2020
November
30
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 30, 2020
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Amelia Newcomb
Senior editor

After a week brimming with examples of giving thanks at a difficult moment, we’re also getting lessons in the power of giving back – literally and figuratively – as we head deeper into the holiday season.

Early this month, members of Open Arms Italy, which rescues migrants in the Mediterranean, found a backpack floating in the water. In it were two wedding rings engraved with two names. Wreckage nearby boded poorly for finding the owners, but the rescuers were undeterred, The New York Times reported. La Repubblica newspaper picked up the story, asking, “Who are Ahmed and Doudou?” And in a moment of light, a young couple surfaced in a reception center in Sicily, having been rescued by fishermen after a harrowing capsizing off Libya. “We had lost everything, and now the few things we had set out with have been found,” they said.

Then there were the workers at the National Roman Museum who opened a package sent from the United States and found an ancient marble fragment. Apparently it was filched from a cultural site in 2017, the Guardian reported. Equally inspiring was what accompanied it: the sender’s abject apology.

“The year 2020, decimated by the COVID pandemic, has made people reflect, as well as moved the conscience,” museum director Stéphane Verger said. “The fact is that three years after the theft, she returned it – it’s a very important symbolic gesture.” The letter, he added, “was quite moving.”


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Today’s stories

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A deeper look

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Firefighters sift through debris to recover keepsakes for residents after the Mountain View Fire tore though the Walker community in Mono County, California, on Nov. 18, 2020. Five of the six largest wildfires on record in the state have occurred this year.

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What's going right
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Deb Kurtz, her arms raised, watches the Philadelphia Eagles play the Cleveland Browns with (left to right) her mother, Peggy Kurtz; her son Wyatt Deutsch; and her daughter-in-law, Alex Douglas, Nov. 22, 2020.

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People gather Nov. 27 in front of Cuba's culture ministry in Havana to show solidarity with dissident artists and to demand a dialogue over limits on freedom of expression.

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A message of love

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Josey Orozco (left) and her twin, Daisy, pick out Christmas trees with their dad, Hector Orozco, at Tucker Tree Farm in Salem, Oregon, Nov. 29, 2020.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Join us tomorrow for Lindsey McGinnis’ exploration of Parler, the new social media platform that conservatives are flocking to.

More issues

2020
November
30
Monday
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