2021
July
22
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 22, 2021
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

The Tokyo Summer Games could still be stopped because of the pandemic, organizers acknowledge. There will be virtually no spectators. And these Games come at a time of social unrest, with athletes looking to express their convictions.

These will be Games unlike any other. How will they feel? It’s a personal question for me as someone who covered seven Olympic Games. Back before the 2012 London Games, as I wondered how I would cover such a massive event, a thought came: Look through the lens of love.

It seemed an odd assignment. But for all the legitimate criticism of the International Olympic Committee as an elitist sports cabal, the Olympics and Olympians themselves still express something pure. In the Olympics I’d covered, I could feel something beyond marketing and medals. There was genuine hope, fellowship, and goodwill. So at the London Games I looked for love, and it was everywhere I turned. From the incomparable grace of a sprinter to the triumph of a judoka overcoming abuse.  

Amid the world’s concerns, the Olympics still offer that glimpse of something beyond sport. They offer real-life portraits of perseverance, joy, and goodwill, forged amid adversity and sacrifice and etched in extraordinary achievements. Nine years ago, that appeared to me as love flowing through every event. This year, it will again be there, waiting to uplift those who let it in.


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Courtesy of White Oak Conservation
This panther is growing up at White Oak Conservation, an animal rehabilitation facility in Yulee, Florida, after its mother was euthanized for health reasons.
Sara Miller Llana/The Christian Science Monitor
Geronimo Henry attended the Mohawk Institute Residential School in Brantford, Ontario, from 1942 to 1953, and today he seeks truth and justice for all Indigenous children forced into these residential schools.

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AP
The Olympic rings are seen at Yokohama Baseball Stadium as the field is prepared for softball competition at the Summer Olympics in Japan.

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A message of love

Aly Song/Reuters
A man holding a baby wades through a flooded road following heavy rainfall in Zhengzhou in China's Henan province on July 22, 2021. One of the days of rain brought roughly as much as usually falls in a year. Zhengzhou, a city of 12 million people in central China, experienced some relief today, but much of the city is still underwater.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when Stephen Humphries offers a sneak peak at season two of “Ted Lasso,” the television show that has turned kindness, forgiveness, and grace into a sleeper hit.

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