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Explore values journalism About usThe plaintive cries of the violin are often associated with mourning.
But during the Ukraine war, the fiddle is producing sounds of strength. It’s become a tool of defiance and an instrument of generosity.
Take classical violinist Vera Lytovchenko. She’s been posting performances from the basement of her apartment building in Kharkiv, Ukraine. The Los Angeles Times called her an “internet icon of resilience.”
Ms. Lytovchenko started playing to ease the fear of her neighbors amid the explosions. Then she uploaded videos to let her friends know she’s still alive, she tells me via Instagram. Now, she says her bunker recitals are a message of hope to the world. “We have [the] strength and power to resist and ... we still have hope that the war will finish soon,” she says.
In another basement in Kyiv, violinist Illia Bondarenko’s grandmother filmed him playing an old Ukrainian folk song. He did it at the request of Kerenza Peacock, a world-class British violinist. She put out a call via social media for other top violinists to accompany Mr. Bondarenko. Within 48 hours, she received videos from 94 violinists (including nine from Ukraine), representing 29 countries.
Ms. Peacock, reached in Los Angeles after a rehearsal Tuesday for the upcoming Oscars, calls the resulting video an unprecedented “fellowship of rosin and broken E strings.”
The violinists’ video delivers a stirring counterpoint to the chaos and violence of war. And it’s a kind of prayer, she says. It sends “the message of harmony across nations and across all boundaries. Musicians don’t see boundaries. We speak a universal language. And we exist in a different form of consciousness,” Ms. Peacock says. “Whatever your spiritual beliefs, there is power behind music. And it speaks to a higher power.”
The video also links to a website for donations to help Ukrainians.
What’s next? Ms. Peacock plans to hold a live weekly “prayer session” for Ukraine by violinists around the world. “We’ll play the same piece at the same time together,” she says. “There’s a power to someone playing and praying at the same time.”
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Our reporter witnesses a generational shift in careers, perceptions of their country, and their life purpose as young Ukrainian professionals prepare for the Russian onslaught.
Diana Khalilova’s dreams of becoming a chef are on hold, with the food and wine bistro where she worked in Odessa closed by the war. But, like legions of young Ukrainians feeling renewed national pride, she is taking action on behalf of a greater cause.
“Now I am just trying to be useful,” says Ms. Khalilova, who often serves at a volunteer kitchen, cooking food for security forces and for Ukrainians displaced by the war. “I love to make delicious food."
Across the Black Sea port city, which is seen as a target of Russia’s southern campaign, is a coffee shop stockpiling donations, from bandages to tea, that will be delivered to army outposts up to 60 miles away.
“We are sure those outposts will be the first to meet the enemy,” says owner Gregorii Bayra, who works directly with army officers to fulfill their needs. He says he is worried, but has “no time to panic” because he is so busy with volunteers.
“A lot of people didn’t know it, that this country is worth something, worth fighting for. We didn’t feel that before,” he says. “When I think of my own role, I will take a gun or Molotov cocktail, but now I am more an organizer.”
Ukrainian cook Diana Khalilova is in her happy place, working her wizardry in the kitchen to delight the taste buds of hungry friends.
But she’s not at the food and wine bistro where she normally works – it closed when Russia invaded Ukraine in late February. Instead, the young cook is in a cramped kitchen, after curfew, throwing together a bulgur risotto for her 20-something housemates brought together by war.
The tools of flavor are the same: pouches of pre-prepped delicacies brought home from the restaurant to eat so they don’t spoil, such as anchovy and shredded onion paste, wild mushrooms, and salty goat pecorino cheese.
As snow falls outside, the thick-walled 150-year-old apartment – with its high ceilings and artistic touches (an illustrator and musicians live here too) – fills with the mouthwatering aroma of frying onions and garlic.
Yet it is not long before the war intrudes upon the conversation, bringing with it a boiling anger at Russian attackers.
“Today we learned how to shoot; it was so much fun,” says Ms. Khalilova, about a session for volunteers to learn assault rifle basics. It was the first time she had ever touched a gun.
“I’m a complete pacifist – I never thought about arms and weapons,” she says while scoring several locally produced brie cheeses for baking.
“But today I am so ... angry,” Ms. Khalilova says, using an expletive. “I am so shocked at all the damage and cruelty. I just want to – I don’t know – I just want to kill these Russian [invaders] by my own hands.”
The cook may not join actual combat. But she is one of legions of young Ukrainians whose trajectories have been upended by Russia’s invasion and who are now temporarily reorienting their daily lives.
Largely unprepared for the impact of Russia’s three-pronged assault, which has enveloped Ukraine and triggered an outpouring of global support, many young Ukrainians are finding unexpected purpose for their seething anger in renewed national pride, and by taking personal action on behalf of a greater cause.
“Now I am just trying to be useful,” says Ms. Khalilova, who these days often serves at a volunteer kitchen, cooking food for security forces and for Ukrainians displaced by the war.
“I love to make delicious food,” she says. The place where she volunteers was a center for feeding homeless children, she adds. “They just took on more responsibility.”
Dreams of being a chef are on hold, thanks to the war. She brushes garlic skins off the cutting board, then picks up a gourmet pouch. “Fermented lemons!” she exclaims. It is not the sort of delicacy that she expects to be using much in her new role.
A few blocks away in this historic Black Sea port city – expected to be the final target of Russia’s southern advance, with Russian warships lurking off the coast – another young professional Ukrainian is putting the parameters of her life on a wartime footing.
Chief legal counsel for an information technology firm, Kseniia Havrina lost her job last week when her company downsized. Now her dream of setting up on her own has been inadvertently fast-tracked.
When the invasion began, the first bomb she heard prompted a frantic Google search for the contents of the emergency suitcase used in the sitcom series “The Big Bang Theory” by the show’s nerdy intellectual character Sheldon Cooper.
Ms. Havrina packed the essentials, from key documents to phone chargers, and raced across the border to safety in Moldova. Almost immediately she had second thoughts, because her mother and sister were stuck in bomb shelters in “a very hard part” of the capital, Kyiv.
Telling her mother that she was – and still is – safe in Moldova, Ms. Havrina drove back to Odessa on the fourth day of the war with jugs of gas and motor oil to make Molotov cocktails. She teamed up with a friend she had recently met on the Tinder dating app, and began to live with a small group in central Odessa, which today inspires her with its devoted volunteerism.
Now the lawyer ferries vulnerable Ukrainians to the border in her car, and helps her housemates to fill sandbags and prepare Odessa’s civil defense.
The number of volunteers wanting to join the Territorial Defense force is so high, she says, that even a young man working with the police, who lives with her group, has found it impossible to bribe his way into a unit.
Ms. Havrina has been awed at how the war is changing Ukrainian society, and the priorities of young people like herself.
“I have never seen people so unified as now. It’s everywhere, in shops, on the streets; people are talking to each other, and it’s so inspiring,” she says. “It’s not Ukraine, it’s a New Ukraine.”
Her new project aims to help Ukraine’s IT army wage the information war against Russia.
Her first step was to petition the office of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, asking that IT specialists be exempt from rules forbidding men from leaving Ukraine. They can do more effective work for the war effort if they are allowed to use their expertise, says Ms. Havrina, rather than adding one more gun to the front line.
Her experience in the month of violence since Russia attacked – and since Ukraine began rekindling its national spirit – allows only one prediction, she says: “I don’t believe, I am sure that Ukraine will win.”
For Ms. Havrina, that means being ready to throw Molotov cocktails from her balcony, if Russian troops ever appear below.
She doesn’t think Russian President Vladimir Putin will survive the conflict with Ukraine, and adds, “I suppose he understands that we are unbreakable.”
That is the calculation, too, on the other side of town at a coffee shop with a bicycle racing theme, where most customers these days come only to the takeaway window – which is taped, to minimize potential blast damage – between air raid sirens. On one recent frigid day, a couple hold each other while waiting for their coffee.
Inside, a pet dog roams and donations pile up, from bandages to tea, which will be delivered to army outposts up to 60 miles from Odessa.
“A lot of people are afraid to go outside the city ... because of the danger,” says owner Gregorii Bayrak, a bearded and lean bicycle racer whose network of cyclists is among soldiers deployed at those distant camps.
“We are sure those outposts will be the first to meet the enemy,” says Mr. Bayrak, who works directly with army officers to fulfill their needs. He says he is worried, but has “no time to panic” because he is so busy with volunteers.
“Our military is now feeling the support of the world,” he says. “Being in the Ukraine army now is one of the most romantic positions in the world,” he adds with a smile.
“A lot of people didn’t know it, that this country is worth something, worth fighting for. We didn’t feel that before,” he says. “When I think of my own role, I will take a gun or Molotov cocktail, but now I am more an organizer.”
For Mr. Bayrak, that means more than just collecting tins of food.
He steps out onto the sidewalk, and at a shopfront nearby raises the graffiti-covered metal door. Inside is a bicycle repair workshop, its air thick with the smell of gasoline and oil, which has been converted to make Molotov cocktails and homemade sleeping bags for soldiers.
The production line made 170 Molotov cocktails on the first day, then 450 the second. But then production switched to making sleeping bags for troops, and finding tactical gear like gloves and kneepads.
Why the change?
Explains Mr. Bayrak, “A lot of people are doing Molotovs ...”
Our Moscow correspondent looks at what it means for Russian journalists to pursue the truth while navigating personal and moral crises amid more Kremlin censorship rules.
As Russian troops wage their so-called special military operation in Ukraine, the Kremlin has taken aim at another target on the homefront.
Strict censorship rules have closed almost all independent media outlets. And official TV stations, newspapers, and websites have been hit by a massive outflow of journalists who can no longer morally justify their work.
Setting the tone was Marina Ovsyannikova, a longtime producer at the official Channel One TV station, who interrupted the evening news last week by rushing onto the set and brandishing an anti-war sign. She had worked uncomplainingly at the state-owned channel for years, but explained later that Russia’s action in Ukraine had forced her to confront the truth about her job.
Many of those stepping out of their jobs in the press are not openly protesting the conflict, but say they are taking family leave or sick time. Others have been forced to quit by Western sanctions and bans on Russian media, such as the entire staff of RT America.
“For former journalists,” says Alexey Venediktov, former head of the now-banned Ekho Moskvy radio station, “it’s now a struggle for survival.”
Russian troops have been violently waging their government’s so-called special military operation for over three weeks now in Ukraine. But on the homefront, state police and state prosecutors are waging a more intangible conflict.
The domestic casualties, so far, are mainly the thousands of Kremlin-critical voices, especially in the media.
Editor’s note: This article was edited in order to conform with Russian legislation criminalizing references to Russia’s current action in Ukraine as anything other than a “special military operation.”
Faced with public shock over the devastation caused by the military operation – which cannot be concealed from Russia’s huge internet-savvy population – Russian authorities have shuttered liberal news organizations. Ekho Moskvy radio station and TV Dozhd, whose chief editor has fled to Georgia, have already fallen victim to the crackdown.
Russian mainstream media have also seen many longtime employees depart, including well-known correspondents and news anchors. Meanwhile, the English-language RT network has been virtually gutted by the sudden outflow of its foreign employees.
Many of those stepping out of their jobs are still not openly protesting against the conflict, but say they are taking “family leave” or “sick time.” Others are being forced to quit due to Western sanctions and bans on Russian media, like the entire staff of RT America and the head of Yandex, which is sometimes described as “Russia’s Google.”
Attention has been riveted on the example of Marina Ovsyannikova, a longtime producer at Russia’s flagship Channel One state TV station who burst onto the evening news set with a dramatic anti-war poster, in a protest that has since been seen around the world. In a pre-recorded video she explained herself in terms that sound typical of youngish, middle-class professional Russians.
She is the child of a mixed Russian-Ukrainian marriage – as are large numbers of Russians – and had worked uncomplainingly in the bowels of state TV for years, taking her paycheck and averting her gaze. But she said that recent events forced her to confront the ugly truth. She blamed one person, Vladimir Putin, for what she described as a crime that has subjected all Russians to profound shame. She was arrested, but subsequently let go with a fairly minor fine.
Alexey Kovalyov, an editor with the Latvia-based opposition news outlet Meduza, says he could easily have been in Ms. Ovsyannikova’s shoes.
He worked in a comfortable job with the state-owned RIA Novosti news agency until he was forced out in an internal takeover by hard-liners in 2013. Compelled to find another job, Mr. Kovalyov eventually found his place with Meduza, which has produced some of Russia’s best alternative journalism and been declared a “foreign agent” by authorities.
A few days ago, Mr. Kovalyov and his wife quietly slipped across the border into Latvia, where he has resumed his work with Meduza, whose website is now blocked in Russia.
“If I hadn’t lost my job in 2013, I could still be sitting there” like Ms. Ovsyannikova, he says. “After all, I wasn’t making propaganda. I was mostly translating articles from the foreign press into Russian. Like so many others, I could tell myself that I wasn’t doing anything wrong, just performing my job.”
Still in touch with old friends from Russia’s media world, Mr. Kovalyov says many are in shock at what has happened. “People are telling me that they are devastated, feel blindsided. They’ve continued for eight years,” since Russia’s annexation of Crimea, “doing ‘nothing wrong.’ People now feel shame over their complicity. And yeah, that could have been me.
“This is the nature” of the Putin model, he says. “It’s a set of compromises where good people work in bad institutions, for a bad regime. They accepted the deal, in which the Kremlin took care of politics and they enjoyed the rewards and didn’t get involved. We can now see this order crashing before our very eyes,” he says.
Mr. Kovalyov says that Meduza is still going strong and retain most of their Russian readers who use virtual private networks (VPNs) on their computers, something Meduza has taken pains to educate them about.
For many years Alexey Venediktov steered Ekho Moskvy, the scrappy Moscow radio station that was owned by the media wing of the state natural gas monopoly Gazprom, but which provided a regular perch for some of the Kremlin’s harshest critics. That’s all over now. The station has been closed down, and Mr. Venediktov says he is unemployed.
“When the military operation was declared, propaganda had to be total,” he says. “It’s odd, if there is no war, why do we have military censorship?”
Ekho Moskvy’s staff has scattered, he says. “Modern technology enables some to continue with their own information channels. But, if tomorrow YouTube or Telegram cease to exist, there will be nothing left. For former journalists, it’s now a struggle for survival. People have families to support, rent to pay.”
The single opposition news outlet still standing is Novaya Gazeta, a newspaper co-founded by Mikhail Gorbachev. Its editor, Dmitry Muratov, won the Nobel Peace Prize last year, together with a Filipina journalist, for “their efforts to safeguard freedom of expression, which is a precondition for democracy and lasting peace.”
The paper survives by striking a difficult compromise, says Nadezhda Prusenkova, Novaya Gazeta’s press secretary.
“We pulled any materials that did not meet the demands of the new law on fake news,” she says. “We have to work under conditions of military censorship, and limit ourselves. Not only can we not call [it] a war, but we may not report about what’s happening in Ukraine or anything our armed forces are doing. Otherwise, there is criminal punishment of 15 years in prison.
“We thought about closing down, had a stormy staff meeting, but decided we had a responsibility to continue. There is a lot we can do under the existing conditions, a lot of valuable stories to report, and as long as we can go on, we will. We realize it can end at any moment,” she adds.
Some observers see the censorship as auguring a profound social crisis. Things can’t go on like this for very long, says Boris Kagarlitsky, a veteran left-wing Kremlin critic, who holds the distinction of having served jail time for his dissenting views under three different Soviet and Russian regimes.
“Russia’s elite knows that there is a storm coming, the Putin order is falling apart, and this is all going to end very badly,” he forecasts. “Our generation already experienced revolutions and political dramas galore. So, it looks like we’re headed for another one.”
It’s one thing to call attacks on schools and hospitals in Ukraine war crimes. It’s another to prove it in a court of universal justice. Our reporter looks at the basics of building a case under the law.
“I think he is a war criminal,” President Joe Biden told reporters March 16 when asked about Russian President Vladimir Putin.
He echoed a unanimous resolution the day before from the Senate labeling Mr. Putin the same thing. And on March 23, the U.S. government issued a formal assessment that war crimes have been committed during the invasion of Ukraine.
In terms of accountability, though, it’s just a label until proved in court. The International Criminal Court launched an investigation on March 2, and an unprecedented 41 member states petitioned the court for one. Even if their findings resulted in charges, there’s no guarantee any Russian leaders would face trial.
Rachel Kerr, co-director of the War Crimes Research Group, says a war crime is a serious violation of international humanitarian law that gives rise to individual criminal responsibility by a person or group of people rather than a country. War crimes include attacks that intentionally target civilians or civilian property. They can also include use of munitions, such as chemical weapons, that inflict severe or indiscriminate damage.
Karima Bennoune, visiting professor at the University of Michigan Law School, says, “It’s very positive that there has been such a strong reaction to the reports of war crimes that we’ve seen. I think that public outrage and response is critical to actually trying to stop further war crimes.”
Last week, soon after granting $800 million of military aid to Ukraine, President Joe Biden responded to a reporter’s question with his harshest description of Russia’s invading leader yet.
“I think he is a war criminal,” President Biden said of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The unexpected comment echoed a unanimous resolution the day before from the Senate, labeling Mr. Putin the same thing. In terms of accountability, though, it’s just that – a label – until proved in court. On March 23, the U.S. government issued a formal assessment that war crimes have been committed during the invasion of Ukraine. Multiple countries and international organizations are already investigating. Even if their findings resulted in charges, there’s no guarantee any Russian leaders would ever face trial.
“The classic definition is serious violations of international humanitarian law that give rise to individual criminal responsibility,” says Rachel Kerr, a professor at King’s College London and co-director of the War Crimes Research Group.
That means two things. One, infractions of international humanitarian law – a decades-old patchwork of treaties like the Geneva and Hague conventions – are severe. Two, a person or group of people is responsible, not a country.
War crimes include attacks that intentionally target civilians or civilian property, or military objectives that recklessly endanger civilians. They can also include use of munitions, such as chemical weapons, that inflict severe or indiscriminate damage.
Because war inevitably involves civilian harm, says Professor Kerr, the key rule is proportionality – any target or tool requires a proportionate military objective. Intentionally bombing a school is off-limits. But bombing a school housing enemy troops or ammunition may be more complicated.
“It’s military necessity versus humanity,” says Professor Kerr.
It depends on who’s investigating. Because potential war crimes are occurring on Ukrainian soil, Ukraine has unquestioned authority to investigate. But war crimes operate under universal jurisdiction – any country has the right to investigate, regardless of location. Germany, Spain, and Poland have all begun their own inquiries.
The International Criminal Court (ICC), as well, launched an investigation on March 2, and an unprecedented 41 member states petitioned for one, says Ryan Goodman, professor of human rights law at New York University.
“I am satisfied that there is a reasonable basis to believe that both alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity have been committed in Ukraine,” wrote ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan in a statement before the investigation began. (War crimes, unlike crimes against humanity, can only occur during armed conflict, can be committed against combatants and civilians, and can be isolated incidents.)
The process is arduous, beginning with specific allegations – such as a strike on a hospital or fleeing civilians – and builds a record of what happened and who’s responsible through eyewitnesses, videos, and other verified evidence. Then investigators attempt to assess intent and information at the time of the strike, which likely requires inferences because Russia almost certainly won’t cooperate.
“That’s not an easy task, especially with the conflict ongoing,” says Karima Bennoune, visiting professor at the University of Michigan Law School and an international human rights lawyer. “Every day there’s more things that have to be investigated, and the conflict itself is a significant obstacle to the investigation.”
Human rights groups, Ukrainian citizens, and the United Nations Human Rights Council are all helping document evidence in support. While each investigation has its own timeline, some could take years, says Professor Bennoune.
“At the moment, it’s so hard to see any,” says Professor Kerr.
The ICC doesn’t conduct trials in absentia – defendants must be in custody. When charges are filed, that rule can amount to a travel ban because leaders won’t risk being taken into custody outside their borders. As long as they remain in power, leaders like Mr. Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov are sheltered.
Russia, not an ICC member, wouldn’t be the first major power to fight the court’s legitimacy. The United States isn’t a member either and has resisted investigation of Americans, says Professor Goodman. Since the war in Ukraine, the Biden administration has begun an internal review of its policy toward the ICC.
That doesn’t mean the investigations don’t matter, Professor Bennoune says.
“It’s very positive that there has been such a strong reaction to the reports of war crimes that we’ve seen,” she says. “I think that public outrage and response is critical to actually trying to stop further war crimes.”
Here’s another story today looking at a younger generation exploring new roles in society. Our reporter finds highly educated, unemployed Jordanians entering local politics as a path to progress for themselves and their communities.
Thousands of candidates ran for local office across Jordan Tuesday. A few dozen stood out: candidates in their 20s, all unemployed university graduates in outer provinces. That is the exact demographic that has borne the brunt of the kingdom’s economic crisis.
While unemployment hovers around 24% nationwide, unemployment among those under 30 is at 50%. University graduates spend years, even a decade or more, without work.
“Their parents have spent all their savings and resources to send them to university, and they are stuck at home unable to start their own lives,” says Amer Al Sabaileh, a Jordanian analyst. “If we can encourage youths to take part in local politics, it will reflect positively on the society as a whole.”
Many of those running for office filled their years waiting for jobs with workshops and paid internships to enhance their employability.
“I have these skills, I have some experience, and I have many solutions to improve my community. Why shouldn’t I enter politics?” says Nour Alawamreh, an agricultural engineer who ran for office hoping to upgrade the local health center and scale up her forestation project to reduce flash flooding.
“Just to know that we can take part in the political process, that is the first step toward change.”
In Ahmed Al Qubeilat’s village of Mleih in central Jordan, unemployment is a fact of life, especially for the young.
His cousins are jobless. So too is his neighbor, who holds a Ph.D. in medicine. Mr. Qubeilat has not found work since graduating with a B.A. in business administration in 2019.
Yet he now subscribes to the mantra that if you need a job – or a job done – do it yourself. He ran for local office.
“Now is the time to break the cycle and get involved,” the 27-year-old candidate says outside an election tent next to his home. “No one is more capable in addressing my generation’s challenges than we are.”
Jordan’s local elections this week featured something unexpected: a surge of unemployed young people who feel neglected by the political system running for office to create change themselves.
In what analysts are calling a “dress rehearsal” for the kingdom’s much-ballyhooed political reforms, more than 4,640 candidates from across the country ran for municipal and governorate council posts Tuesday.
Yet out of the many, a few dozen stood out: candidates in their 20s, all unemployed university graduates in the kingdom’s outer provinces. That is the exact demographic that has borne the brunt of the resource-poor kingdom’s economic crisis.
“In rural areas outside the capital, there is a high presence of youth, fewer opportunities, and greater challenges,” says Amer Al Sabaileh, a Jordanian geopolitical analyst. “Their parents have spent all their savings and resources to send them to university, and they are stuck at home unable to start their own lives or improve that of their families.”
Some 70% of Jordan’s 6.5 million citizens are under the age of 35, and 63% are under the age of 30. While unemployment hovers around 24% nationwide, unemployment among those under 30 is at 50%. University graduates spend years, even a decade or more, without work.
For some, their inability to move forward has led to apathy, rising drug abuse, depression, and a silent epidemic of suicides. Young Jordanians have climbed to the top of electricity towers and threatened to jump to protest their lack of prospects.
Yet these young Jordanians running for office have filled their years of waiting with something else: workshops and paid internships provided by royal foundations, international NGOs, the United Nations, and USAID designed to enhance their employability. The skills developed include public speaking and civic engagement and advocacy techniques.
“I have these skills, I have some experience, and I have many solutions to improve my community. Why shouldn’t I enter politics to help address our community’s problems?” says Nour Alawamreh.
The 26-year-old agricultural engineer launched her candidacy for the regional governorate council in the summer of 2021. Her goals included upgrading her local health center and scaling up her forestation project to reduce the flash-flooding that regularly hits her hometown of Maeen, in central Jordan.
How did she overcome resistance by some in her community to a “young upstart” running for office? By starting small, she says.
“I am careful not to overpromise,” Ms. Alawamreh says, stressing that she would first evaluate the provincial budget and available resources before proposing any project.
The youth influx is an upset of the country’s established political culture.
In Jordanian politics, voters rarely flock to the exciting new prospect. Few fawn over fresh-faced candidates full of new ideas and youthful energy.
Instead, for most of the country’s history since independence, Jordanian voters have gravitated toward candidates with experience and long track records, such as a secretary-general at a ministry, a director at the phosphates factory, or the local school headmaster.
Another current in Jordanian politics is tribalism, with an entire family and wider clan pressured to support their candidate, a senior relative or that of an allied tribe.
It has led Jordanian voters to cast ballots for relatives or familiar faces with little debate on policy, sending stone-faced and graying men and bureaucrats who insist on doing things “the traditional way” to fill posts on municipal councils and in parliament.
“The experience gap was one of the biggest challenges we’ve had to overcome,” Mr. Qubeilat admits. “We had to break down the barrier that has prevented young people from taking part in political life.”
Rather than “experience,” the young Jordanians say they pitched something else: policy.
For Mr. Qubeilat, that meant sitting down with each voter to explain his electoral platform of rejuvenating farming, creating spinoff agricultural and tourism jobs, and hosting job training events in the village.
“All I ask is for people to just hear out my ideas,” Mr. Qubeilat says.
“We are trying to change the entire culture around voting, where the best ideas win,” says Mohammed Breizat, 29, an unemployed candidate also from Mleih.
Some older voters may be receptive.
“With one economic crisis after another, we can no longer afford to be governed by tribalism,” says Abu Maher, a 54-year-old voter in Madaba, central Jordan. “We should give young people a chance to improve their future,” he adds, though he declines to say whether he voted for a young candidate.
In the village of Lib, Qusay Alfugha, 28, darts and dashes across the courtyard of a polling center with a grin on his face, racing to the finish line to seal votes.
Unemployed for the last eight years, he has modest but clear plans, including solar-powered streetlights, repaving streets, and expanding the government health clinic.
“Every household has an unemployed young man or woman waiting for a future that is not arriving. People don’t just support us, they feel for us,” Mr. Alfugha says as he escorts an elderly woman on his elbow to her registered polling booth. “This is helping us unleash our potential.”
But significant challenges to opening Jordan’s political system remain.
Political parties were sidelined in local elections, and a mere 29.6% of eligible Jordanians voted in polls that saw rampant vote buying. The country’s opposition is marginalized and divided.
Despite calls by the king for young people to make their voices heard, the government has sent mixed messages by jailing young Jordanians for critical social media posts and joining protests.
“There is a trust gap among young Jordanians. Can young Jordanians join the political process and express themselves freely without paying a heavy price?” asks Oraib Rantawi, director of the Amman-based Al Quds Center for Political Studies.
Yet all agree on the need to attract youth into the political process.
“If we can encourage youths to take part in local politics, it will reflect positively on the society as a whole and boost these areas that suffer from neglected services” and a lack of development, says Mr. Sabaileh, the analyst.
With votes still being certified Wednesday, it was unclear how many young candidates had won their seats. But already the candidates say they have an eye on the next local election, and one day, parliament.
“No matter what the end result is, it is enough that we as youths are able to get election experience,” says Ms. Alawamreh, the agricultural engineer, who according to early returns has won her regional council seat. “To see young people run for election, just to know that we can take part in the political process, that is the first step toward change.”
Three hours before polls’ closure on Tuesday, Mr. Alfugha rushes to a neighbor entering the polling station.
“Can I count on your vote?” Mr. Alfugha pleads in a last-minute pitch.
His neighbor smiles.
“Even if you don’t have my vote, you have my support,” she says. “You are the youth; you are our future. It’s your turn.”
Our points of global progress roundup this week includes using tiny lights on fishing nets to help catch the ‘right’ fish, a constitutional commitment to the environment in Italy, and a program that helps children in Ethiopia displaced by war or drought to get back into school.
Along with environmental news, we look at how nonprofit organizations can sustainably empower residents in need of affordable housing, and how child laborers can be supported before returning to regular classrooms.
An overlooked approach to housing is giving more low-income residents the chance to own a home. In Springfield, Oregon, the nonprofit affordable housing developer SquareOne Villages and architecture firm Cultivate Inc. opened the C Street Co-op to residents last fall. The six-unit apartment complex is a limited-equity cooperative, which means each inhabitant is a partial owner of the building. Members pay $10,000 at the outset for a one-bedroom unit, and then $788 per month, utilities and maintenance included. Increases in the property’s resale value are capped at 3% per year. SquareOne owns 10 acres of land through a community land trust across six sites, including a 22-unit tiny home co-op in Eugene.
Those involved say there will be more opportunities to scale up the models: Oregon in 2019 passed the country’s first law that ends single-family zoning in medium and large cities, with a June deadline for cities to update their own rules. Across the U.S., there are around 250,000 households that operate as shared-equity units, although finding lenders to finance the relatively small mortgages can present a challenge. “It’s the permanent affordability that means everything,” said Silvia Salazar, a resident of a limited-equity co-op in Washington, D.C. “No matter how much our community gentrifies, we don’t have to worry about displacement.”
Eugene Weekly, The New York Times
Speed schools in Ethiopia give children who aren’t in school another opportunity to restart their education. When families need help with house or field work, children often drop out of school to pitch in. Around 2.2 million Ethiopian children are currently out of school, a problem exacerbated by war, drought, and flooding. An accelerated learning program called Luminos Second Chance is a steppingstone to help students catch up. “For children who’ve been in a laboring environment, that sense of empowerment, that sense of safety that comes from being in a warm, welcoming classroom is a powerful entry point back into the school system,” said Caitlin Baron, who runs the nonprofit Luminos Fund.
Students spend 10 months covering material taught in the first three years of school, providing a foundation for them to rejoin regular classes in the third or fourth grade. Bright, decorated spaces and a focus on music and games encourage a sense of joy. So far, Luminos has reached nearly 140,000 students in Ethiopia, and in 2016 the government began replicating the model in schools across the country. While literacy rates still have room for improvement, primary school enrollment tripled between 2000 and 2016.
Thomson Reuters Foundation
Italy revised its constitution to include environmental protection. The amendments, passed Feb. 8, hold the state accountable for safeguarding ecosystems and biodiversity and stipulate that economic activity must not harm the natural world. Environmentalists praised the move but acknowledged that constitutional laws don’t always live up to expectations. While concrete results remain to be seen, the “strong and symbolic act,” as Minister of Ecological Transition Roberto Cingolani called it, helps Italy lay out “well-defined rules’’ to guide the country forward.
To ensure the law is applied in practice, lower courts can appeal to the Constitutional Court in cases where it isn’t being upheld, and the head of state can veto bills that don’t align with the constitution. The European commissioner for the environment, Virginijus Sinkevičius, congratulated the country on Twitter: “This is a major step Italy! By choosing to protect the environment, biodiversity, and ecosystems through your constitution, you are choosing to protect future generations!”
Reuters, Earth.org
A women-led collective is restoring mangrove swamps around Indonesia’s Tanakeke Islands. The gnarled saltwater trees protect coastal communities from extreme weather while also acting as an important carbon sink. Indonesia has the world’s largest concentration of “blue carbon” habitats, but it has lost almost half of its mangroves in the last 30 years, to make room for shrimp and fish farms. “Womangrove” is one of various groups across the country stepping up to revive native mangrove forests.
The collective was formed in 2015 by around 20 women with the help of international donors. By replanting over 110,000 mangroves, the group is rejuvenating a local ecosystem, and some participants are now harvesting shellfish that live among the trees. While the business side of the initiative presents logistical and financial challenges, the group’s restoration work remains strong, with support from the Indonesian nonprofit Blue Forest Foundation. Some of the women have become local leaders, and all of them are helping shift the local mentality toward protecting the mangroves. “There is an emerging awareness of how important it is,” said one member of Womangrove. “Women play a very important role in this because it is closely related to everyday life.”
Mongabay
Simple LED lights are saving wildlife from fishing nets. Large gill nets are commonly used for commercial fishing, but these walls of mesh that hang in the ocean are notorious for bringing in unwanted “bycatch,” including species like dolphins, sea turtles, sharks, and squids. So Jesse Senko of Arizona State University and his team partnered with small-scale fishers from Baja California, Mexico, to test the effectiveness of nets dotted with green lights in 10-meter increments.
In comparison with regular nets, the lighted nets trapped 63% less bycatch overall, ranging from 51% fewer turtles to 95% fewer sharks. Some sea creatures avoid the lights or the nets better than others, perhaps thanks to more sophisticated eyesight. By reducing undesirable catches, fishers also spent less time hauling in and detangling nets. Smaller fishers may find the current price of equipping a net with battery-powered lights prohibitive at up to $140, but Dr. Senko and his team are testing a solar light to help make the illuminated nets easier to use.
Science
The confirmation hearings of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to join the Supreme Court have brought fresh scrutiny to one of the most emotional and subjective aspects of law: punishment.
During one exchange on Tuesday, Sen. Josh Hawley questioned the judge about her decision to sentence a man convicted of child pornography to just three months in prison. It reflected a pattern of leniency, the Missouri Republican charged, in Ms. Jackson’s approach to such cases.
Ms. Jackson tried to explain the range of factors that a judge is required by law to consider in determining punishment. She noted the defendant’s age. He was 18, just out of high school. The senator was unmoved. “I am questioning your discretion, your judgment,” he said.
That kind of exchange has become standard in Senate hearings to fill vacancies on the highest bench. Yet it sometimes obscures a shared recognition in the United States of all the aspects of justice, from deterrence to rehabilitation, that fulfill the purpose of a court sentence.
At a time of waning trust in the Supreme Court, a helpful debate about the nature and purpose of punishment revealed deeper insights about the values that define justice.
The confirmation hearings this week of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to join the Supreme Court have brought fresh scrutiny to one of the most emotional and subjective aspects of law: punishment.
During one exchange on Tuesday, Sen. Josh Hawley questioned the judge about her decision to sentence a man convicted of child pornography to just three months in prison. It reflected a pattern of leniency, the Missouri Republican charged, in Ms. Jackson’s approach to such cases.
Ms. Jackson tried to explain the range of factors that a judge is required by law to consider in determining punishment. She noted the defendant’s age. He was 18, just out of high school. The senator was unmoved. “I am questioning your discretion, your judgment,” he said.
That kind of exchange has become standard in Senate hearings to fill vacancies on the highest bench. Yet it sometimes obscures a shared recognition in the United States of all the aspects of justice, from deterrence to rehabilitation, that fulfill the purpose of a court sentence.
Since 1984, when Congress established the U.S. Sentencing Commission, there has been growing concern about how to fix the many disparities in sentencing. That focus has gained urgency in recent years as the country has grappled with how to decrease the size of the prison population. The U.S. incarcerates 664 out of 100,000 people, the highest rate in the world, according to the Prison Policy Initiative.
One example of fixing those disparities is the First Step Act. Passed by Congress four years ago, it enables incarcerated people to seek reduced sentences based on “compassionate release” and to ease mandatory minimum sentences. As a former member of the commission, Judge Jackson helped identify those criteria. But she also noted that Congress has not updated sentencing guidelines since 2003. This nearly two-decade lapse has left judges to rely on out-of-date guidelines for determining punishment even as changes in technology and social norms have focused attention beyond the length of sentences.
“Part of my sentencings was about redirecting the defendants’ attention,” she said in response to Mr. Hawley. “It’s not just about how much time a person spends in prison. It’s about understanding the harm of ... this behavior.”
That struck a chord.
“You want to get them to own up to what they’ve done in these cases,” the senator acknowledged. “And I thought that was powerful. And I thought that was right.”
This week’s Senate hearings have offered a valuable service in enabling citizens to overhear debate about legal principles and modern points of law. At a time of waning trust in the Supreme Court, a helpful debate about the nature and purpose of punishment revealed deeper insights about the values that define justice. That can only help lift society in selecting the best jurists to the court.
Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.
Can we ever be too far away to help in a troubling situation? Not when our prayers are impelled by God’s power and goodness, as a mother experienced after her son became ill while living on another continent.
My college-aged son is studying in Spain for the semester – an ocean away from home. At one point he called to tell me that he was feeling very poorly. He couldn’t get out of bed and was in pain, and he asked me to pray for him.
At first I just felt helpless. He was so far away; how could I take care of him and ensure that he was safe? What good could my prayers do from all the way across the ocean?
Yet through my study of Christian Science, I have experienced the power of prayer. I’ve seen that even when we are far away from someone we love, heartfelt and dedicated prayer affirming God’s goodness and loving care has a very healing effect.
Christ Jesus proved just how effective prayer can be. In “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures,” Mary Baker Eddy, the discoverer of Christian Science and founder of this news organization, wrote that Jesus’ “humble prayers were deep and conscientious protests of Truth, – of man’s likeness to God and of man’s unity with Truth and Love” (p. 12). Through her years of prayer, study of the Bible, and healing work, Mrs. Eddy showed – as Jesus had – that even from a distance, a silent prayer voicing spiritual truth is powerful. As Science and Health explains, “The inaudible voice of Truth is, to the human mind, ‘as when a lion roareth.’ It is heard in the desert and in dark places of fear” (p. 559).
For me, a big part of prayer is listening for inspiration, turning my thought to God for answers. But it’s also an affirmation of spiritual laws that come from God and govern each of us as spiritual offspring of the Divine – an acknowledgment of God’s goodness, power, and presence. Like the law of gravity, although we can’t see God with our eyes, still God’s power is always present to secure and firmly ground our steps.
Prayer also opens our eyes to the fact that God maintains our spiritual and indefatigable nature. The Bible assures us that God made each one of us whole, strong, and good. God’s care and provisions keep us this way. Even in dark places of fear, or when the evidence before us seems to indicate otherwise, there isn’t a moment when we are alone or outside of God’s powerful reign. No one can ever stray from God’s protection and attention. Our divine Parent is everywhere. Opening our heart to these truths inspires solutions that lead us to health and peace.
That day when my son called, as I tried to settle my thought, I thought of an account in the Gospel of Matthew. A centurion, or commander in the Roman army, came to Jesus and asked him to heal his servant, who was back at his home and gravely ill. The commander didn’t feel it was necessary for Jesus to be physically present with the sick man in order to heal him. Jesus marveled at his trust and faith in the power of prayer, and indeed, the servant became completely well that very hour (see Matthew 8:5-13).
It occurred to me that not only was it important that I pray diligently, but that I trust wholeheartedly that prayer based on spiritual fact is effective. And so I spent the next few hours affirming God’s care; and affirming my son’s God-given right, as a beautiful creation of God, to experience freedom and joy; and affirming that such prayer does have an impact.
In fact, I kept right on praying until I felt certain that my son was well. And I was so grateful when I got a text from him shortly after that, telling me that he felt perfectly well and thanking me for praying.
Many sons and daughters – our own or others’ – across the globe are needing our prayers right now. We can trust that even if we’re an ocean away, our “conscientious protests” of God’s all-encompassing power and of everyone’s right to freedom and peace are effective in helping to meet all kinds of needs.
For a regularly updated collection of insights relating to the situation in Ukraine from the Christian Science Perspective column, click here.
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