2022
May
03
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 03, 2022
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Ali Martin
California Bureau Writer

What is it that keeps us engaged in a tragedy, even when we know it’s going to end tragically? 

Hope. 

I had the joy of seeing “Hadestown” over the weekend. The Tony Award-winning musical tells the story of Orpheus and Eurydice through a framework of modern-day racism and socioeconomic injustice.

In the retelling of this Greek myth, the charmed Orpheus falls in love with Eurydice, who’s worn down by the Fates and falls under the pressures of bad choices into the underworld. Who hasn’t been there? Orpheus goes after her, reminds Hades and Persephone of their own lost love, inspires an uprising of the oppressed, and almost gets his happily ever after with Eurydice. So, so close. 

Despite the anguish of his near miss, the musical ends on a high note. Because along the way, Orpheus made people believe in a better world – in a world they couldn’t see, but could feel in their hearts. And he inspired them to move toward that. 

Aliyah Fraser is creating her better world in rural Ontario, where she combines social justice and environmental sustainability at Lucky Bug Farm. The Monitor’s Sara Miller Llana introduces us to Ms. Fraser and other Black farmers who are empowering their own underserved communities by growing and selling fresh produce. 

And Monitor contributor Lydia Tomkiw takes us to Poland, where Ukrainian refugees are navigating the limbo of war, trying to envision the life they’ll have when the war finally ends. 

Their stories tie together with hope, and acknowledge the strength that propels humanity forward even when chaos or catastrophe seem to have a stronger hold. Hope is a gift, but it’s also a talent. 

Eurydice touches on that at the end of “Hadestown”:

“Some flowers bloom when the green grass grows.
My praise is not for them.
But the one who blooms in the bitter snow
I raise my cup to him.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Alex Brandon/AP
Protesters gather outside the Supreme Court early on May 3, 2022, in Washington. A draft opinion suggests a majority of justices could be poised to overturn the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade case that legalized abortion rights nationwide, according to Politico. The leaked draft, confirmed by Chief Justice John Roberts, represents a rare breach of the court’s deliberation process.
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A deeper look

Sara Miller Llana/The Christian Science Monitor
Last year, Aliyah Fraser began Lucky Bug Farm, a Black-owned business in rural Ontario that aims to be socially and environmentally just. She is planting garlic in Moffat, Ontario, in November 2021.

In Pictures

Eduardo Leal
Fátima Garcia removes the hook from a boca negra off the island of Faial. She has gone to sea daily for 25 years.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
International Criminal Court (ICC) Prosecutor Karim Khan (right) and Ukraine's Prosecutor General Iryna Venediktova visit a site of a mass grave in the town of Bucha, outside Kyiv, Ukraine, April 13.

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A message of love

Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters
A man plays the guitar on a pedestrian promenade along the banks of a river during a five-day Labor Day holiday coming amid COVID-19 concerns in Beijing, May 3, 2022.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back tomorrow. Scott Peterson will have a story from the Donbas region in Ukraine about lessons Ukrainian soldiers have learned so far about fighting the Russians.

If you’d like to learn more about what a post-Roe landscape might look like, we have several stories for you: Why America’s “rights era” is ending, why the Supreme Court decision won’t end the culture war, and why the U.S. is moving in the opposite direction on abortion from many other countries.

More issues

2022
May
03
Tuesday
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