2022
August
24
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 24, 2022
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As a journalist, I’ve observed that problems often burst into the headlines and quickly sow fear. But solutions tend to emerge quietly. Real hope debuts gradually – like a ship coming over the horizon. 

Perhaps that’s why a steady flow of grain shipments out of Ukraine – 33 shiploads in the past month – has garnered few headlines. 

You’ll recall that late last month, amid fears of a global food shortage, Russia and Ukraine struck a deal to allow grain exports through the blockaded Black Sea. Slowly, shipping has resumed. Of course, it takes time to build trust. War insurance premiums are still high and cut into profits. Every time a Russian missile strikes a Ukrainian port or a military aircraft flies over the demilitarized sea corridor, cargo captains get nervous.

But confidence is building.

The Ukrainian Sea Ports Authority reports some 600,000 tons of grain, mostly wheat and corn, have now reached the global market. The authority expects 100 ships a month will soon be able to make the journey safely. 

One of those 33 ships is the Brave Commander, the first vessel chartered by the U.N.’s World Food Program since the war started. It left the port of Odesa Sunday, Aug. 14, carrying 23,000 metric tons (about 25,000 tons) of Ukrainian wheat. Currently, it’s in a line of ships moving into the Suez Canal, and is expected to arrive in Djibouti on Aug. 31. From there, the grain will be trucked to Ethiopia, where the worst drought in 41 years has left millions facing famine. 

The resumption of Ukrainian (and Russian) grain shipments comes amid an improving global outlook for wheat supplies. Thanks to bigger-than-expected harvests in Canada, the United States, and Russia, the U.S. Department of Agriculture projects world wheat exports to be 5% higher than last year. Prices have fallen 40% since March. “The global situation is becoming a little bit less tight than it was just a few months ago,” Veronica Nigh, a senior economist at the American Farm Bureau Federation, said Tuesday.

Maybe that’s not “big” news. But for a hungry family in Ethiopia, it’s noteworthy and a credible reason for hope.


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Howard LaFranchi/The Christian Science Monitor
Ukrainian-language teacher Oleksii Bezverkhnyii stands in the courtyard of his home, at left, in Mykolaiv, Ukraine, Aug. 23, 2022. When a Russian rocket crashed into a neighboring house in July, his wife and three children had already left to live in Germany. Window glass and shrapnel flew into the children’s bedroom.

For many Ukrainians, celebrating Independence Day this year comes with a sharpened sense of freedom and defiance, our reporter finds. And, for some, a sense of gratitude.

A deeper look

Linda Feldmann/The Christian Science Monitor
Members of Generation Ratify pose behind a sign they set up along Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House during the group's overnight protest, July 30, 2022. They believe the Equal Rights Amendment could offer a path to a constitutional right to abortion.

Political activists under the age of 25, our reporter finds, are dissatisfied with how older generations are fighting for abortion rights. They see themselves as nimble innovators who are adept at using digital tools to influence policies.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Our London columnist looks at the moral complexities around “sportswashing” – an effort to polish a national image by paying large sums to international players and teams. Is it working? 

Colette Davidson
Chris Knutsen (left) makes his way to the end of the field with the ball during a pickup game with the TC Native Lacrosse team in St. Paul, Minnesota, on Aug. 7, 2022.

Lacrosse started as a game that fostered healing, respect, and fun! Our reporter explores how some Indigenous communities today see the sport’s Native American origins and values as a way to nurture cultural resilience. 

In Pictures

Sharafat Ali/VII
The potter’s craft is mostly passed down through families, with both men and women contributing to the effort. Mehmooda Bano lights a fire to keep the earthen pots warm as part of the curing process.

How do you protect the past and the present? Neolithic potters in India have made a group of caves a valuable archaeological site. Yet, there should be a way to also preserve the community of artisans who still live at the site. 


The Monitor's View

In a news report on how Ukraine has changed six months after the Russian invasion, a Financial Times reporter went to an underground music club in the capital, Kyiv. There he saw a DJ at the turntables unfurl a large Ukrainian flag.

“Glory to Ukraine,” the DJ screamed.

“Glory to the heroes,” the crowd screamed back.

Such joyful unity among young Ukrainians may seem like merely wartime patriotism. But it is not. In an Aug. 24 speech marking 31 years of independence from the Russia-dominated Soviet Union, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said a new nation appeared when Ukraine was invaded Feb. 24.

Six months later, “we changed history, changed the world, and changed ourselves. ... We started to respect ourselves,” he said.

As The Kyiv Independent put it, Ukraine is a very different country from a year ago because “its values, ideas, and future are more concrete than ever.”

If love is self-negation and loving one’s neighbors, then Ukrainians learned quickly how to love their country – through the sacrifices of soldiers (more than 9,000 killed) and the selfless giving of those supporting Ukraine’s sovereignty against the second-largest military in the world.

Rather than hold an independence parade on Wednesday, Kyiv displayed the symbols of an empty type of patriotism on its main street: the wrecked tanks from Russia’s failed attempt to take the city in March. That early victory for Ukraine reflected how much its soldiers have absorbed the democratic values that give them an edge – enough liberty to take individual initiative on the battlefield but accountability to the goals of a civilian, elected government.

“We are not afraid because we have complete faith in our defenders, the armed forces of Ukraine,” one civilian, Viktoria Skovroska, told The Wall Street Journal.

Ukraine’s rapid shift in identity shows up in the latest poll taken in July by the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology.

During the early years of independence, a majority of people associated more with a region, language, or ethnicity than with Ukraine as a nation. After two democratic revolutions in 2004 and 2013, 64.4% put Ukrainian citizenship first. Soon after the war started, support of a national civic identity rose to 84.6%.

Even among ethnic Russians in the areas controlled by Moscow, it’s 78%. These numbers defy a claim by Russian President Vladimir Putin that there is no such thing as the Ukrainian nation.

The country’s cohesion around democratic ideals – especially freedom from invasion and the integrity of nation-state borders – serves a purpose beyond Ukraine. It has united the European Union to make sacrifices on Ukraine’s behalf.

“We turned out to be the heart of Europe,” President Zelenskyy told The Washington Post. “And we made this heart beat.”


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

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.

The key to understanding true manhood is understanding that each person is created by God, and therefore finds fulfillment and productivity in expressing good, spiritual qualities.


A message of love

Jordan Simeonov/AP
Mack Rutherford, a 17-year-old British Belgian pilot, waves after he landed in Sofia West Airport in Bulgaria on Aug. 24, 2022. Upon arriving back in the country where his journey kicked off five months ago, Mack expects to claim Guinness World Records for the youngest person to fly solo around the world and the youngest to do so in a microlight plane. His sister, Zara, previously held the microlight record for her solo flight completed when she was 19.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’ve got a story about new television shows and movies featuring increasingly modern and authentic representations of Indigenous people.

More issues

2022
August
24
Wednesday

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