2022
October
12
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 12, 2022
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Trudy Palmer
Cover Story Editor

I had a classic Monitor moment last night. Fred Weir’s story about parents and teachers in Russia pushing back against the government’s required patriotism lessons reminded me that you can’t judge citizens by their leader.

Schoolchildren were already top of mind for me because of a chipped, cracked serving bowl I reluctantly threw out over the weekend.

For well over a year, every time I used it, I wondered if that would be the moment the crack would worsen and the bowl would split. Finally, I decided to replace it.

Why was it so difficult to let it go? Because two little labels with my last name and an old phone number were still stuck to the bottom after countless washings. Seeing them always brought back memories of my daughter’s school days when I’d use the bowl to take a salad of some sort to a school potluck celebrating something or other. It didn’t really matter what.

The love in the classroom or playground or wherever we gathered was palpable. We loved our kids and were doing the best we could for them. 

So are those Russian parents Fred wrote about, I realized. In trickier educational settings than I have ever faced, they are doing their best to pass along family values – instead of what many call propaganda – to their kids. 

If they have school potlucks in Russia, I’m pretty sure I know what they feel like. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

SOURCE:

U.S. Census Bureau, Harvard University's Joint Center for Housing Studies

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Patterns

Tracing global connections
Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Q&A

Points of Progress

What's going right

In Pictures

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Brothers Leigh (right) and Penn Parseghian admire an apple they’ve just picked at Honey Pot Hill Orchards in Stow, Massachusetts, Sept. 24. The family recently moved to the area from Southern California. This was the boys’ first time picking their own apples.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
People walk near the Lebanese border as Israeli navy boats patrol the Mediterranean Sea.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Khalid al-Mousily/Reuters
Students walk to school on the first day of the new school term in the Old City of Mosul, Iraq, Oct. 12, 2022.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

It was great to have you with us today. Join us again tomorrow for a look at why the protests in Iran have persisted so long and how the women’s role has been a unifying factor in a variety of ways.

More issues

2022
October
12
Wednesday
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