2023
May
16
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 16, 2023
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Whitney Eulich
Latin America Editor

In 2009 my career trajectory shifted dramatically when I was sent to a university town in the Venezuelan Andes on a Rotary fellowship. I lived with a local family, climbed the steep colonial streets to daily Spanish classes, and learned important lessons in humility (I was a 20-something who didn’t know much beyond “hola” when I arrived).

Hugo Chávez was president, and Venezuela was already struggling with food shortages and political repression, but it was a different universe compared with today. My host family’s six children are now building their careers across the Americas; only their octogenarian parents remain in Venezuela. Economic, political, and human rights crises have pushed more than 7 million people out of Venezuela since 2015.

I often think about Venezuela and the role it has played in my life – I even met my husband there. But, last month reporting along the U.S.–Mexico border was the first time I’ve been so intimately reminded of the country and its people in almost 15 years. The Monitor was at the border reporting a collection of stories in the lead-up to the end of Title 42, a U.S. rule that essentially closed the U.S. border to migrants and asylum-seekers from around the world for the past three years. You can read the latest story from my colleague Christa Case Bryant today.

Nearly every migrant I met in Ciudad Juárez, the Mexican city across from El Paso, Texas, was from Venezuela. When I spoke to the teen mother from Los Llanos who fled police harassment, I was struck by memories of fishing for piranhas just miles from her town. Then there was a group of friends who’d fled the utter lack of opportunity in Mérida. They were standing on a street corner trying to connect to the CBP One app for asylum-seekers, and they generously chatted with me about the shop where I discovered the Venezuelan treasure of tizana (chopped fruit submerged in juice).

Something shifts in a conversation when both parties spot a connection. I wasn’t just the journalist asking about difficult journeys and dreams ahead. And these weren’t just another group of migrants, because whether I’ve been to their hometown or not, each individual showing up at the border has left behind a favorite meal, a community, and roots, in hopes of security and a future.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Daniel Becerril/Reuters
Migrants seeking asylum in the U.S. gather on the Matamoros-Brownsville international border bridge, in Matamoros, Mexico, May 12, 2023.
Press service of "Concord"/Reuters
Wagner mercenary group leader Yevgeny Prigozhin, shown here standing before Wagner fighters in an undisclosed location, threatened to pull his troops back from Bakhmut by May 10. Though he ultimately did not, he continued to slam Russian military leadership.
Lefteris Pitarakis/AP/File
A camp for internally displaced people in al-Bab, in northern Syria, in May 2018. Syria's civil war has left an estimated 6.8 million displaced internally, while more than 5 million fled to neighboring countries.

Books

Karen Norris/Staff

The Monitor's View

AP
Retired Gen. Paulino Coronado, the Colombian commander of soldiers who committed extrajudicial executions, hugs Blanca Nubia Monroy, the mother of one victim of those killings, during a reconciliation event in Soacha, Colombia, May 10, 2022.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

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Nadja Wohlleben/Reuters
Cattle graze outside the Reichstag building in Berlin during a protest by Greenpeace and animal rights activists on May 16, 2023. The issue: how much time the animals should get in pastures and outside barns.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Please come back tomorrow, when we’ll profile a difference-maker who shows school communities how to combat bullying with kindness.

More issues

2023
May
16
Tuesday
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