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Monitor Daily Podcast

May 22, 2023
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Last week, Otis Taylor finally received his high school diploma in his 70s. 

Mr. Taylor, a celebrated blues musician, was the guest of honor at Manual High School in Denver. The occasion was more than just a graduation ceremony. It was an act of atonement. 

In 1966, Manual High School expelled Mr. Taylor after he refused an ultimatum.

“‘Cut your hair, or you won’t graduate,’” recalls Mr. Taylor in a phone call. “It was very simple.”

His hair wasn’t that long, just a little fluffy on the sides. But administrators at the mostly Black school targeted students, including white hippies, who weren’t regulars at a barber shop. Back then, Mr. Taylor stood out as different. He was a Black kid who played a banjo while riding a unicycle. The teenager listened to the Paul Butterfield Blues Band and Muddy Waters. 

Asked what happened after he was expelled, the musician offers a wry response: “I just became Otis Taylor.”

The nonconformist artist has released 16 albums, including the 2023 release “Banjo ...” His hard-to-classify sound, which he dubs “trance blues,” centers around the banjo. The songwriter is drawn to exploring injustices faced by Native Americans and African Americans. But his unconventional approach kept him out of the mainstream. His belated breakthrough came in 2009 when director Michael Mann featured the song “Ten Million Slaves” in the movie “Public Enemies.” More recently, the National Museum of African American Music in Nashville, Tennessee, has also recognized Mr. Taylor’s work. Now, the musician’s alma mater has made amends for failing to support the musician’s individuality.

“It’s the antithesis to who we are as Manual today, that type of discrimination,” says school principal Joe Glover in a phone call. “Now we embrace that creativity. We embrace that uniqueness. ... You could tell this was meaningful and powerful for him.”

Mr. Taylor doesn’t begrudge choosing an unusual path in life.

“I have two kids. A beautiful wife, married for 37 years,” he says. “Why should I have regrets?”

Describing the graduation ceremony as a surreal experience, Mr. Taylor jokes, “Now I can apply for the Berklee school of music.” 

Editor’s note: This story has been updated to correct an error about Mr. Taylor’s race. He is Black.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Jae C. Hong/AP
Farmland is submerged in Corcoran, California, April 20, 2023, after record-setting rain and snowfall. Since Tulare Lake appeared this spring, it has grown to 100 square miles.

Tulare Lake, which didn’t exist mere months ago, could overwhelm a town and two state prisons. To meet the challenge, local, state, and even federal agencies are having to work together.

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A difficult job market demands compromise. In China, record-high unemployment has leaders urging youth to “struggle” in the name of national rejuvenation, but young job seekers are hoping for a more balanced lifestyle.

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Army Staff Sgt. Alex Henninger kisses the head of his newborn son, Hugo.

Men and women make big work commitments in military service, but they often also have big commitments in family life. A new paid leave policy aims to help military families find a better balance. 

Commentary

Timothy D. Easley/AP/File
Pro Football Hall of Famer Jim Brown meets with other participants of the Muhammad Ali Humanitarian Award at the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, Kentucky, Sept. 27, 2014.

Jim Brown was the paragon of football running backs, whose athletic feats defied belief. But he saw himself, first and foremost, as a man fighting for the freedom of those around him – and himself.

In Pictures

JOANNA JOHNSON
An American tourist uses a leaf brush on an elephant at Patara Elephant Farm in Chiang Mai, Thailand, in early 2023. Westerners have been both eager participants in and sharp critics of elephant tourism in Thailand.

Elephant tourism brings joy to many who visit Thailand. As the industry rebounds from a pandemic pause, so too has discussion of how to best care for the beloved beasts.


The Monitor's View

Despite five weeks of civil war between factions of a military junta, the people of Sudan have shown remarkable enterprise and resolve. Many are caring for one another. Youth groups have launched apps to help people find resources. Doctors and women’s groups are working together to record incidents of sexual violence committed by soldiers.

Such civic activism helps explain why the two warring generals – erstwhile partners in a 2021 coup – have felt compelled to reassert their democratic intentions despite turning on each other. In early May, they signed an agreement vowing to uphold international legal norms for protecting civilians. And today their respective forces were set to begin observing a weeklong cease-fire to enable the flow of humanitarian supplies to besieged citizens.

The truce, brokered over the weekend by the United States and Saudi Arabia, is meant to be a first step toward restoring Sudan’s interrupted transition back to civilian rule. It concedes an important point. By “ensuring full, safe, and unhindered movement for all humanitarian organizations, civil society groups and community organizations,” it acknowledges that political legitimacy rests not with the force of arms but in self-government.

“We have been moved by the courage and resilience of the people of Sudan, their desire for change, and their attachment to principles of justice and freedom,” said Volker Türk, the United Nations’ human rights chief, during the cease-fire talks. For peace to be sustainable, stable, and just, he said, it must be built on “bedrock commitments of accountability, non-discrimination and participation.” 

Sudan has struggled since 2019 when pro-democracy groups toppled a military dictatorship that had lasted 30 years. A civilian-led transitional government was established with the military’s tacit support. But two years later, just as that government was set to publish a report on corruption in companies tied to the armed forces, the generals seized back power.

An alliance between thee generals prevailed for a time against an array of professional and civil society groups seeking a restoration of democracy. But last month the political and economic competition between the two main armed factions erupted in urban warfare. More than a million people have fled into Sudan’s already fragile neighbors.

The civil society groups that formed the backbone of Sudan’s pro-democracy movement have now become, as regional expert Alex de Waal described them recently, the only functioning civic government in the country, “repurposed ... as emergency networks for community information, protection, and supplying humanitarian essentials.” 

Sudan’s conflict has raised concerns of destabilizing a region beset by drought, hunger, and myriad other conflicts. But it is also reinforcing a civil strength. By tying “the slogan ‘no to war’ with practical assistance,” Muzan Alneel, co-founder of a Sudanese technology institute, wrote earlier this month, “a truly realistic and sustainable approach is being created by the people of Sudan in the face of war.”


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.

Turning to a spiritual, Godlike view of those who oppose us opens a path to progress.


Viewfinder

Amy Harris/Invision/AP
Festivalgoers attend the Welcome To Rockville Music Festival on Sunday, May 21, 2023, at the Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Fla. The four-day event attracted an estimated 170,000 people who enjoyed 95 acts – and showed off a wide variety of hairstyles, costumes (including an inflatable dinosaur), and body art.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for reading our stories today. Please do share your favorites with friends and family. Tomorrow’s issue will look at how Saudi Arabia, the world’s second-largest oil producer, is a surprising new player in the fight against climate change.

More issues

2023
May
22
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