2023
July
05
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 05, 2023
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Ken Makin
Cultural commentator

If Yusef Salaam had lost faith in the justice system, let alone electoral politics, it would have been understandable. As a teenager in 1990, he was convicted of a crime he didn’t commit and spent nearly seven years in jail. 

And yet, Mr. Salaam, one of the five men exonerated of raping and savagely beating a Central Park jogger in 1989, grew more determined. Last week, he won the Democratic primary for a New York City Council seat representing Harlem, making him the strong favorite to win the seat in November. A few months before he announced his candidacy, Mr. Salaam stood at a ceremonial gate that was unveiled to honor the Exonerated Five’s resilience and independence.

“We are here because we persevere,” Mr. Salaam said at the time.

There are times when a gate works as a dam – a prison. Gatekeeping is the activity of limiting access and controlling resources. Martin Luther King Jr. spoke allegorically many years ago about how we might break open the floodgates: “Now is the time for justice to roll down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Dr. King’s reference to the book of Amos wasn’t just aspirational. It was a call to accountability. Even as Mr. Salaam walks in the way of Harlem activists such as Malcolm X and iconic politicians such as Adam Clayton Powell, there are still injustices that profoundly affect Black people. As we highlight the individual stories of the exonerated, we should be mindful that there is a collective of people who seek independence from poverty and homelessness.

The potential that comes from that social uplift is limitless, as Mr. Salaam said when asked about the arc of his life on PBS. “It strikes me as the ultimate justice,” he said. “In faith and in faith communities, they always talk about when God restores, you get back 100 times what was taken.”

Editor’s note: A sentence in this article has been corrected to note Mr. Salaam’s victory was in the primary election.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Ann Scott Tyson/The Christian Science Monitor
Ren Dezhi prepares to take his drove of donkeys into the hills, as he does each day in Shaanxi province, China, May 26, 2023. With little income and a meager pension, he and his wife expect to continue working to support themselves for as long as they can.

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A new window on unmarried Americans

SOURCE:

Pew Research Center

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Difference-maker

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Phungbili Basumatary (left) completes a pass during an ultimate game in Rowmari village, India. She says the sport has allowed her to bond with teammates from different ethnic backgrounds.

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A demonstrator in the Paris suburb of Nanterre runs during violent protests sparked by the fatal police shooting of a 17-year-old driver.

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South African firefighters dance during a break in their morning meeting in Fox Creek, Alberta, on July 4. Several countries, including South Africa, deployed firefighters to Canada to help local efforts to control widespread wildfires. The country has seen more than 3,000 fires this year, according to Yahoo News, burning an area the size of South Carolina and making this the worst fire season on record in Canada.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for spending some time with us today. We hope you’ll come back tomorrow, when our Ira Porter examines the rise of sports betting in the United States. The industry is exploding, but without much consideration for the social cost of silent addiction. We look at what could be done. 

More issues

2023
July
05
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