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As Palestinians stream home to a devastated northern Gaza, attention is turning to the work of political reconstruction, too. Fifteen months of war has decimated the leadership of Hamas, which ignited the conflict with its cross-border raid. The Monitor’s Taylor Luck and Ghada Abdulfattah outline the big challenge in the Gaza Strip: Hamas knows that its default rule will keep it blockaded by Israel, and keep reconstruction aid at bay. But its options are complicated.
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Monitor journalism changes lives because we open that too-small box that most people think they live in. We believe news can and should expand a sense of identity and possibility beyond narrow conventional expectations.
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Headlines from AP and Reuters
And why we wrote them
( 5 min. read )
A key aim of Israel’s war against Hamas was to eliminate the militant group. But with the ceasefire, Hamas has reasserted its rule over Gaza, emerging from its tunnels to stage rallies and parades. Hamas says it is ready to hand over the government of the strip, if not its weapons. It is proving hard, though, to find another entity that is both ready to take that responsibility and acceptable to all sides.
( 8 min. read )
Utah Sen. John Curtis, like his predecessor, doesn’t always agree with President Donald Trump. “I view myself as somebody who has commitment to my constitutional responsibility,” he tells the Monitor, “and I’m not a rubber stamp.” His approach also leaves more room for consensus – and shows how the Senate Republican Party has changed compared with when President Trump first won office.
( 3 min. read )
Every two years, America’s schoolchildren get a report card on math and reading. The latest results show students falling further behind. Lackluster outcomes are sparking questions about what else, besides pandemic disruption, may be hindering students from achieving their full academic potential. Chronic absenteeism, for example, continues to be a problem.
( 6 min. read )
The U.S. military says its personnel face increased levels of mental health distress amid a rise in dangerous operations. That has led the Navy to focus more on the spiritual needs of sailors, drawing from some 200 faith groups. It’s about shared purpose, says the head of the U.S. Navy’s chaplain corps. “We help sailors make sense of what they’re doing out there.”
( 5 min. read )
Western sanctions over the invasion of Ukraine were meant to sandbag Russia’s economy. But creative Russian entrepreneurs have been rising to fill some previously unreachable niches vacated by departing brands. “I didn’t wish for this situation, but I’m a Russian who feels patriotic,” says one fashion designer. “Russian customers were looking for equivalent goods, ... and our task was to provide them.”
( 5 min. read )
Artist Lauren Pacheco believes Gary, Indiana, is ripe for rejuvenation. So Ms. Pacheco has devoted considerable energy toward enlivening the cultural heritage of this once-mighty industrial town. She has brought in artists to create vibrant murals and established art archives as guides to the city’s past and current treasures. Her main goal, she says: “getting people to fall in love with Gary the way I did.”
( 2 min. read )
For the people of Ukraine, an election in neighboring Belarus Jan. 26 was well worth watching. It was an example of what they are fighting against. The rigged election kept a dictator of three decades, Alexander Lukashenko, in power – and kept his country of 9.5 million people well within Russia’s orbit of influence.
Yet after the election, officials in Ukraine noted that eventually it will be “the people, not one person,” who will determine whether Belarus becomes democratic. They should know. Ever since the Russian invasion of 2022, Ukraine has relied on its people to not only fight the invaders but also unite around a renewed identity of civic and cultural values – separate from those dictated by the Kremlin.
Ukraine’s struggle has inspired many in Belarus – and those forced to flee the country – to follow suit. “Belarusian national identity, cultures and language are our strongest weapons against the Russian world and Russification,” stated exiled opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya last year.
That task of identity-building began in earnest in 2020 after the last election. To most observers, Ms. Tsikhanouskaya won the vote, a rare case of President Lukashenko allowing a legitimate opposition figure to run. When he kept power, it ignited the largest protests ever seen in Belarus. A harsh clampdown on pro-democracy activists then forced some half-million people into exile.
“My sense of identity is more Belarusian now than it was before 2020,” Kseniya Halubovich, an exiled film director and journalist, told The Kyiv Independent. “I make a conscious effort to avoid reading or watching anything Russian, and I’m grateful that my mind feels so clear and free from that imperialistic influence.”
Much of what connects the exiled community is renewed interest in speaking the Belarusian language – regarded as a symbol of freedom – and in learning about the country’s history and arts. One example is a current exhibit in Scotland. It shows 200 figurative drawings of political prisoners held by the regime and was done by artist Ksisha Angelova, who fled her country in 2021.
The exiled author, Hanna Komar, said the struggle to define a cultural identity has changed him. “The identities I once took pride in, like being a writer or an activist, now feel distant,” she told The Kyiv Independent. “More and more, I find myself thinking that what truly matters is simply being a decent human.” Sometimes standing up to a dictator first requires knowing what you stand for.
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.
( 4 min. read )
Rather than shackling or limiting us, our unity with God gives us wholeness and health.
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The Church publishes the Monitor because it sees good journalism as vital to progress in the world. Since 1908, we’ve aimed “to injure no man, but to bless all mankind,” as our founder, Mary Baker Eddy, put it.
Here, you’ll find award-winning journalism not driven by commercial influences – a news organization that takes seriously its mission to uplift the world by seeking solutions and finding reasons for credible hope.
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