2021
May
03
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 03, 2021
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

The National Football League’s draft is both a commodification of talent and a career gateway. Follow the safety protocols, guard those finances, and a player might carry family and friends into better lives. 

This year’s draft wrapped up over the weekend and delivered, as always, some warm backstories about athletes already honoring the places from which they came.

Najee Harris, a standout running back at the University of Alabama, dropped in on a watch party at a homeless shelter in Richmond, California, before the first round – in which he’d go to the Pittsburgh Steelers – got underway. He brought food and gratitude. He and his parents and four siblings had lived at the shelter for a few years when he was growing up.

“There was a time I needed a helping hand,” he told Sports Illustrated. “They gave us an opportunity to get back on our feet. So it is my job to give back.”

Kwity Paye, a defensive end from the University of Michigan, was born in a refugee camp in Guinea to a Liberian mother who’d witnessed atrocities and escaped a refugee camp in Sierra Leone on foot – eventually making it to Rhode Island where she worked double shifts in nursing homes.

Mr. Paye got to play at a Catholic high school, approaching the game “with a monklike gravity,” as an ESPN profile put it. A first-round pick of the Indianapolis Colts, Mr. Paye has a goal beyond NFL success – to make it easier for other people who want to become U.S. citizens.

“Being able to become someone of status and then go back to my community, and ... uplift them?” he told ESPN. “That’s something I look forward to.”


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Tomorrow the high court takes up a case that, for many, epitomizes the racial injustice bound up in sentencing rules left over from the war on drugs. Will its decision herald reform?

Maksim Blinov/Sputnik/AP
Electric buses in Moscow's new environmentally friendly fleet are lined up during the launching ceremony in Moscow Dec. 25, 2020. The new buses are just one of the projects the city has rolled out to try to fight its horrible traffic problems.

A top-down commitment to improving public works could make Moscow, a legendarily snarled city, easier to get around in, and greener too. We look at the complex roots of a priority shift.

Ralph Jennings
Boats used to catch flying fish sit ready to launch at Yayo Village on Orchid Island, Taiwan, April 10, 2021. Flying fish are a staple of local cuisine.

The pandemic has put many tourism hot spots in peril. We found one that’s thriving, but one where locals also have a message for visitors: More important than your money is your respect.

Karen Norris/Staff

Difference-maker

Noah Robertson/The Christian Science Monitor
Kwesi Billups (right) and volunteers at Project Eden hold homegrown Swiss chard at the greenhouse in Southeast Washington, April 17, 2021. Project Eden distributes its produce, along with donations from the Capital Area Food Bank, at a nearby church.

Nourishment takes different forms. Planting a community oasis in a food desert is about much more than nutrition. It’s also about opportunity, and healing.


The Monitor's View

India is now home to 1 in 3 new coronavirus cases around the globe. But that is not India’s only burden. It also accounts for nearly 60% of the global increase in poverty caused by the pandemic. The COVID-19 recession in India has increased the number of poor people – or those living on less than $2 a day – by 75 million.

Yet despite the grim numbers, the South Asian nation has done something quite well over the past year. It has managed to feed most of its 1.3 billion people, a result of more than a half-century of reforms aimed at ending the country’s history of famines.

While the world rushes to help India deal with the pandemic, it also has something to learn from India’s ability to find new ways to combat hunger.

A new report from the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) gives one reason food kept flowing during the crisis. “India’s rapid policy actions and effective coordination across national, state, and local institutions helped buffer the initial shocks to health and nutrition programs. This success reflects India’s decades of investments in social-safety-net infrastructure, particularly recent investments in direct and cash benefit transfers,” the report states.

Such lessons will be needed in 2021. The United Nations estimates the number of people vulnerable to severe hunger will nearly double because of the pandemic. And the COVID-19 crisis has exposed many weaknesses in the global food system. As a result, the U.N. plans to hold the Food Systems Summit 2021 in September to transform how the world produces and consumes food.

Compared with food summits going back to the 1970s, this one offers a new conceptual shift, writes Julie Howard, an adviser to the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Instead of a focus on simply growing more food, it holds “the possibility of reshaping the global food system to become more productive, resilient, sustainable and healthy.”

Besides India, a number of countries have responded well in providing food during the crisis. “Although income losses caused serious, potentially persistent declines in food security and nutrition, food supply chains proved more resilient than expected,” states the IFPRI report. “Also importantly, as food systems’ central role and capacity for adaptation were demonstrated, the momentum needed to change our food systems for the better increased in 2020.”

That momentum will be on display this fall, when world leaders gather in New York for the food summit. By then, India hopes to be on top of the pandemic. As it is, it can offer lessons on how it constantly innovates in agriculture and in other aspects of the food supply. In times of crisis, those lessons pay off.


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.

Is there a way out of substance abuse? A woman who persistently struggled with addiction and mental health problems found that getting to know God more deeply brought complete healing.


A message of love

Vladimir Pirogov/Reuters
A family that was evacuated after recent clashes on the Kyrgyzstan-Tajikistan border is seen in a school that has been turned into a temporary shelter in the town of Batken in southern Kyrgyzstan, May 3, 2021. For the past 30 years, the border between Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan has been a site of recurring tensions related to land and water rights.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for kicking off another week with us. Tomorrow we’ll be back in the U.S. capital, and back on the subject of food aid, with an audio story (to give your eyes a screen break) about an organization that pivoted to serving first-time recipients – with special attention to preserving their dignity. 

More issues

2021
May
03
Monday

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