2021
May
18
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 18, 2021
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In prison, inmates make an average of 100 decisions a day, Bev Sharp says. For those on the outside, the average is about 30,000. “In prison, everything is decided for you,” she tells the “100 Days in Appalachia” podcast. Simply making decisions is a skill that can be lost. And that points to how incarceration is not simply a matter of walls and bars, but a mental state that can linger after prison doors open.

In today’s issue, Francine Kiefer examines how two inmates in a Los Angeles jail help others struggling with mental health issues. Ms. Sharp aims to help West Virginians when they leave prison. In 2015, she helped the state’s Council of Churches start a reentry program. Its goal is connection, and workers like Jeremiah Nelson are on the front line.

In so many ways, success in society depends on networks of connection and support. Finding housing, for example, can be so hard that some people simply stay in prison. “You can just sit in prison for no other reason than you have no place to go,” he says. But the deeper aim is to kindle those connections into genuine opportunity – when former prisoners see a purpose and a future. “The biggest inhibitor for a lot of people is a lack of hope,” says Mr. Nelson. “The biggest contributor to recidivism is giving up hope.”


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

President Joe Biden has called for a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, but there’s little sense the U.S. is an equal broker in the conflict. Nor has it been for decades.

A deeper look

A sea change in thinking about gender equality – and a powerful woman at the top – mean the European Union might realize a long unfulfilled goal: equal pay for equal work.

Stepping Up

Profiles in Leadership
Ann Hermes/Staff
From left, Adrian Berumen and Craigen Armstrong, two inmates at the Twin Towers Correctional Facility, sit for a portrait in one of the FIP Stepdown pods on May 6, 2021, in Los Angeles. With the help of the mental health professionals in the jail, Mr. Armstrong and Mr. Berumen have become mental health assistants, supporting their peers while awaiting trial.

From the squalid conditions of the Los Angeles County jail has emerged a potential model for how to address mental illness. The secret? Administering regular doses of brotherly love.

U.S. Army
A U.S. Army soldier wears a newly approved ponytail hair style. Along with being more comfortable for some women than a bun, it provides a better fit for helmets and gas masks.

What may seem like a superficial change in grooming standards signals a dramatic change in attitudes about military strength.

Books

“All things seem possible in May,” wrote American naturalist Edwin Way Teale. Our picks for this month transport readers through a bountiful landscape of books that enliven and illuminate.


The Monitor's View

After days of Israel-Gaza violence that has killed hundreds, the Arab citizens of Israel and Palestinians on the West Bank did something peaceful Tuesday. They went on a one-day general strike in solidarity with Palestinians in East Jerusalem who are using legal means to claim land they have lived on for decades. Instead of throwing stones or launching rockets, the strikers boycotted businesses.

The nonviolent tactic was echoed in a little-noticed action by a top Arab politician in Israel, Mansour Abbas. On Sunday, the chairman of the United Arab List coalition visited a burnt-out synagogue in the city of Lod, a mixed Arab-Jewish city that was the scene of violent clashes after the outbreak of the latest Hamas-Israel war.

“We must begin rehabilitating the synagogue in Lod,” the Arab leader said. “Even in times of war, Islamic values forbid harming holy places.” He advocated for a healing after the violence.

In recent days, many Israeli Arabs have joined peaceful protests – often with Israeli Jews – to end the violence and seek solutions to the many issues that divide Palestinians and Israel. As one protester in Haifa, Tawfiq Nagar, told Haaretz, “It’s not a question of national identity but of values.... We can’t let racism break through again. This is the time to protest together, Arabs and Jews, against police violence and the occupation, and for peace, otherwise hatred will win again and again.”

Last year, Associated Press found a growing number of Palestinians “have embraced nonviolent means of protesting Israel’s military rule and expanding settlements.” Sometimes peaceful actions do have an impact of Israeli institutions. Last month, for example, a court in Jerusalem imposed a fine against a Jewish settler on the West Bank for slapping a prominent pacifist, Issa Amro, as he was walking Palestinian children to a school in Hebron.

Israeli Arabs and Palestinian who do commit to nonviolent means - such street demonstrations, petitions, or general strikes – often learn they can gain allies among Israel Jews and foreign countries. Such tactics also appeal to those exhausted by violence or who see how violence reinforces radicalism on either side.

While few in number, those advocating nonviolence do not get much attention from journalists. Peaceful tactics, however, can often touch hearts, lessen anger, and promote social change.  Like an act of love, they invite an opponent to resolve long standing issues by relying on just means. When that happens, both sides are enabled to build a relationship that allows for just solutions.


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.

How can we bridge the conflicts that divide us? This short podcast by the editor of the Monitor explores a spiritual basis for respect that fosters healing and progress.


A message of love

Bernat Armangue/AP
A member of the Spanish Red Cross comforts a migrant near the border of Morocco and Spain, at the Spanish enclave of Ceuta, on May 18, 2021. Ceuta, a Spanish city of 85,000 in northern Africa, faces a humanitarian crisis after thousands of Moroccans took advantage of relaxed border control in their country to swim or paddle in inflatable boats to European soil. This migrant was sent back to Morocco by Spanish security forces.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Before we let you go, we’d like to direct you to a podcast our Mark Trumbull and Stephanie Hanes Wilson did on whether business can bridge the gap on climate change. The podcast is hosted by the Common Ground Committee and can be found here.

More issues

2021
May
18
Tuesday

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