2021
September
17
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 17, 2021
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Linda Feldmann
Washington Bureau Chief

Susan Coti has long been an educator. On Sept. 11, 2001, she was my daughter’s fourth-grade teacher at John Eaton Elementary School in Washington, D.C. Today, she helps run a nonprofit for Burmese teachers of English in Myanmar.

The pandemic halted in-person training, and then the military coup in February suspended the program altogether. This past week, Gift of Education started a new program teaching children who are unable to attend government schools. And students are eager: Two walk 35 minutes each way from a teak logging camp in the mountains to a village with internet access. 

Ms. Coti’s professional evolution didn’t happen in a vacuum. In 2012, her Marine son, Niall Coti-Sears, was killed by an IED in Afghanistan. Ever since, this Gold Star mom has devoted herself to honoring the life of her only child in ways he would find meaningful. 

Niall was a musician interested in Buddhism, and Ms. Coti channeled her energy toward funding an instrumental program at a music school in Yangon, Myanmar. Then she pivoted toward the training of English teachers, and joined forces with Sunda Khin, founder of Gift of Education. 

“We believe it will elevate the economic and social growth of Myanmar,” Ms. Coti says. “Everybody wants to learn English.” 

And how has she processed the U.S. pullout from Afghanistan? 
 
“Even though the Taliban have taken over again (inevitable), I am glad we are out of there,” she writes in an email. “Niall felt he was doing something good there, and that means a lot to me. I won’t go down the ‘died for nothing’ road.”
 
“I just have to do something to keep moving forward and remembering Niall in a positive way,” she says. “It nourishes me and hopefully the world.”


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/The Christian Science Monitor/File
Shogofa Sediqi, then a producer for the all-women's channel Zan TV, at the broadcaster's studios on Sept. 16, 2019, in Kabul, Afghanistan. Zan TV closed abruptly with the Taliban's return. “It is a challenging time for [female journalists] these days,” says Ms. Sediqi, in Canada after a rushed exit from Afghanistan. “All our achievements were destroyed and wasted.”

How well, and how long, the Taliban will tolerate independent journalism will be telling. Many Afghan reporters fled amid threats, but others stayed, boldly continuing to do their jobs.

Carlos Osorio/Reuters
Canada's Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau answers questions from reporters during an election campaign stop in Montreal, Sept.16, 2021. Though Mr. Trudeau has been subject to harassment on the campaign trail by opponents of vaccine mandates, political analysts say the campaign has largely not been polarized.

Canadians have watched concernedly as political polarization has divided the United States. But centrism appears to be winning the day in Canada’s national elections.

Tatiana Meel/Reuters
A campaign poster for a Just Russia party candidate is seen at sunset in Vladivostok, Russia, Sept. 12, 2021. Just Russia is one of 14 parties approved to run candidates for the State Duma without having to undergo demanding, extra vetting by the Central Election Commission.

Why do opposition-minded Russians vote in the elections? Because despite the state's tight controls over parties and the dirty tricks of the ruling United Russia, voting can make a difference.

Graphic

Pandemic took bite out of US economy. Yet millions escaped poverty.

During economic hard times, one role that government can play is shock absorber. New Census Bureau data show the difference that Congress’ quick assistance for millions of Americans made in 2020.

SOURCE:

U.S. Census Bureau, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, World Bank

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Jacob Turcotte and Mark Trumbull/Staff

Essay

Ashley Garrett/Courtesy of Bedlam
Anne Elliot (understudy Sarah Rose Kearns) and Capt. Wentworth (Rajesh Bose) sit in a carriage during a rehearsal for Bedlam theater company's off-Broadway production of Jane Austen's "Persuasion."

How relevant is the work of Jane Austen to a society making its way through a pandemic – and a racial reckoning? With more stage and screen versions of “Persuasion” emerging, an essayist considers the intersection of Regency times and ours.


The Monitor's View

Extreme weather events, many of which are rooted in climate change, could displace some 216 million people within their own countries by 2050, finds a new study from the World Bank. And that is only in poorer countries. Another study estimates that every additional day each year with an average temperature of about 90 degrees Fahrenheit adds nearly 1% to the number of climate migrants. Added to the tens of millions of people who have fled war or political strife – as witnessed in Afghanistan – solutions to forced migration are more urgent than ever.

The World Bank’s new research, titled Groundswell 2.0, offers this suggestion: If governments take quick remedial action they could cut internal migration, and the hardships it brings, by as much as 60% to 80%. The action most needed would be to reduce worldwide emissions of greenhouse gases. A United Nations Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP26) is scheduled to be held in early November in Glasgow, Scotland, a follow-up to the Paris climate accords of 2015.

As governments struggle to pledge and keep promises to reduce emissions, the World Bank says concurrent steps can be taken to build resiliency and fend off the worst effects of climate migration. These include ways to help people stay in their homes, as well as to help in their movement to and resettlement in new locations.

In Egypt, for example, parts of the Nile delta are projected to be places of out-migration. Several cities, including Cairo, should expect to receive these refugees. The report notes that planners could identify places most likely to be hit hardest by climate change and help more climate-resilient areas prepare to take in migrants.

Many other ways to help ease climate migration are available. More drought-resistant crops, for example, are being developed that could help keep farmers home. Rooftop water harvesting can be used to irrigate fields.

In some villages in India where water harvesting and other water conservation methods are being undertaken, climate migration has been reversed and migrants are returning to their homes, says Sunita Narain, director general of the Center for Science and Environment in New Delhi, in a recent interview with The Times of India. “It is essential to invest in building local climate resilience and protecting community economies,” she added.

Ways to mitigate climate migration are becoming well known. Even as nations try to curb carbon emissions, they can also put measures in place to solve the rising displacement of people by weather disasters.


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.

Whether the “fires” we’re faced with are literal or figurative, we can turn to God for inspiration that guides us safely through – no matter our age or location.


A message of love

Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters
Competitors take part in the senior horse class at the Irish National Ploughing Championships in Ratheniska, Ireland, Sept. 16, 2021. The competition is closed to the general public due to the pandemic.

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us. Please come again Monday, when the Monitor’s Lenora Chu explores how Chancellor Angela Merkel changed Germany – and the world – after 16 years in office.

More issues

2021
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