2021
October
28
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 28, 2021
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An important thing happened when East Londoner Barbara Grossman met her member of Parliament. She felt included. She felt connected. She felt her bonds with her own community – and the government – became stronger.

If there’s a lesson in today’s Daily, that’s it. Democracy must build connections and create a steadily larger sense of community. But that work is not easy, and perhaps too easily reversed. 

Through Ms. Grossman and others, our Shafi Musaddique looks at the importance of politicians’ connections with their communities in the wake of a tragic killing. Can Britain keep that openness despite new security threats? Other stories in today’s issue point to the importance of the answer. Japanese democracy has in many ways stagnated because the rules for participation simply enforce the status quo. Sudanese women have won unprecedented freedoms during the past few years, but a new coup could snuff them out.

In its purest state, democracy promotes freedom and responsibility, expands our sense of community, and promises universal inclusion. Humanity is still wrestling with the enormity of those demands. Our graphic on how Indigenous communities in the United States were systematically dispossessed of their lands is proof. 

But our final article about the historical discoveries of an author investigating Black lives during the 1700s and 1800s hints at the promise. Progress toward real, universal freedom and equality reveals troves of human richness. How are our democracies wrestling with that demand today? From Britain to Sudan, we offer a window into the struggle.


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

The course of Joe Biden’s presidency will likely be set in the coming days by the fate of his two signature bills.

Issei Kato/Reuters
A candidate from Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party waves to voters in Tokyo from a van on the first day of campaigning for Sunday's lower house election. The party has governed Japan almost continuously since it was formed in 1955.

Can democratic values thrive when one political party enjoys an almost unbreakable grip on government? Upcoming elections show how Japan is grappling with that question.

Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah/Reuters
Women sit in a car as they watch a screening of the Sudanese European Film Festival at an outdoor, drive-thru cinema for visitors, adhering to coronavirus restrictions, in Khartoum, Sudan, on Feb. 28, 2021. Women have made significant gains since the fall of a dictatorship in 2019, but a military coup this week threatens to undo progress.

Sudan’s women have had the most to gain since the fall of a dictatorship in 2019. After this week’s military coup, they have the most to lose – so they’re taking up their historic place on the front lines to fight back.

The face-to-face meetings that British parliamentarians hold with voters might seem quaint, but they are a bulwark of democracy. After the stabbing of a British MP, they are under threat.

Graphic

Beyond ‘Trail of Tears’: Tracing Indigenous land dispossession in US

The story of how Indigenous people in the present-day U.S. were dispossessed of their land is known in part. But new research is offering a fuller picture.

SOURCE:

“Effects of land dispossession and forced migration on Indigenous peoples in North America,” Justin Farrell, et al., Science 374

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Books

Courtesy of Red Planet Pictures/ITV 2019
This scene from "Sanditon" on PBS features Charlotte Heywood, played by Rose Williams. Intrigued by the biracial character Georgiana Lambe in Jane Austen's unfinished novel "Sanditon," author Vanessa Riley set out to learn more about Black women in Regency and colonial times.

As historians unearth the stories of Black lives in British colonial times, novelists like Vanessa Riley are lending imagination and romance to efforts to right the historical record.


The Monitor's View

Growing up in Dallas as a devout Muslim decades ago, Rashad Hussain noticed only a few mosques in his Texas city. Now there are dozens, an affirmation, he says, of the American freedom to worship. On Tuesday, a Senate panel welcomed him as the president’s nominee to be ambassador-at-large for international religious freedom. If approved by the full Senate as expected, he would be the first Muslim to hold the position, marking a strong break from past bigotry against Islam in the United States.

Major Christian and Jewish leaders endorsed the nomination, noting Mr. Hussain’s work under two previous presidents in seeking religious harmony in troubled countries and finding ways to prevent young Muslims from joining terrorist groups. As he said in his testimony, “In an era of vigorous partisan debates, Americans continue to be largely of one mind regarding the importance of defending international religious freedom.”

His appointment would affirm a recent finding by the Institute for Economics and Peace. In a global survey, the think tank found that religious plurality in countries can have a pacifying effect, countering the notion that religion is a driver of violence and the main cause of conflicts.

The post of envoy for religious freedom, created by Congress in 1998, reflects both a basic right in the U.S. and the country’s long and hard struggle to protect it. “Our own experience, our own example, is what compels us to advocate for the rights of the marginalized, vulnerable, and underrepresented peoples the world over,” said Mr. Hussain.

His past work includes working with Middle East religious leaders on a 2016 document, known as the Marrakesh Declaration, that laid out Islamic principles for protecting the rights of minority religious groups. As someone who memorized the Quran and earned a Yale law degree, he relies on positive ways to end religious discrimination.

During the Obama administration, for example, he sought to create constructive paths for young Muslims to express their faith rather than being tempted to join the Islamic State group. He worked in Muslim countries to offer alternatives to media that dehumanized non-Muslims.

His main diplomatic tactic is to convene people of different faiths for heartfelt dialogues, pushing them to rely on each religion’s concept of love. As the late Jonathan Sacks, the former chief rabbi of Britain, wrote, “To insist that being loved entails that others be unloved is to fail to understand love itself.”

Many people of minority religions, from Muslims in China to Christians in Vietnam, share a common experience of persecution. “I am committed to fighting, day in and day out, for their rights,” he told the senators. It is a right he knows well from the days when he freely worshipped as a Muslim in Dallas.


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 the nature of existence more than what meets the eye? Considering our identity from a spiritual perspective brings a powerful new view of reality that heals – as a woman experienced after badly injuring her arm.


A message of love

Pilar Olivares/Reuters
Children roll cooking gas cylinders to help their mother get them home in the Vila Vintém area of Rio de Janeiro, Oct. 28, 2021. She was able to buy the cylinders at a fair price, as part of an initiative organized by the Federation of Oil Workers, amid high energy prices caused by inflation.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when we look at what progress looks like at a high-stakes global summit on climate change that begins next week. 

More issues

2021
October
28
Thursday

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