2022
January
21
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 21, 2022
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

Thor Vikström bought his island in the 1960s for $5,000. His goal was to protect and preserve its 7 acres.

Mr. Vikström could see the island, Île Ronde, across a narrow stretch of river from his home near Montreal. He and his family explored it often – at one point they even built a cable ferry across. But the rules were clear: Leave the environment as untouched as possible.

“[My dad would] get mad at us because we left a Coke bottle on the island,” son Hans Vikström told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp.

Over the years the surrounding area, wedged between fast-growing suburbs and the city, became built-up and expensive. Developers came calling, offering increasingly high bids for Île Ronde. 

Mr. Vikström rebuffed them all, saying nature was more valuable than money in his pocket. In December he donated the island to the Nature Conservancy of Canada so the metropolitan area would have a guaranteed spot of green.

In the spring, flocks of wood ducks and other waterfowl land near the island and raise chicks in its cover, Mr. Vikström said when announcing his gift. Turtles sun themselves on the shore. The forests are full of shagbark hickories, a spectacular tree whose bark appears to be falling off like old clothes.

“It is a dream for me now that it is preserved forever,” Mr. Vikström says.

The Nature Conservancy of Canada says it’s thrilled with the gift of valuable land so near an urban center. Individual donations can combine into major collective environmental protection, Joël Bonin, a development and communications official with the organization’s Quebec chapter, told The Washington Post.

“Every time someone makes a gift, it’s for everyone,” said Mr. Bonin.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

HEIDI LEVINE/SPECIAL TO THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
The Solomon family, suitcases packed, prepare to leave Tel Aviv for a new life in Canada. The asylum-seekers from Eritrea tried to rebuild their lives in Israel but weren’t granted refugee status.

Jewish Canadians, upset over Israel’s hard-line policies toward asylum-seekers, are sponsoring the relocation of Eritrean families from Israel to Canada. They believe Jews are morally obligated to help others who have been persecuted – “to welcome the stranger.” 

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Robbie Stewart poses for a photo in his East Boston neighborhood on Jan. 19, 2022. Mr. Stewart went into the nuclear industry because he wanted to be part of fighting climate change. While getting his Ph.D. at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he co-founded the company Boston Atomics.

Nuclear energy has been pushed into decline by a host of concerns, from waste to disasters like Fukushima. But new technology and a rising group of climate pragmatists may be changing that.

The squabbles between Russia and the West over whether to recognize each other’s vaccines are undermining a critical bridge between the two: Russians who travel between East and West.

Our top picks for this month include books about striving to realize the American dream, looking beyond old patterns, searching for answers to racial divisions in America, and celebrating the lives of creative individuals. 


The Monitor's View

Like many pro-democracy uprisings, the one in Sudan has had its share of setbacks. An entrenched military, despite having aided the ouster of an unpopular dictator in 2019 and made promises of civilian rule, has killed or arrested hundreds of protesters. Soldiers have wielded sexual violence against women and girls. The latest street confrontations since Jan. 2 hint at a long struggle for freedom.

Yet there is one casualty the putschist generals have failed to claim. It is what some protesters call “the joy of the mawkib.” And it may be central to bringing democracy to this largely Islamic country on the upper Nile.

Mawkib refers to the pro-democracy marches that brought down the 30-year military regime of Omar al-Bashir in 2019 and have continued ever since, often weekly. More than protest rallies, they are celebrations of unity, safety, and a sense of shared responsibility to one another.

“The celebrations are expressed in different manners, like slogans and songs,” explained Mai Azzam, a Sudanese civil society activist and an anthropologist, in a recent essay for the Chr. Michelsen Institute in Norway. “But they all share one common feature – the spirit of joy. It is not only a celebration of a ‘yet to come’ victory. It is also about creating a collective memory and celebrating unfinished historical revolutions.”

Mawkib allows for the possibility of victory, she writes. That spirit will be needed in Sudan. The country of 44 million people has largely been under military rule since gaining independence in 1956. This has created a tradition of protests that embrace the full range of civilian society – professionals, youth, artists, musicians, and especially women. Given the central role that women have played in Sudan’s protest tradition, the country has a unique opportunity to forge a new model of accommodation between Islam, democracy, and the rights of women.

In recent days, foreign diplomats have visited the capital, Khartoum, to stop the violence and to restore a civilian-led transitional government. The United States has suspended financial aid. In a rare public rebuke, 55 Sudanese judges condemned the military of “the most heinous violations against defenseless protesters.” Given its gun power and its willingness to kill and jail dissidents, the military junta embraces a United Nations call for mediation – perhaps as a chance to buy time. Pro-democracy groups are wary. Further talks risk legitimizing a cabal that has grabbed power through violence and controls much of the country’s wealth. How Sudan creates a certain path toward democracy may hold valuable lessons for other societies challenging military rule.

One outcome is already certain. Facing down violence with daily demonstrations of unity and determined joy, protesters have already won a battle for the legitimacy of civilian rule. That spirit may yet win converts in the military ranks and eventually prove that guns are not as powerful as the rightful ideals of the protesters.


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.

God is always communicating angels of inspiration to us – and an openness to this divine wisdom paves the way for healing, as a college basketball player experienced after sleeping poorly and feeling ill before a game.


A message of love

Stephen R. Sylvanie/USA TODAY Sports NPSTrans TopPic
A young Montreal Canadiens fan watches team warmups before a game against the Vegas Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena on Jan. 21, 2022, in Las Vegas.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Come back Monday, when we’ll have a story on whether big new infrastructure projects, such as a tourist “Mayan Train,” can bring prosperity to Mexico’s Indigenous communities. 

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2022
January
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