2022
April
25
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 25, 2022
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

The dateline on the story is a place called Miti. Its subject sounds like something cooked up at MIT: An innovator with a gift for electrical engineering goes DIY on a small-scale hydropower project that also carries the power to change lives.

In fact, the backdrop is the rickety grid in the blackout-prone Democratic Republic of Congo. The innovator: a Congolese nun whose convent helped her get training after she showed an interest in, and an aptitude for, fixing circuitry when things flickered.

“They saw in me the talent [for electrical engineering],” Sister Alphonsine Ciza told Reuters, “so they offered me an opportunity to go study [it].”

That would pay dividends. After a few years of donor funding, beginning in 2015, the convent also secured enough money to build, near a reservoir, a micro-turbine plant that cranks enough energy for the convent, a clinic, and two schools. 

To help children study, and to keep a clinic’s lights on, Sister Alphonsine is not afraid to get her hands dirty greasing the gears.

The power, of course, is clean. While this use of hydro is chiefly about convenience – leaning on cheap, renewable energy – it also sidelines costly, emissions-belching gasoline or diesel generators. So this sister’s confident act also represents a pushback on the perception that the Global South, broadly, is solely a victim in the climate crisis story. 

Miti shows how ingenuity can offset government shortcomings, notes Monica Mark, the Monitor’s Africa editor. It’s also a small example “of how Africa is leapfrogging technology that’s contributing to the climate crisis,” she notes.

Locally, it’s a story of pure practicality.

“Having our own turbine,” one Miti school headmistress tells Reuters, “has been a great relief.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Thibault Camus/AP
Supporters of French President Emmanuel Macron watch a screen in front of the Eiffel Tower as the first election projections are announced in Paris, April 24, 2022. Though Mr. Macron won another term, his margin of victory was 15 percentage-points lower than in 2017, when he also faced far-right politician Marine Le Pen.
AP/File
Large photographs of former South African President Nelson Mandela are displayed at the Nelson Mandela legacy exhibition at the Civic Centre in Cape Town, South Africa, on June 27, 2013.

The Explainer

Bikas Das/AP/File
A crowd gathers in Kolkata, India, to sign up for Aadhaar on May 16, 2012. More than a billion people have enrolled in the digital, biometric ID system since its 2009 launch.

Book review


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Palestinians protest at the compound that houses Al-Aqsa Mosque, known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as the Temple Mount, in Jerusalem's Old City April 22.

A Christian Science Perspective

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A message of love

Jaimi Joy/Reuters
Sam Rerekura of the New Zealand Returned Services attends the dawn service ceremony commemorating Anzac Day in Sydney, April 25, 2022. "Anzac" stands for Australian and New Zealand Army Corps. The day, established after World War I, honors all those killed in military operations. At the Anzac Day ceremony, those present repeat the words "We will remember them." After a pause, this is followed by "Lest we forget."
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting another week with us. Stop back tomorrow. As the 30th anniversary of the Rodney King verdict and Los Angeles riots nears, our Francine Kiefer takes a deep look at the shifts in understanding of police violence, racism, and justice that have occurred since those events. 

Also, the passing this weekend of Orrin Hatch, the former longtime senator from Utah, prompted one veteran staffer to recall this 2002 story by Gail Russell Chaddock on Senator Hatch’s ardent role as a pianist and lyricist, with hundreds of songs to his name. It adds some dimension to his legacy. 

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2022
April
25
Monday
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