2023
July
24
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 24, 2023
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Some stories are just worth revisiting. Take our story from Malawi today by contributor Xanthe Scharff. It grew out of a journey that started in 2005. Xanthe was working in Malawi, and the Monitor asked if she could write a piece that put a human face to a widely used statistic about extreme poverty: the number of people who lived on less than $1 a day. Monitor readers responded, offering support and helping to change the trajectory of many girls in Malawi and that of Xanthe herself.

Twenty years later, after a period in which Xanthe founded the organization Advancing Girls’ Education in Africa (AGE Africa) and then handed it to others, Xanthe realized it was time to plumb more deeply the meaning of everything she and others had built.

“Change comes back to, ‘How can we understand one another?’” she says.

On her return, Xanthe saw the power of a word she thinks about often: agency. She saw it when she renewed old friendships and made new ones. It was in the gratitude of people who saw her presence as connection to a larger world. It was in the pride AGE Africa girls radiated, and in the joy that coexisted with their burdens. And it was in the honesty: “What made me feel best was that I was told it was good I’d left, making more space for Malawian women to take up leadership,” she says.

“Our opportunity is that we can kick open some doors through our access to resources and get it to girls who are going to power change.”


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Ohad Zwigenberg/AP
Thousands of Israelis near the end of a dayslong protest march against plans by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government to overhaul the judicial system, in Jerusalem, Saturday, July 22, 2023. The roughly 45-mile trek began in Tel Aviv.

Ignoring warnings of harm to Israel’s security, polls showing solid public opposition, and even repeated entreaties from President Joe Biden, the Netanyahu government passed a law that critics say strikes a direct blow at Israel’s democracy.

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/The Christian Science Monitor
Ukrainians clear away debris after a Russian missile struck the historic Transfiguration (Spaso-Preobrazhensky) Cathedral in central Odesa, Ukraine, July 23, 2023. The attack was part of an overnight barrage of 19 Russian rockets and missiles fired on the Black Sea port city and its region.

A Russian bombing campaign launched with Russia’s withdrawal from the Black Sea grain deal has targeted Odesa’s port and grain silos. But it has also targeted the Ukrainian city’s culture and heart. Odesans are unbowed.

What will make college admissions more equitable? Now that affirmative action has been struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court, other practices, such as special consideration for the children of alumni, are under scrutiny. 

A deeper look

MATAMANDO MAFUTA
Students at Ludzi Secondary School for Girls perform songs and plays as part of their peer mentoring program with AGE Africa, Dec. 1, 2022.

With help from Monitor readers, a 2005 story turned into support for girls’ education in Malawi. We check back to see what’s been learned.

Books

Our picks include books that travel to war-torn countries, grapple with the power of defying expectations, and explore the meaning of healing and forgiveness. 


The Monitor's View

Perhaps few other places in the world have seen so much prayer as Jerusalem’s Western Wall. The stony remnant of a destroyed Jewish temple has drawn millions to pray over centuries. Yet on Sunday, the day before Israel’s government approved a contentious change to the independence of its courts, one group of prayers stood out. They had gathered, as The Jerusalem Post put it, to offer “a prayer for the country’s unity.”

“They didn’t cast blame, demonize the other side, or predict a dystopian future for Israel,” the Post opined. “Instead, they called for cooler heads to prevail to prevent an insurmountable schism.”

For months, Israel has seen mass protests against any judicial overhaul by the right-wing government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The national debate strikes at the heart of Israel’s identity as both a democracy and a Jewish state – and at the values guiding Israel’s actions toward the Palestinians.

The gathering at the Western Wall was “the first major event of its kind to bring together representatives of both sides of the controversy,” observed Haaretz newspaper. The group included those in favor of and opposed to the judicial changes, which will prevent the Supreme Court from overturning government decisions it deems unreasonable.

Before the event, Rabbi Yaakov Medan, a supporter of clipping the court’s powers and a prominent leader of a West Bank Jewish settlement, explained, “We will pray for Him to cool down the consuming fire eating away at our souls. 

“There are two views here, but what we share is greater than what divides us: The continued existence of the Jewish People,” he wrote in a statement.

The praying may have had a calming result. Afterward, the group of several hundred people marched arm in arm to the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, many singing songs. They could be heard debating the legal changes – with civility – “to the point, in fact, that many of these arguments ended with a big hug,” observed Haaretz.

One participant, Rabbi David Stav, described the prayers as “a plea to the Almighty to send wisdom and good counsel to our leaders so that our state makes it intact out of this situation.” His group, Tzohar, seeks ways to reconcile religious and secular Jews in Israel.

Most of all, the affection displayed during the event has set an example for how Israel can move ahead. The changes to the courts approved by the current ruling coalition could easily be reversed by a future government. In many democracies, fundamental change by a ruling majority can often alienate a minority. Just as praying helps people listen for God’s word, it also helps people listen to each other.

Or as Shlomit Ravitsky Tur-Paz, co-director of the Jewish Life Advocacy Center, wrote about the political tactics surrounding the new legislation, “Belief, and a bond to culture, tradition, and history cannot be achieved by compulsion, but only through love.”


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.

Engaging with the news becomes easier when we take a prayerful approach, paying heed to the light of Christ, Truth, that is shining everywhere.


Viewfinder

Nicolas Economou/Reuters
Firefighters rest at dawn as a wildfire burns near the village of Asklipieio, on the island of Rhodes, Greece, July 24, 2023. The island has been battling fires for a week, and nearly 19,000 people have been evacuated from at-risk areas amid searing temperatures. Firefighters from the European Union and Turkey have been offering help.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Please come back tomorrow, when Simon Montlake looks at how abortion-rights activists are increasingly turning to ballot measures and other forms of direct democracy. And watch for a conversation about our Malawi cover story today in Friday’s episode of the Monitor's “Why We Wrote This” podcast.

More issues

2023
July
24
Monday

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