2023
October
30
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 30, 2023
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Whitney Eulich
Latin America Editor

Several years ago I lost a pregnancy at about 13 weeks. I’ve thought about that day over the years for all the obvious, sad reasons. But also because of one big “what if”: I had initially planned to be reporting in El Salvador that week.

Scores of women have been imprisoned following miscarriages in El Salvador, accused of murder under the country’s strict abortion laws. What would I have done if my trip dates hadn’t changed? Would I have been able to find a compassionate doctor?

Fleeing the country, which is likely what I would have done, isn’t a privilege most Salvadoran women have. Certainly, it hadn’t been on offer for the women defended by Dennis Muñoz, the human rights lawyer profiled among today’s stories. Mr. Muñoz has dedicated his career to fighting for lost causes – the cases hardest and often riskiest to defend in El Salvador, whether due to draconian laws or the social or economic standing of his clients.

El Salvador’s story of injustice goes far beyond reproductive rights – and Mr. Muñoz’s work underscores that. He told freelance reporter Nelson Rauda Zablah that it feels increasingly like the justice system is designed “to convict.”

For more than a year and a half, El Salvador has been under a so-called state of exception. The rule suspends the constitutional rights of anyone arrested, going beyond the gang-related cases it is meant to apply to.

Homicide rates have fallen dramatically. There’s a new sense of freedom and safety as a result. But there’s also the risk of arrest, which the state of exception says can take place without explanation.

In theory, one shouldn’t have to choose between justice and freedom, but that’s an increasingly common point of tension in Latin America today.

I can see the short-term appeal of giving up some rights in return for more freedom, but not everyone has a Mr. Muñoz to defend them. 


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Cities and their residents don’t fare well in urban warfare. As Israel launches its incursion into Gaza, the question is whether experience, new equipment, and American input will make a difference.

Record crossings at the southern border are increasingly affecting northern cities. In Denver, the needs of new migrants test the ability of public and private sectors to respond. 

Víctor Peña/Special to The Christian Science Monitor
Dennis Muñoz, a Salvadoran lawyer, takes on some of El Salvador’s most difficult human rights cases, often free of charge.

Despite increasingly difficult and dangerous odds, attorney Dennis Muñoz seeks to uphold human rights. 

Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Des Moines Register/AP
Des Moines Public Schools interim Superintendent Matt Smith announces that school will be canceled due to a cybersecurity incident, Jan. 10, 2023, in Des Moines, Iowa. The district is one of several that has faced disruptions this year.

Part of education is providing a safe environment. As the use of technology increases in schools, how can they ensure that not only students but also their private data are protected?

Points of Progress

What's going right

In our progress roundup: To unlock the power of reading, Lego now sells bricks with Braille, and a phone app is helping 350,000 people in the Horn of Africa learn in their native tongue.


The Monitor's View

When the order to stay in place was lifted Friday after the worst mass shooting incident in the United States this year, residents of Lewiston, Maine, did what people often do in communities shaken by violence – they sought comfort in one another. They held early Halloween events to bask in the joy of children. They gathered for interfaith services in their places of worship.

Responses like those can have a welcome healing effect at times of acute mourning. Yet they also point to the storehouses of quiet strength behind a significant shift in thinking about public safety. Increasingly, communities are marshaling their own civic and religious resources to push beyond stuck and divisive political debates. Their solutions often start with qualities like compassion and empathy.

By staying “focused on the things that invite peace into our communities,” the Rev. Allen Austin, a pastor at Pathway Vineyard Church in Lewiston, urged residents at an interfaith service last night, what arises from tragedy is a “kinder people, a more compassionate people, a more merciful people.”

According to The Chronicle of Philanthropy, a focus on gun violence prevention among foundations and private donors has helped shift more public funding toward community-based approaches to public safety. These strategies focus on the building blocks of healthy communities, such as safe public parks and affordable housing. They emphasize caring for those most vulnerable after gun violence.

Approaches like these, involving faith leaders, police departments, local politicians, and residents, helped Indianapolis achieve a 15% reduction in gun-related homicides during the past year. Violence had declined in New York City and Oakland, California, through similar strategies. Congress has taken note. The Bipartisan Safer Communities Act last year earmarked $13 billion to address the root causes of gun violence. It included funding for community-based solutions.

The key, according to a community leader surveyed by The Chronicle of Philanthropy, is to treat potential offenders as human beings who are “not to be thrown away as if they’re of no value.”

“Having empathy isn’t about being a pushover,” a Security magazine study found. “It is about remembering that most people who threaten violence do so because they are in crisis and looking for ways that security leaders can help them solve that crisis or ride it out through support.”

Nearly three decades ago, Boston’s Black clergy responded to high rates of gun violence by engaging gangs and drug dealers. They recovered communities block by block. Their example has now become a model adopted across the U.S. One effect is to replace resignation with individual agency. “We will not be defined by the tragedies that happened,” the Rev. Todd Little, a Pentecostal minister, told residents gathered at the vigil last night. “Fear, anxiety and trepidation will not dictate our present or our future.”

Like communities elsewhere, Lewiston may now discover the resources it needs to heal from violence by turning to a greater love of community.


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.

When we strive to let qualities from God, good, win the day in our own thoughts and actions, we’re playing a part in lessening aggression in the world around us.


Viewfinder

Martin Meissner/AP
We're so much more than a metaphor: An Irish wolfhound shares a moment with a pony at a press conference for an upcoming dog-and-horse show in Dortmund, Germany, Oct. 27, 2023.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. We’re working to bring you a story from Gaza tomorrow, chronicling how some Palestinians are defying impossible conditions to do their jobs, helping the community and winning public admiration.

More issues

2023
October
30
Monday

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