2023
December
01
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 01, 2023
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

In his two hours in the Schem household in Israel, Monitor reporter Howard LaFranchi formed a bond. The Schems’ daughter Mia had been abducted by Hamas, and Howard felt a particular kinship with Mia’s brother, Eli. Howard has three sisters himself, he told Eli. You can read the moving story he wrote here

Today, there is joy. Mia was freed Thursday in the latest hostage swap. But Mia’s return is also a reminder of those who have not come home. Mia’s good friend, Elia Toledano, attended the music festival that was raided and is still in captivity.  

Howard had told the family he was counting on meeting Mia someday. They promised him he could. “I try to think what it will be when [Mia] is home,” Eli said. At last, that day has come.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Leah Millis/Reuters
U.S. Rep. George Santos, Republican of New York, walks to a series of votes including a vote to expel him from the House of Representatives, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Dec. 1, 2023.

An appreciation

AP/File
Supreme Court Associate Justice Sandra Day O'Connor poses for a photo in 1982. Justice O'Connor, who joined the U.S. Supreme Court in 1981 as the nation's first female justice, has died at age 93.
Kang-Chun Cheng
Villagers near Naro Moru carry in tree seedlings as part of a Kenya Forest Service-supported initiative to regenerate forests in central Kenya.

Podcast

Right to arms, right to peace? Our writer explored a balance.

What Might Curb Mass Shootings

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The Monitor's View

AP
A man sells fruit in Lagos, Nigeria, Nov 29. Nigeria's leader on Wednesday presented a $34 billion spending plan for 2024 with a focus on stabilizing Africa's largest economy.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Viewfinder

Won Young Lee/AP
A wild chinstrap penguin perches on rocks on King George Island, Antarctica. Using sensors attached to adult chinstrap penguins, researchers have discovered that during the breeding season, some penguin parents nod off thousands of times each day, with their naps typically lasting about four seconds. Why that schedule? It allows the penguin parents to protect their eggs and chicks around the clock.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us. Next week, we’ll have our next installment in the Climate Generation series. Young people in tiny Barbados are leading the way on thinking about how to turn climate action into business opportunity. 

We’ll also look at the culture of honor killings in Pakistan, where a teenage girl was slain apparently for posing in a picture with men who were not family members. We examine why these crimes persist, and where progress is happening.

More issues

2023
December
01
Friday
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