2024
July
18
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 18, 2024
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In polarized times, it can be hard to plumb why people hold views that differ from your own. Take a hot topic at the Republican National Convention this week: the intense conviction about a divine purpose in Donald Trump’s political mission and his protection from an attempted assassination.

To some Americans, many of them at the convention, God’s hand is obvious. Others are incredulous. Still others offer gratitude to God that Mr. Trump was not harmed, but are loath to go further.

Thoughtful reporting that is neither credulous nor sneering is at a premium, especially when it comes to religious belief. So take a moment to read Cameron Joseph’s powerful report from the convention today. You’ll hear the voices and historical context, and have the space to make up your mind for yourself.


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Mike Segar/Reuters
Donald Trump Jr. speaks as an image taken by photographer Evan Vucci following the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump is shown on a large screen on Day 3 of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, July 17, 2024.

Donald Trump’s survival of a would-be assassin’s bullet is a sign of God’s hand at work, many Republicans say – a belief in a divine purpose that raises the existential stakes of the campaign.

Today’s news briefs

Bangladesh clashes: Media reports say 19 more people have died in clashes between police and student protesters attempting to impose a “complete shutdown” of the country, following days of violent confrontations.
Student debt: U.S. President Joe Biden canceled another $1.2 billion in student debt for 35,000 borrowers, bringing the number of people to benefit from debt relief to 4.76 million.
Black sailors exonerated: The U.S. Navy exonerated 258 Black sailors unjustly court-martialed for refusing to follow orders after an explosion in a California port 80 years ago. White sailors were given leave while the Black sailors had to return to handling ammunition without proper training or equipment.
Gaza aid pier: The U.S. military-built pier to carry humanitarian aid to Gaza will be dismantled and brought home. The military said the pier delivered close to 20 million pounds of supplies to Gaza.

Johannes Sadek/picture-alliance/dpa/AP
A Palestinian woman from the Gaza Strip looks at a photo of the rubble of her destroyed apartment building while sitting in a café in Cairo, May 27, 2024.

As the war grinds on in Gaza, life goes on in next-door Egypt. Some Palestinian residents of Gaza managed to escape the physical conflict by crossing the border, but the war, its worries, and survivor’s guilt are ever present.

Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports NPStrans toppic
Olympian Leanne Wong performs a balance beam routine at the U.S. Gymnastics Championships in Fort Worth, Texas, June 2, 2024. Ms. Wong is sporting one of her signature bows and a leotard from her own apparel line.

You know them as competitors, but what about as savvy business people? With the Olympics kicking off in a week, meet athletes who have embraced the entrepreneurial spirit. 

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Across Europe, leaders are witnessing not only threatening rhetoric but also acts of violence. That’s focusing their attention anew on “turning down the volume” while working to counter a sense of alienation and loss of faith in democratic systems.  

Nathalie Bertrams
In the Spanish factory Frigoríficos Arcos, in O Carballiño, Galicia, Mauritanian octopus is prepared for cooking. The octopus gets washed first, and then tenderized.

The common octopus is considered the most intelligent invertebrate. But the fishing industry threatens to decimate its ranks in Mauritania.


The Monitor's View

On July 2, when the president of Sierra Leone signed a new law banning child marriage, his 8-year-old daughter was at his side. “I have always believed that the future of Sierra Leone is female,” said President Julius Maada Bio.

On July 15, when an all-male legislature in Gambia voted not to end a ban on genital cutting of girls – after first favoring the move – it was because of lawmakers like Gibbi Mballow. “I am a father, and I can’t support such a bill,” he said.

On July 17, something similar was revealed about the fathers of daughters in Afghanistan, an isolated country where the ruling Taliban has barred girls’ education beyond the age of 12. A new survey finds that fathers, especially those whose eldest is a daughter, are very likely to favor rights for girls and women. 

The survey, conducted for researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, could upend the approach of the international community to restore full education for Afghan girls. Trying to persuade or threaten the Taliban to change has only hardened their position in the three years since they retook power after the American withdrawal. Instead, researchers suggest that fathers with eldest daughters be “primed” by outside groups to use their authority in a male-dominated society to overturn the education ban.

In the campaign to restore women’s rights in Afghanistan, fathers whose first-born is a girl might be the best ally of activists. “I will be proud of myself that I will fight for women’s rights,” one father said in responding to the survey.

This news may not be new to the Taliban. Many fathers have been detained and beaten for helping their daughters violate the regime’s restrictions on girls. One young Afghan woman told The New Humanitarian that her father is her greatest advocate: “He told me, ‘You must study. You are the futuremaker of your country. You have to help your people, your homeland’.”

One father has even given money for his eldest daughter to start her own school for girls, one that teaches only about Islam, according to the Afghanistan Peace Campaign. While the daughter waits for final approval, she says she hopes the Taliban “will find a way” for all Afghan girls to “finish high school and even go to university, if they want to.”

In many countries, from Africa to Asia, freedom for girls often starts with a father’s 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.

Becoming aware of what we are as the spiritual offspring of God opens the door to greater harmony in our relationships.


Viewfinder

Jon Nazca/Reuters
Neighbors chat outside a house to beat the heat on a summer night in Ronda, Spain, as a heat wave from North Africa sweeps across the country bringing dust and haze, July 17, 2024. Temperatures were expected to exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit, triggering an "orange alert" that bans some outdoor work in the afternoon.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for spending time with us today. Tomorrow, we’ll have a final dispatch from the Republican National Convention and report on upcoming Venezuelan elections. And just in time for the weekend, we’ll have an essay about finding light and inspiration in Henry David Thoreau’s “Walden.”

More issues

2024
July
18
Thursday

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