2024
April
09
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 09, 2024
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TODAY’S INTRO

Wonder, hope, and the news

Do wonder and hope belong in the news?

Wonder certainly did yesterday, as Americans marveled at the total solar eclipse sweeping across their country. It challenged the discordant images many Americans hold of each other. Staff writer Simon Montlake reflects today on experiencing it with his son.

You’ll see hope in our other stories as well. In Antakya, Turkey, a school principal is countering expectations of a “lost generation” struggling in the aftermath of last year’s devastating earthquake. And amid National Poetry Month, a former U.S. poet laureate, no stranger to hardship, talks about looking for the stars – the “constellation of story” that helps a person thrive.

Building trust in the future, looking for light. It’s news.

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Graphic

How do immigrants affect US economy? The answer might surprise you.

Immigration and the economy are top concerns of voters ahead of the 2024 U.S. election. But political talking points don’t tell the whole story.

Are immigrants a boon to the U.S. economy or a drag on it?

For urban centers that have experienced a surge of immigrants, the costs are staggering. For instance, the New York mayor’s office estimates the city will spend north of $12 billion through fiscal year 2025 to accommodate more than 100,000 migrants. But that’s a microcosm. The macro picture tells a different story.

The United States is experiencing a labor shortage, according to Dhaval Joshi, chief strategist at BCA Research. The surge of people who have immigrated legally or illegally since 2022 has helped fill those job vacancies. And that’s helped stave off a recession.

“One important way to reduce inflation is to increase the production of goods and services,” says David Bier of the Cato Institute. “One reason why the economy has adjusted over the last three years is the fact that we have started to get these immigrants into the labor force.”

The increase in foreign-born labor is vital at a time when U.S. birthrates are declining, economists say.

Many foreign-born workers are filling important roles in sectors such as health care and construction. Immigrants also create a disproportionate share of both patents and companies. Some 55% of U.S. startup companies valued at more than $1 billion were founded by immigrants, according to the National Foundation of American Policy.
– Stephen Humphries, staff writer

SOURCE:

USAFacts, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Stanford Graduate School of Business

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Today’s news briefs

• Abortion ban reinstated: The Arizona Supreme Court said the state can enforce its long-dormant law criminalizing almost all abortions. The 1864 law allows abortions only if a mother’s life is in danger. 
• Climate decision: Europe’s highest human rights court ruled countries must better protect their people from the consequences of climate change. This was the first time an international court ruled on climate change – and the first decision confirming that countries have an obligation to protect. 
• Cease-fire proposal: Hamas said an Israeli proposal on a cease-fire in the war in Gaza met none of the demands of Palestinian militant factions, but it would study the offer further. The proposal was delivered by Egyptian and Qatari mediators at talks in Cairo. Israeli forces stepped up bombardments in central and southern Gaza.
• Debt cancellation: President Joe Biden announced plans to ease student debt that would benefit at least 23 million Americans. The plans include canceling up to $20,000 of accrued and capitalized interest for borrowers, regardless of income.
• Washington visit: Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio begins a state visit to the United States amid shared concerns about Chinese military action in the Pacific and public differences over a Japanese company’s plan to buy U.S. Steel. Mr. Kishida and his wife, Yuko, will stop by the White House ahead of the official April 10 visit and formal state dinner as President Joe Biden celebrates a decadeslong ally he sees as the cornerstone of his Indo-Pacific policy.

Read these news briefs.

Why Bollywood is cranking out pro-government films ahead of India’s election

An uptick in brazenly pro-government Bollywood movies highlights the close relationship between India’s ruling party and mainstream media – as well as the risks of blurring the lines between politics, news, and entertainment.

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As India prepares for a massive general election, its theaters have been flooded with films that extol Prime Minister Narendra Modi and amplify his party’s platform. 

One is a biopic of the founder of Hindu nationalism. Another casts Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru University, long considered a leftist bastion, as working against the nation. And “Article 370,” which still pulls in decent crowds weeks after its release, celebrates the government’s 2019 decision to revoke Kashmir’s autonomy. 

These new releases reflect a broader shift in Indian cinema over the past decade, one that critics say has transformed Bollywood into an extension of the prime minister’s PR machine. Films that support his party’s stance are often given tax breaks at the box office and praised by government ministers. Films that don’t face intense backlash.

In some ways, the films are simply a reflection of the country’s mood, with surveys showing 79% of Indians hold a favorable view of Mr. Modi. But experts warn that growing pro-government bias in entertainment and news media can exacerbate fault lines in Indian society. 

“Mainstream Hindi cinema [or Bollywood] has always been pro-establishment,” says Sreya Mitra, an associate professor of media studies. “But you’ve never witnessed so much explicit alignment with the establishment to the extent that it is parroting the same lines.”

Why Bollywood is cranking out pro-government films ahead of India’s election

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Rajanish Kakade/AP
People pass a poster for "Swatantra Veer Savarkar" outside a cinema in Mumbai, India, March 21, 2024. The movie is one of several recent Bollywood releases promoting Prime Minister Narendra Modi's political agenda.

A burqa-clad woman walks through a bleak version of Srinagar in India-administered Kashmir. She’s an undercover agent hot on the trail of a young separatist militant.

Over the next 2 1/2 hours of the recent Bollywood production, titled “Article 370,” the audience follows her action-packed journey against the backdrop of the troubled Himalayan region. 

The movie’s climax? The Indian government’s real-life decision to revoke Kashmir’s special autonomy in 2019. That shocking move and a subsequent media blackout were broadly criticized by human rights organizations and the international media, but “Article 370” celebrates it unequivocally.

The movie ends with a montage of positive headlines about Kashmir, set to uplifting music, and a shot of Prime Minister Narendra Modi – played by actor Arun Govil – smiling as he reads a newspaper article extolling his decision. 

“Article 370,” named after the constitutional article that formerly granted Kashmir some autonomy, is one of several films with striking pro-government narratives released just ahead of the country’s massive general election, which begins this month.

Another is a biopic of Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, a radical leader who opposed Mahatma Gandhi’s nonviolent resistance and founded the Hindu nationalist ideology embraced by Mr. Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). And “JNU” – a film that appears to cast Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru University, long considered a leftist bastion, as working against the nation – is set to reach theaters later this month. 

The new releases reflect a broader shift in Indian cinema over the past decade, one that some critics say has transformed Bollywood into an extension of the prime minister’s PR machine. Films that support the BJP’s stance are often given tax breaks at the box office and get shoutouts from government ministers. Films that don’t face swift and intense backlash. 

“Mainstream Hindi cinema [or Bollywood] has always been pro-establishment,” says Sreya Mitra, associate professor of media studies at the American University of Sharjah. “But you’ve never witnessed so much explicit alignment with the establishment to the extent that it is parroting the same lines.”

Bollywood under Mr. Modi

Media experts say Bollywood movies have always reflected the collective anxieties of the nation. Villains in the past were mysterious foreign entities or rich industrialists profiteering by duping the masses. These days, the bad guy is often a liberal, an opposition figure, or a Muslim.

“The Kerala Story” (2023) depicts Muslim men luring Hindu women and recruiting them into the Islamic State, mirroring a widespread Hindu right-wing conspiracy theory called “love jihad.”

The latest films feature cameos of the prime minister’s character – flanked by the Indian tricolor and delivering punchy dialogues with a steely gaze – and “explicit rewriting of historical narratives,” says Dr. Mitra. “It is very much in alignment with the populist sort of deification of Modi himself,” she says.

Anupam Nath/AP
A woman stands in front of a poster for "Article 370," displayed at a cinema in Guwahati, India, March 21, 2024. The film celebrates the government's 2019 decision to revoke Kashmir's special status.

What is shown on the screen can have real-world consequences. “The Kashmir Files” (2022) showed graphic and hyperbolic depictions of violence against Kashmiri Hindus by Kashmiri Muslims. After watching the film, some Hindus made rousing speeches and Islamophobic comments in movie halls.

Implicit censorship

When a film veers from these formulas, Hindu hard-liners have quickly mobilized in protest.

In 2017, right-wing Hindu nationalist groups threatened violence against the actor of a period drama when rumors spread that it contained scenes depicting a romance between a Hindu queen and a Muslim ruler. And in 2021, makers of a political drama series streaming on Amazon apologized for scenes that allegedly disrespected Hindu gods and the office of the prime minister, and made changes to their show.

In this environment, nuanced portrayals of religious and sociopolitical issues are rare, says Dr. Mitra. 

The implicit censorship extends to the press, too. Kunal Majumder, India representative at the Committee to Protect Journalists, lists several disturbing trends over the past decade: an uptick in police complaints against reporters, the unprecedented use of anti-terror laws against journalists, and foreign journalists’ visas being revoked, among others.

Several news outlets, including Hindi-language newspaper Dainik Bhaskar and the BBC, have also faced tax raids after they published stories critical of the government.

“When something like this happens, it sends a chilling effect,” says Mr. Majumder. 

The government is a major source of advertising revenue for big media companies, he adds, which makes news outlets wary of running stories that could upset those in power. Plus, many of India’s top news organizations are now controlled by billionaires close to Mr. Modi, including India’s second-richest man, Gautam Adani. In 2022 he acquired NDTV, one of the last remaining networks that pursued hard-hitting coverage. 

“India’s vast media landscape has been captured by the BJP,” says Zoya Hasan, professor emerita at Jawaharlal Nehru University. Fawning coverage of the Modi administration’s policies or the echoing of sensationalist anti-Muslim narratives have earned a large section of Indian media the moniker godi or “lap dog” media.

To be sure, Mr. Modi and the BJP are extremely popular throughout the country. A Pew Research Center survey showed 79% of Indians hold a favorable view of Mr. Modi, who is expected to easily win a third term in the upcoming elections, which begin April 19. But observers say the pro-government bias in entertainment and news media can warp viewers’ perception of Indian politics and exacerbate fault lines in Indian society. 

Propaganda or point of view?

“Article 370,” like many new releases, has been labeled “propaganda” by critics. Anjali Sharma, who caught a recent showing in the Delhi suburb of Gurugram, agrees such films can be one-sided. “What is shown to us and what is happening [in Kashmir], there is a lot of difference,” she says. 

But Siddharth Bodke, who plays a leading role as a right-wing Hindu nationalist student leader in the upcoming “JNU,” says these films merely present audiences with a certain point of view. He insists that his film is “balanced,” adding that if he had the opportunity to do a more anti-establishment film – and the script was good – he would take it. 

Either way, audiences are buying in.

At the Gurugram screening of “Article 370,” the theater was three-quarters full even a month after the movie’s release. “The Kerala Story” and “The Kashmir Files” also had successful runs at the box office, though not all pro-government movies do well.

Filmmakers today feel they can milk the country’s current sociopolitical climate, says Dr. Mitra, but if more movies flop, they will stop.

Could these movies shape voter opinions? Maybe over a long period, says moviegoer Dinesh Bansal. But not him, he adds. “I always look at the entertainment quotient,” he says. “I don’t think too much about the messaging.”

Essay

Some things are worth missing school for

Our reporter Simon Montlake, like many parents, wanted his son to experience the wonder of a total solar eclipse. As so often happens with parenting, the one left most in awe by the celestial event was not the fifth grader.

Riley Robinson/Staff
Amilia Yahyazadeh (right) and Nea Yahyazadeh gaze at the total solar eclipse, April 8, 2024, in Burlington, Vermont. Thousands of people descended on the banks of Lake Champlain.
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We’re minutes away from a total solar eclipse, and I’m scribbling in my green notebook, trying to record my impressions of a family trip in search of wonder, a once-in-a-generation celestial event. So rare and special that Sylvester is missing a day of fifth grade. 

I tell myself that he’s being schooled in the science of the cosmos, the movement of planets. You can’t learn that in a classroom. Actually, you can, and he did already. (We have the artwork.) But here we are, sprawled out on a town common in Waterbury, Vermont, along with dozens of other eclipse watchers, counting down to the magic moment.

Sylvester peers into my lap. “Will you be able to write in the dark?” he asks. 

Sure, I tell him. But when the eclipse happens, I can’t. Words fail me. Or I fail them. Only afterward do I pick up my pen. But nothing will measure up to the majesty of the light that we see and the vertiginous sensation of day becoming not-night, not-day. It lasts less than three minutes. Three head-spinning, heart-stopping minutes.

Some things are worth missing school for

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“I can’t wait for it to go dark,” says Sylvester. He wiggles in his camp chair, and I look over at my son. His dark hair flops over a pair of protective eclipse glasses as he angles his head toward the waning afternoon sun. 

We’re minutes away from a total solar eclipse, and I’m scribbling in my green notebook, trying to record my impressions of a family trip in search of wonder, a once-in-a-generation celestial event. So rare and special that Sylvester is missing a day of fifth grade. 

I tell myself that he’s being schooled in the science of the cosmos, the movement of planets. You can’t learn that in a classroom. Actually, you can, and he did already. (We have the artwork.) But here we are, sprawled out on a town common in Waterbury, Vermont, along with dozens of other eclipse-watchers, counting down to the magic moment. And we’re not the only ones skipping school. Friends have gone even further north to St. Johnsbury, which is smack-dab in the path of totality. And we unexpectedly run into another family we know from Cambridge, Massachusetts, on the common. 

Sylvester peers into my lap. “Will you be able to write in the dark?” he asks. 

Sure, I tell him. But when the eclipse happens, I can’t. Words fail me. Or I fail them. Only afterward do I pick up my pen. But nothing will measure up to the majesty of the light that we see and the vertiginous sensation of day becoming not-night, not-day. It lasts less than three minutes. Three head-spinning, heart-stopping minutes. 

As the crowd whoops and wows its appreciation at the spectacle, Sylvester turns to me again, his brown eyes no longer hidden by dark plastic panes. “The moon is covering the sun! Take a photo of it, Dad.” 

But I leave my phone in my bag. I want to listen and watch, to share the moment with Sylvester and Jenn, my wife. You can’t put a price on memories. At least, that’s how we justified our last-minute decision to book the last hotel room in town at peak eclipse price. 

Later, Jenn showed me her photos, including images of the sun she took as the moon began its hourlong occultation. We had watched its passage across the sun through the eclipse glasses we packed that morning in Cambridge, leaving home at 7 a.m. to beat the northbound traffic.

Riley Robinson/Staff
Andrew Martell takes a selfie with his son, Theo, age 5, as they wait for the total solar eclipse April 8, 2024, in Burlington, Vermont. Their family traveled from Brooklyn, New York, to experience totality.

“It looks like a croissant,” I told Sylvester. 

He studied it again. “Dad, the colors are changing. It’s more orange now.” 

“OK, then an orange segment.” 

On our way over to the common, I’d told him about what the Aztecs saw in eclipses of the sun, the movements of which they tracked closely, both for practical reasons – as a farmer’s almanac – and to buttress their cosmic mythology. A total eclipse was a moment of peril: A monster threatened to consume the sun god Tonatiuh, plunging humanity into chaos and perpetual darkness. Only the proper rituals could stave off calamity; human sacrifices were involved. (I didn’t dwell on this point.)   

An Aztec-themed eclipse explanation seemed appropriate. In February, we had taken a vacation in Mexico City. We spent a sunbaked day at Teotihuacan, the colossal pyramid ruins that predated the Aztecs, where we walked the Avenue of the Dead. A vendor of tourist trinkets showed us a smooth patty of obsidian, a black volcanic rock, that fit in Sylvester’s palm. 

“Look at the sun,” he told us, and held the black disc to his eye. We did, and a red disc appeared. Before eclipse glasses, there was obsidian, which was traded widely across Mesoamerica and crafted into tools and blades.

Sylvester liked the pyramid tour, but Mexico City felt overwhelming at times, and he was glad to get home. And when I tell him in Vermont about the Aztec conception of eclipses, he doesn’t respond. Later, though, as we sit on the common, taking in the fading daylight as the moon slides into place, I try again. “The monster is taking bigger bites of the sun,” I say. 

He laughs. I suggest we need to offer a sacrifice to save the sun god. Mom has a bag of jalapeño chips. Maybe a chip? He agrees. A chip is a fair offer. 

Then Sylvester tells me about a book in the “Warriors” series, of which he has a passel of dog-eared paperbacks. The series features epic wars among clans of feral cats who inhabit a Hobbesian world. In this book, he explains, the four clans are battling for supremacy. “They’re fighting; then suddenly everything goes dark,” he says. “They all went running, wailing, and screaming home. But actually, it was an eclipse, because it went light again.” 

The warring cats thought that their ancestors had killed the sun “because they were angry with their fighting,” he continues. I nod. So they stop fighting? Yes, in that book, he says. 

After the sun reappears, spreading its warmth again, the crowd on the town common starts to disperse. The streets fill with cars as eclipse-chasers head off. Sylvester is also ready to move on. I’d rather sit longer to watch the moon’s onward passage and try to hold onto the feeling of wonder. But it’s time to go. 

The next total solar eclipse in August 2026 won’t be visible from North America. It will, however, pass over Iceland. We know a family who is already scoping out accommodation there. Maybe we should join them. Sylvester won’t even need to miss school. 

Difference-maker

In post-quake Turkey, kids struggle. A school principal named ‘Hope’ steps in.

After a disaster, the best of humanity surfaces, something that was clearly seen after the devastating earthquakes in Turkey a year ago. But some have met the challenge with a special determination. 

Erin O'Brien
The road to Ekinci Atatürk Middle School, once lined with buildings, is now mostly rubble.
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Over a year since a devastating series of earthquakes destroyed the Turkish city of Antakya, caring for children in the quake recovery zone is among the most pressing challenges for the region. More than 6 million children were affected by the earthquakes, according to Save the Children, and 760,964 people, over a quarter of them children, still live in makeshift housing.

Schools play an important role in recovery, but education is out of reach for many. More than 70% of schools in Antakya were destroyed, according to the teachers union. And most students still attend classes in makeshift shelters or container housing, or crowd into remaining school buildings. Classroom hours have been severely shortened, compounding learning loss that began with the coronavirus pandemic. 

But one principal, Umut Beyazgul, whose first name means “hope” in Turkish, is determined to return normalcy to his 480 students – preparing them for recent annual exams despite the education gap they face, and reconnecting them to the love of sport, art, and play that defined their childhoods before they lost so much. 

“We have to put their focus elsewhere,” says Mr. Beyazgul. “After all, children have a future. They are in a position to improve themselves.”

In post-quake Turkey, kids struggle. A school principal named ‘Hope’ steps in.

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The roads leading to Ekinci Atatürk Middle School are dusty, and the surrounding fields strewn with rubble – the remnants of apartment buildings, restaurants, and grocery stores razed by a series of earthquakes in February 2023.

But in the schoolyard, the sun is shining. The air smells like pine and cypress from the trees that hem the property. Children laugh as they throw a worn-out soccer ball across the basketball court, or chat excitedly about the art exhibition they planned for later that week. Principal Umut Beyazgul cuts a hulking figure as he crosses the yard and banters easily with the middle schoolers.

In Antakya, still reeling more than a year after the quakes that struck southeastern Turkey, the school’s concrete structure painted in bright orange and white stands as a rare example of stability. According to official figures, 53,537 people were killed in the quakes, half in the Hatay region where Antakya sits. Millions of others were displaced.

Mr. Beyazgul, whose first name means “hope” in Turkish, is determined to return normalcy to his 480 students – preparing them for recent annual exams despite the education gap they face and reconnecting them to the love of sport, art, and play that defined their childhoods before they lost so much. 

“We have to put their focus elsewhere,” says Mr. Beyazgul, fiddling with a tesbih, a small string of prayer beads, around his wrist while he talks. “After all, children have a future. They are in a position to improve themselves.”

Courtesy of Umut Beyazgul
Ekinci Atatürk Middle School Principal Umut Beyazgul is determined to bring normalcy to students traumatized in the earthquake recovery zone in Antakya, Turkey.

“We’re trying to do whatever it takes to get them out of the psychology of the earthquake,” he adds.

Caring for children in the quake recovery zone is among the most pressing challenges for the region. More than 6 million children were affected by the earthquakes, according to Save the Children. “It was just a traumatic event in general,” says Makayla Palazzo, director for advocacy and communications for Save the Children’s country office in Turkey. “We’re still seeing things like nightmares, children not being able to sleep.”

Schools play an important role in recovery, but education is out of reach for many. More than 70% of schools in Antakya were destroyed, according to the teachers union, and most students still attend classes in makeshift shelters or crowd into remaining school buildings. Classroom hours have been severely shortened, compounding learning loss that began with the coronavirus pandemic. Some students – especially Syrian refugees – do not go to school at all.

Özgür Tıraş, head of the teachers union for Hatay, warns of a “lost generation” and implores the federal government for more help: “The children and teachers need clean water; they need to be fed; they need housing; they need to solve their economic problems.”

Erin O'Brien
Students play in the courtyard of Ekinci Ataturk Middle School in Antakya, March 4, 2024.

Many in Hatay say support has been scant because of politics. In February, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan seemed to warn that if his party didn’t win upcoming elections, Antakya would continue to struggle. “If the central government and the local government do not join hands and are not in solidarity, [no aid] will come to that city,” he said. His party won back control of Hatay in March 31 elections.

An oasis amid grief

Mr. Beyazgul, a teacher for five years before the earthquakes, is trying to make his middle school an oasis amid the vast needs.

The night of the quakes, he was asleep with his wife when they felt strong tremors and ran to their young son’s room. They heard walls coming down above them in the apartment building and feared the structure would crumble atop them. When the tremors finally stopped, they fled to the safer port city of Mersin for a month. But Mr. Beyazgul says he couldn’t stay away, so the family returned to a village on the outskirts of Antakya. He began teaching in the informal tent schools set up in displacement camps until being named principal of Ekinci Atatürk Middle School last September.

Nearly a quarter of his students still live in temporary housing, and many classes are held outside in containers that leak when it rains. Two teachers died in the quakes – both were close friends of Mr. Beyazgul – and others left the city and haven’t returned. So the school recruited staff from cities such as Ankara and Istanbul. Because these teachers weren’t themselves traumatized by the quakes, they can focus on children’s well-being, Mr. Beyazgul says.

This stability is an exception in the region, says Uğur, a former in-school psychologist who now travels among 300 schools providing mental health support to students affected by the quakes. He asked to be identified by his first name only, fearing professional reprisal for speaking candidly. He says he sees widespread effects of trauma in students, teachers, and parents.

Erin O'Brien
A temporary container school inside the container city built by the Konya municipality on the outskirts of Antakya is typical of where students in the recovery zone are studying a year after the devastating quakes.

Ms. Palazzo says that creating a safe space for children, as Mr. Beyazgul is doing at Ekinci Atatürk Middle School, is critical to helping them move on. “Just having that space and having somewhere for children to go does so much,” she says. “Children are very comforted by routine, and having the school day as the rhythm of their life is important in helping them ... regain a sense of expected everyday life without surprises and with some structure to it.”

A lesson in trust

On a recent day, children with oversize Spider-Man and Superman backpacks scramble over bits of building material to get to the school. They stop at a small pop-up market by the front gate that sells ice cream and other treats, and laugh as they eat purple-and-white ice pops.

In the schoolyard, children talk about the activities Mr. Beyazgul and his staff have planned, including an International Women’s Day event, sports tournaments, and a festival where kids could perform halay – a traditional dance from the region.

It’s not about ignoring the pain; the students’ artwork and these activities are an outlet for their grief. It’s also an effort to foster trust in the future.

“Yes, they need to experience this sadness,” Mr. Beyazgul says. “But this sadness shouldn’t take over the rest of their lives.”

Poet Natasha Trethewey delves into memory in her new book

April is National Poetry Month in the United States. Our poetry reviewer talks with Natasha Trethewey, former U.S. poet laureate, about  “The House of Being,” and the memories that propel her writing. 

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When Natasha Trethewey was born in 1966, her maternal grandmother purchased a set of World Book encyclopedias. The gift spoke of a grandmother’s love, and the books later provided a respite from the world outside.

As the child of a Black mother and a white father growing up in the American South, Ms. Trethewey and her family faced bigotry and hatred. But the encyclopedias, along with her grandmother’s fabric murals, sparked the future poet’s imagination, as she describes in “The House of Being.” The book is part of the “Why I Write” series from Yale University Press.     

In a recent interview, the 2012-2014 U.S. poet laureate discussed how her childhood memories, which include her father teaching her the importance of language, have shaped her desire to write. 

“I think he was trying to teach me that all of language influences how we see,” she says. “Language can be used to contain and define us. That understanding was such a gift and so necessary for someone like me, growing up in the Deep South.” 

Poet Natasha Trethewey delves into memory in her new book

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Jill Norton
Natasha Trethewey, former U.S. poet laureate, is the author of "The House of Being," part of the series "Why I Write" from Yale University Press.

Natasha Trethewey, who served as poet laureate of the United States from 2012 to 2014, deepens her exploration of the memories and landscapes that have shaped her writing in “The House of Being.” The book is a slim yet stunning collection of essays published as part of the Yale University “Why I Write” series.

Fans will recognize the broad thematic strokes in “The House of Being,” as illustrated by her parents’ interracial marriage, which was illegal in Mississippi in the year of Ms. Trethewey’s birth. Her mother, Gwendolyn Ann Turnbough, a Black woman, and her father, Eric, a white poet who had emigrated from Canada, met when they were in college in Kentucky. They married in Ohio and returned to the South. Natasha was born in Gulfport, Mississippi. Her grandmother, a seamstress, cared for young Tasha while Gwendolyn and Eric were at work.

Natasha was 6 years old when her parents divorced. Her mother later married a Vietnam vet who was deeply troubled and abusive. For 10 years, he was physically violent with Gwendolyn and emotionally tormented Natasha. After they divorced, he continued to stalk Gwendolyn. When Natasha was 19, he shot and killed her mother.

“The House of Being” addresses those and other defining experiences, as well as the racial inequities in the South, through the lens of memory and metaphor. The book opens with vivid details about the baby gift Natasha’s grandmother purchased for her: a 20-volume set of World Book encyclopedias. Those books, like the fabric murals her grandmother created, sparked a sense of wonder. They also reminded the future poet of the stark differences between the love and acceptance she experienced within the walls of her grandmother’s house and the bigotry outside them.

"The House of Being" by Natasha Trethewey, Yale University Press, 96 pp.

Ms. Trethewey has addressed some of those issues in “Native Guard,” a collection of poems, which won the 2007 Pulitzer Prize, and in her memoir “Memorial Drive,” published in 2020.

In a recent interview by video call, the poet discussed how her childhood memories, which include her father teaching her the importance of metaphorical language, have shaped “The House of Being” and her desire to write. 

“I think he was trying to teach me that all of language influences how we see,” she says. “Language can be used to contain and define us. That understanding was such a gift and so necessary for someone like me, growing up in the Deep South.” 

The importance of metaphor runs throughout the book, as does the impulse to transform one’s surroundings into something more beautiful. Ms. Trethewey learned the latter from her grandmother, who used fabric and oil paint to create window-sized nature scenes of owls and mountains. 

“I think everyone has that desire to make something beautiful and to surround yourself with it,” Ms. Trethewey remarks. “People try to curate their worlds and their lives.” 

Those fabric pictures decorated a long, windowless hallway and reminded the family of the pasture that once existed behind the house. The art was also a subtle reminder that Black people in Mississippi could only dream of many freedoms. That fact became frighteningly real the night the Ku Klux Klan burned a cross in front of her grandmother’s house, perhaps because they thought it was part of the church across the street, which was holding a voter registration drive, or because of the interracial family inside. “We never knew which,” Ms. Trethewey says. 

Yale University Press
A family photo shows Natasha Trethewey as a child with her parents, Gwendolyn and Eric, in the living room of her grandmother’s house in Mississippi in 1969.

More lasting markers were visible throughout the South, most noticeably Stone Mountain – a Confederate Mount Rushmore – which could be seen from the front gate of the apartment where Ms. Trethewey’s mother lived and died.

The metaphor of monuments is relevant, she says, because “we’re living in a moment in which the contests over what is remembered, contests over statues and memorialization, and what they inscribe onto the physical landscape and into the landscape of our cultural imagination, are more fraught than ever.” 

“I think some people thought of monuments as things that ... no one paid attention to, that they weren’t somehow still speaking to us, some of us at least, about what our place in the culture at large was supposed to be,” she explains. “In the aftermath of the death of George Floyd and Black Lives Matter protests that were centered around a lot of these monuments, people began to rethink what their place is now, which is why some of them are being removed and put in their proper places.”

In “The House of Being,” Ms. Trethewey revisits themes, including the idea of constellations – both stars and circumstances. 

“When you look at the night sky, so many of the stars are, to our view, brighter than others, and there are countless tiny ones that are perhaps harder to see,” she says. “I think of that as a metaphor for how we tell stories about our lives. Which of the stars do you pick out, and how do you draw lines between them to make connections? When I wrote ‘Memorial Drive,’ and when I wrote ‘The House of Being,’ there were countless other details I could have chosen to tell, but you choose the ones that are creating the constellation of story that ... is the one that you can exist inside of, and thrive within.”

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A welcome for German leadership

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On April 8, or just shy of 79 years after Nazi forces surrendered in World War II, Germany began its first permanent stationing of combat troops outside its borders. The first of 4,800 German soldiers arrived in Lithuania – which borders Russia – to set up a military base. They were warmly welcomed by the Baltic nation as part of NATO’s new Forward Presence strategy against further Russian aggression in Europe.

The deployment is a historic “lighthouse project” for Germany after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, said Defense Minister Boris Pistorius. It is part of a “turning point” for Germany in improving its military and becoming a protector of European security, according to German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

“Given Germany’s complex historical legacy and the state of its armed forces, the German commitment is astounding,” wrote Māris Andžāns, a professor at Rīga Stradiņš University in Latvia.

Germany’s longtime reluctance to be a military leader has actually earned it a measure of trust within the 32-member NATO. “To some people, we now seem like a sometimes slow, but ultimately always helpful and, above all, reliable friend,” wrote commentator Matthias Koch in the German daily newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau.

A welcome for German leadership

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German soldiers arrive at an airport in Vilnius, Lithuania, April 8.

On April 8, or just shy of 79 years after Nazi forces surrendered in World War II, Germany began its first permanent stationing of combat troops outside its borders. The first of 4,800 German soldiers arrived in Lithuania – which borders Russia – to set up a military base. They were warmly welcomed by the Baltic nation as part of NATO’s new Forward Presence strategy against further Russian aggression in Europe.

The deployment is a historic “lighthouse project” for Germany after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, said Defense Minister Boris Pistorius. It is part of a “turning point” for Germany in improving its military and becoming a protector of European security, according to German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

“Given Germany’s complex historical legacy and the state of its armed forces, the German commitment is astounding,” Māris Andžāns, a professor at Rīga Stradiņš University in Latvia, wrote for the Macdonald-Laurier Institute.

The German forces in Lithuania will complement American troops in Poland, British soldiers in Estonia, and Canadian soldiers in Latvia. Those Eastern Europe countries are considered among the most vulnerable if Russian President Vladimir Putin makes good on a promise to re-create the Soviet empire that fell in 1991. Russia has lately begun to increase its arms production by more than 60%.

Germany’s first temporary deployment of troops – in defense of Bosnia-Herzegovina – came in 1996, or more than a half-century after World War II. But such milestones did little to sway German opinion from a deep postwar pacifism. In 2011, as Russia began to flex its military might, a Polish foreign minister declared that he feared “German power less than German inaction.”

Now the Russian invasion has forced many Germans to “recognise that it may sometimes be necessary to defend territory, values and principles,” wrote Katja Hoyer, a German British historian, in the Financial Times.

Germany’s longtime reluctance to be a military leader has actually earned it a measure of trust within the 32-member NATO. “To some people, we now seem like a sometimes slow, but ultimately always helpful and, above all, reliable friend,” wrote commentator Matthias Koch in the German daily newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau. From the welcome given to German soldiers by Lithuanians on Monday, he may be right.

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.

‘I cannot tell a lie’

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Each of us is divinely empowered to think and act with integrity and brotherly love.

‘I cannot tell a lie’

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Today's Christian Science Perspective audio edition

When I was in elementary school, we learned the legend of young George Washington chopping away at his father’s cherry tree – and, when confronted by his angry dad, admitting that he had done it with the famous words, “I cannot tell a lie.”

As a child, I found the spirit behind this story reassuring. Honesty is a quality I’ve continued to value in the years since, especially as my study and practice of Christian Science has progressed. It is heartening to acknowledge that man (meaning each of us) has a spiritual nature that includes integrity.

This spiritual identity is actually our only true identity. As children of God, we reflect God’s nature, one of truth and uprightness. In fact, Truth is a Bible-based synonym for God, as elucidated in the Christian Science textbook, “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy. With such a divinely bestowed character, we have a natural inclination to love truth and to actively think and act with integrity – and an innate ability to do so.

Numerous accounts in the Bible point to this. For example, in the book of Genesis, a couple named Abraham and Sarah were staying in the land of Gerar. Abraham intentionally did not tell King Abimelech that Sarah was his wife, hoping that misrepresenting their relationship would prevent him from being killed by someone who wanted her for himself.

So King Abimelech took Sarah into his harem. Fortunately, God revealed the truth to King Abimelech, who immediately course corrected and sent Sarah back to her husband. The consequence of King Abimelech’s integrity was that his household was healed of infertility and bore children (see Genesis 20).

When we tell the truth, we are living in a way that’s consistent with what we truly, spiritually are – the reflection and expression of God, Truth. This puts us on the path to seeing God’s infinite goodness more readily in our lives.

But sometimes truth-telling can seem challenging. What if we hesitate to be totally upfront about something for fear it could be detrimental to us, or to someone else?

One time the principal of the school where I taught at the time asked me to evaluate another teacher, as part of an overall assessment of her performance. From what I had witnessed, this colleague was a very well-meaning but not particularly competent teacher.

I realized I had a choice. I could whitewash the situation and be a bit vague in my assessment of her skills, or I could compassionately, but honestly, attest to what I had observed.

As I prayed about how to handle this, the thought came that since God is Truth and Love, as the Bible teaches, telling the truth and expressing brotherly love cannot conflict, but must work together for good. Reliance on God as both Truth and Love opens the door to harmony that blesses all involved, in every kind of situation.

That’s because on this basis, genuine truth-telling doesn’t stem from a desire for personal gain or praise, but comes from obedience to our natural proclivity to do what is just and principled. It is our natural disposition to do what is loving and right. No one is irredeemably prone to lying, altering facts, or subjugating the truth, because the motivation to do less than good could never come from God, who is entirely good. Rather, we can maintain that man’s heritage is integrity. This fact strengthens us and those around us.

Hand in hand with a genuine desire to be truthful and loving, we can trust that divine Love cares for all in just the right way. I realized that this included my colleague and her students, as well.

These ideas gave me the strength and confidence to be kind as well as honest in sharing my observations with the principal. Afterward I felt that I had done the right thing.

Ultimately, this teacher did not finish out the school year. I ran into her a few years later and learned that she had subsequently shifted to a different profession. She mentioned how much happier she was and that her new career was a much better fit for her than teaching had been.

Because we are the offspring of God, Truth, our birthright is truth. We each have the intelligence, wisdom, and courage to tell the truth. God also reveals to us the humility and grace needed to do this lovingly and to support others in expressing their innate integrity, as well. It is natural for each one of us to live a life of honesty – with confidence and sincerity.

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Two in a row!

David J. Phillip/AP
The University of Connecticut celebrates its win against Purdue University in the NCAA men's Final Four championship basketball game, April 8, 2024, in Glendale, Arizona. It was the team's second consecutive national championship and sixth win overall. To celebrate, the city of Hartford is hosting a victory parade on Saturday.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Tomorrow, security writer Anna Mulrine Grobe will look at the issue of closer cooperation between U.S. and Japanese militaries, as Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio comes to Washington for a state visit. 

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