Sunday, December 25, 2022

Poets Respond to War in Ukraine

            ~ I believe in the power of poetry to move us to compassion and action. ~ 

Greeting you this holiday season....

Yesterday, while making year-end charitable contributions, I faced a challenge: where to send money for Ukraine? I want the funds immediately to reach people in the midst of that war, but scams abound.  And super-sized organizations already have fund-raising machines that both cost and generate a boatload of money. ***January Update: Our due diligence regarding Ukraine TrustChain [refers to the human network of trust, not block chain technology] resulted in a significant donation on our part, and from many of you. Here is a link to their latest newsletter. See more commentary following the poem.***

And then today I received my daily-poem email from Rattle, which I now share with you as part of this holiday message because, as I state at the top of this post, I truly believe in the power of poetry to move us to compassion and action. Please visit Rattle for the full December 25, 2022 post from which this message is shared. I am posting it here with full credit to them and gratitude for their publication of this poem.

It's my hope that 2023 find its way to a healthier, more peaceful world. Here’s to Poetry. Here’s to Ukraine. Here’s to you, dear ones. Shalom.

With love, Andi*

THE UKRAINIAN FLAG STARES THROUGH THE BALSAM FIR FROM LARRY’S TREES 

 Julia Kolchinsky Dasbach
just take it he said & I doubted
generosity are you sure? still $30 short
I’ve learned nothing is free
in this country his
white mustache curled
to a smile I’m Larry & this
is the south & these are my trees 
how easy to claim what soil gives 
to own trees & bodies 
to give them away to strangers 
so my children can hang 
the shatterproof ornaments & ask for more 
light while in Ukraine 
the bulbs won’t spark the heat
won’t radiate the soil will stay 
snow-covered & theirs & 
in my house strings & strings 
of electric rainbow dazzle 
trail the evergreen & walls & wind 
my children’s small limbs 
here in Arkansas it’s barely cold 
enough to light a fire 
but we can & do with oak 
& crabapple we home 
its added glow so everything 
smells of invited smoke & pine 
not invaded smoking sky where 
the windows flicker with candlelight 
& shellings & tomorrow 
I will bake gingerbread & fry latkes 
& light the candles 
forbidden in my Soviet childhood 
tomorrow I will pray 
to a god I don’t believe in 
for more miracle tomorrow 
I will still have been born 
from darkness & wick & tonight 
when I lift my daughter 
to place the silver star on the highest branch 
& my American mother— 
in-law takes a photo 
the only light will be the yellow— 
blue horizon of the flag 
frozen in the window behind us 

The Poet’s Comment
“The missiles continue to fall on Ukraine. Millions lose power and heat and even water. It is well below freezing all across the country. On Christmas Eve, when many families in the US and around the world gather around a tree decorated by hundreds of lights, in my birthplace, Ukraine, this day will mark ten months of brutal, full-scale war. It is too easy to grow used to the barrage of terrible news, too easy to forget that during this time of celebration, suffering continues. If you are able, consider contributing to an aid organization that helps those who are in Ukraine and refugees trying to flee. I recommend Ukraine TrustChain, an all volunteer-run nonprofit started by Ukrainian immigrants in the US, they work with local volunteers on the ground, going directly into areas hard to reach by larger international organizations. TrustChain provides urgent food, medical supplies, and transportation to safer regions.” (web)             Julia Kolchinsky Dasbach

*Andi's Disclaimer
Please do your own research if you are interested in either Ukraine TrustChain or Rattle. I am not endorsing sites or soliciting funds!! Just sharing my own commitment to poetry and to Ukraine at a time when the global community struggles to find “Peace on Earth” in any measure. 

Perhaps through our individual actions, we can collectively offer peace and human-to-human “Goodwill” as this difficult year comes to an end. Maybe next year we will be able to say with certainty, "A Great Miracle Happened Here."  Amen.

Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Here, There, and Back Again (July 20) and Again (Nov 9)

July 20: It's been a while. And I have much to share. But not yet. For now I just want to establish the basics (for myself as much as for you): As long as pens and paper exist, I am a writer in my own ink, with or without a blog or a brand, an online presence or mysterious absence, a hook or an arc or a rhyme. And when I retire from my day job, sometime soon I'll revisit this space regularly and craft it into something new. Until then.... Nov 9: I retired on October 6, 2022. Since then, I've been taking two online poetry classes per week, walking in the neighborhood, cooking and baking, reading anything I want to read (novels, poetry, the newspaper, other people's blogs, magazines, journals, short stories, non-fiction... and insurance policies, bank statements, change of address forms [we moved], email, texts, postcards, writers on writing, etc.). I've been writing, sorting files, hanging pictures, grocery shopping, and making travel plans. And following up with my medical oncologist who has declared me to be cancer free [post-chemo, post-surgery]. I haven't decided yet what I want this blog to do or to be in 2023 and beyond, but I can promise new content and maybe a new look. Hasta luego....