He is playing the cursed card!

Ich weiß nicht mit welchen Waffen sich die Menschen im 3. Weltkrieg bekämpfen,
aber im 4. werden es Keulen sein.

Albert Einstein

And suddenly, it went quiet for a moment
of disbelief. He is playing the cursed card,
only it has long ceased to be just another
game of cards. And it will be on your hands,
Russians, but what will it matter in a place
that is completely deserted?

Putin, go fuck yourself

It would seem that everything was going according to plan.
The weather was good, the protesters came in decent numbers,
there were flags, banners full of angry slogans, candles.
And yet it felt uneasy somehow.

Maybe it was because decent people rarely come out in public,
and if they do, they do so with a certain sense of embarrassment,
unless they are angry enough.

But this time, their cries, compared to the noisy groups of fans
just passing by the square on their way from the stadium to the pubs,
were somewhat stunted and died away quickly.

Or maybe it was due to some feeling of inadequacy. After all, it is just
a small city in the north of Scotland. Or perhaps guilt, as Castlegate
is nothing like Snake Island.

Kyiv, not Kiev

My word processor struggles with the name Kyiv.
For some baffling reason, it suggests that I mean Vicky.
At least it does not mind a psychopath, a thug, terror, war,
or tragedy, because otherwise expressing the present reality
would become quite a challenge. The point is, I can quickly
fix my word processor by adding “Kyiv” to the dictionary.
If only it were that painless to fix the reality that drowns
the sovereignty and freedom inherent in this spelling
in the river of blood.

No time for regrets

A bully gets bolder over time,
taking advantage of the passivity of decent people.
So now, as we wring our hands over Kiev,
we can only regret that we shrugged at the sight
of the little green men, and what is more,
we had a great time at the Luzhniki afterwards.
Except that this is not the time for vain regrets,
because Kiev’s fate may cast a shadow over Taipei,
and nobody wants to get caught in the domino rally
of the nuclear-armed strong men.

Why die for Kiev?

Combattre aux côtés de nos amis polonais pour la défense commune de nos territoires, de nos biens, de nos libertés, c’est une perspective qu’on peut courageusement envisager, si elle doit contribuer au maintien de la paix. Mais mourir pour Dantzig, non!

Marcel Déat, “Mourir pour Dantzig”, L’Œuvre, 4 May 1939

Do you remember these words?
To fight alongside our Polish friends
for the common defence
of our territories,
of our property,
of our liberties,
this is a perspective
that one can courageously envisage,
if it should contribute
to maintaining the peace.
But to die for Danzig, no!

Do you remember what happened next?

The cadence of her steps

First, there was the ancient lyrical cadence
of handclapping, which scared the gulls
and attracted the eyes of rare passers-by.
It guided a group of young men through
the sound of the winter sea. Their faces,
carved by the one hundred and twenty-day
wind, burst out with the joyful laughter
of their youth, as they slowly walked away
towards Fittie. But then the poet noticed
a pensive old woman among them
and wondered if she would have given up
everything for the cold granite walls
of an old fishing village if there had been
no cadence warmly embracing her steps.