New poem in Rust + Moth: “Ми тут (We are here)”

One of my poems, “Ми тут (We are here)” written in response to the war in Ukraine, has been published on Rust + Moth.
I am grateful to the editors for choosing it for the Summer 2022 issue, and I am happy to be able to share it with you.
Screenshot of the published poem”Ми тут” in Rust + Moth.

You can find all the poems in the Summer issue here.

Print copies will be available soon. I’ll update this page with a link.

My Father Taught Me About Hope

It is my father, Walter Dudycz’s birthday today. These past few weeks I have been thinking about a lot about what he taught me about hope. (In Ukrainian the word is надія….also my sister’s name.) I can see how hope shaped my father’s life, and his example of hope has shaped who I am.

When I was a teenager, I thought that I was just an optimist; but the older I got, the more I realized that was not true. Optimism is not the same as hope. Optimists expect good things to happen.

I’m actually not an optimist. What I am is hopeful. I was taught by my father that hope is the belief that when the bad things happen, you can work together to overcome those things.

That idea and all its parts have shaped everything for me:
It implies awareness that bad things that have happened and will happen.
It calls out that hope requires action.
It also implies that hope can be shared. Hope in community is powerful.
And at its heart, hope is a belief. For my father and for me, belief implies the mystery of something greater than us in the Universe. That belief means that hope and prayer are interconnected.

From my father, I also learned:
We need to keep practicing hope, or we can lose it. The more we use it, the stronger it becomes.
The memory of hope can help us to rediscover it.
Hope is a tool. We take it, and we do things with it. We need hope to make changes in the world.
Sometimes those changes take a long time. Hope can come in tiny steps.
Stories and songs about hope help it to grow and spread.
When we share hope, it gets stronger.

I thought about this when I was at one of the rallies in support of Ukraine last weekend. I saw that hope in my father’s eyes, and on the faces of the people around us holding signs and chanting, as well those passersby who honked and waved.

Someone asked me why we go to rallies, what good does it do? I think I have a better answer for them now after thinking about it.

The answer is hope.

Happy Birthday, Tato

(Photo by 8 Eyes Photography)

News in Ukraine – Twitter Resources

I have found that Twitter has some of the most up-to-date sources of information, so I am sharing the journalists and organizations that I have been following:

TWITTER:

Olga Tokariuk   @olgatokariuk
@EFEnoticias freelance correspondent in Kyiv. @CEPA non-resident fellow. Disinformation researcher. Ex  @Hromadske

Daria Kaleniuk @dkaleniuk
Executive director at @AntAC_ua (Anti-Corruption Action Centre, curbing grand political corruption in Ukraine.)

Terrell Jermaine Starr @terrelljstarr
Black journalist on the ground in Kyiv, Host, #BlackDiplomats Podcast , Journalist @RollingStone @ACEurasia @AtlanticCouncil

llia Ponomarenko @IAPonomarenko
Defense reporter with The Kyiv Independent.

Christopher Miller @ChristopherJM
Correspondent @BuzzFeedNews covering national security, extremism. Spent 11 years in Ukraine & East Europe.

The Kyiv Independent  @KyivIndependent
English-language journalism in Ukraine.

The New Voice of Ukraine @NewVoiceUkraine
The New Voice of Ukraine is Ukraine’s premier independent English-language news resource.

Radio Free Europe @RFERL
Uncensored news. Responsible and open debate. Specialized coverage of Russia, Ukraine, Central Asia, the Caucasus, Iran, the Balkans, Eastern Europe.