apologia
by bam

dear blessed, blessed, good people of ukraine,
we are without words for the depth of our sorrow and our shame. we have betrayed you. cruelly. mercilessly. and we are sorry. we are so, so deeply sorry.
you have no idea of my existence. i am just a silver-haired lady in the middle of america, thousands and thousands of anonymities away, and yet i woke up trembling for the betrayal, and the insanity rained upon you in the form of words. words spoken by an elected leader of a country that until a month ago was doing all it could to ensure your safety, to uphold your humanity.
it is a sordid twist in history i’d prayed i’d never live to see. i thought we vowed never to forget.
the horror is that i don’t think anything is forgotten. from where i sit in an old shingled house on a quiet street near a big cold lake, it sounds as if the betrayal is the worst kind, the knowing kind, the horror not forgotten but ignored. it’s a supreme act of evil hubris the likes of which don’t belong in any century, let alone the one where we’ve allegedly evolved so much as to make machines that almost think like humans. perhaps we should have been investing in our souls. instead of masterminding brains.
three years ago, we sat in front of screens frozen by the sights of maternity wards in rubble, of old ladies huddled in subway tunnels. some of us crowded into the nearest ukrainian churches, to pray with you. to bend our knees, bow our heads, and make the orthodox sign of the cross at the end of prayers whose words we did not know but whose intent we felt with every fiber of our being.
i can’t count the tears i’ve shed, reading stories of newborns blown to bits, of mothers laboring in bomb shelters, imagining the terror of a sky raining bomb after bomb after bomb. as, for three unbearable years, i read the stories of russian soldiers traipsing house to house, raping woman after woman, regardless of her decade. stories of herding children onto buses, tearing them away from families, all but delivering them to lives of sordid inner torture, tortures whose scars might never heal. stories of villagers lined up, plastic bags pulled over heads, shot execution style. the last sound each one heard, the sound of a rifle shot, and a body thudding to the ground, knowing that sound would next be them.
and yet, words from the white house occupant this week turned truth to lies, blamed the war on you, name-called your president, a man whose courage in the face of abysmal fear and threat not long ago brought burning hope to a darkened world. count me among the ones who cried as he walked the aisle of the house chamber of the u.s. capitol to ascend to the podium where his words shook a silent nation to the core. and where the roaring ovation from those in the chamber, and those in living rooms and rec rooms all around this country seemed a wave without end crashing to a shore. we saw hope in you. we prayed we could muster a modicum of the courage you showed, should we ever, ever find ourselves in a plight with even a fraction of the horror in which you lived.
and now, we are the people of this nation that might well become a living symbol of cruel betrayal.
and so, this humble letter, which you shall likely never read, is but one voice, speaking for many, as i fall to my knees, bow my head, and beg forgiveness for the sins thrust upon you.

three years ago, i wrote “exercise in empathy, another name for prayer,” and left it here on the chair. i am leaving it again, complete with the end note and question i left at the time. to remind us of the time when our whole nation felt united in praying for mercy, and willing to do all we could to make it happen…
exercise in empathy, another name for prayer
can you imagine? can you imagine waking up with your bedroom windows shaking, a distant thump unmistakably drenching you in dread, even in the liminal fog of your pre-dawn dreams?
can you imagine lifting your newborn from the crib, cradling him against your breast, and running in the cold to the nearest subway shelter, where you will then spend hours upon endless hours, hearing the faint cacophony of what you know to be bombs exploding on a land you call your own?
can you imagine?
can you imagine rushing to your kitchen, clearing shelves of whatever might fuel you in the long hours ahead, grabbing your dog, your kids, your passport, and climbing behind the wheel of a car with only a half tank of gas, a tank you meant to fill the day before but one of the kids got cranky so you thought you’d put it off?
can you imagine if you were due to show up for an MRI to see how far the cancer had spread, how fractured was the tibia, the hip, the wrist, but now the air-raid sirens blare through the dawn and you have to weigh a trip to the hospital or the nearest border?
can you imagine watching your father fill his duffle bag, turning toward the door, pausing to kiss you on the forehead, watching the tears well up in your mother’s eyes, seeing how her hand now is shaking, how she clutches the sleeve of your father’s coat, and how he pulls himself away, unlocks the door and steps out into darkness? and your mother fills the sudden emptiness with a wail you’ve never heard before?
can you imagine holding a ticket to a flight out in the morning only to awake to find the airports all are closed, bombed in the night, and no air space is safe for flying?
imagining is imperative. imagining is how we weave the invisible threads that make us one united people, that make us begin to know what it is to walk in another’s hell.
imagining is the birthing ground of empathy.
and empathy fuels our most selfless urgent prayer.
empathy––a necessary precondition for loving as you would be loved, the necessity of imagining another someone’s pain or fear or desperation, for sometimes imagining nothing more complicated than cold or hunger or exhaustion so overwhelming you’re sure your heart is on its last full measure––empathy is the exercise that puts form and fuel to prayer, that enfolds its stripped-down architecture in the flesh of humanity. be it agony, or terror. be it frenzy, or dizzying confusion.
empathy is what lifts our prayer out of the trench of numbness, muttering words we memorize but do not mean. empathy fine chisels each and every prayer. catapults us beyond our own self-obsessed borders, across time zone or geography. conjoins our circumstance with that of someone we have never met, someone whose predicament is dire, and is––in fact––beyond our most ignited imagination.
truth is, our empathy cannot take us the whole distance. cannot––despite our deepest straining––plant us in the fiery pit of what it is to be awaking to the bombs, watching the ones we love walk into the inky darkness, not knowing for weeks if they’re dead or alive, maimed or shackled, or someone else’s prisoners of war.
but it’s the place to begin.
and isn’t the whole point of praying to reach across the emptiness, the void, to unfurl the one first filament that might begin to bring us side-by-side, in soul and spirit if not in flesh?
don’t we sometimes pray as if to hoist another’s leaden burden onto the yoke of our own shoulders?
isn’t the heart of it to lift us as one? we’re not here as parties of one, churning up our own little worries, butting our place to the front of the God line. we’re here to pay attention. to scan for hurt and humiliation, to go beyond, far beyond, lip service and throw-away lines.
imagination––the exercise of empathy––is a God-given gift, it’s the thing that equips us to love as you would be loved. without it, our every petition is flat. is a waste of our breath, really.
we invoke the hand, the heart of God, yes. but isn’t it our business, our holy business, to get about the work of trying to weave us into true holy communion?
it is our empathies that just might save us as a people, that just might move us toward the place where all our prayers rise in echo, from all corners, nooks, and crannies.
it’s not often we wake up to war. but we did this week. and so we will in the weeks and weeks to come.
i awake now in unending prayer. another name for exercising empathies, to stay awake to the suffering now inflicted on ones we’re meant to love. even if we’ll never know their names.
***
i searched for a prayer for peace, and came circling back to this, from ellen bass; it is a prayer for all, no matter to whom or what or how you pray:
Pray for Peace
Pray to whomever you kneel down to:
Jesus nailed to his wooden or plastic cross,
his suffering face bent to kiss you,
Buddha still under the bo tree in scorching heat,
Adonai, Allah. Raise your arms to Mary
that she may lay her palm on our brows,
to Shekhina, Queen of Heaven and Earth,
to Inanna in her stripped descent.
Then pray to the bus driver who takes you to work.
On the bus, pray for everyone riding that bus,
for everyone riding buses all over the world.
Drop some silver and pray.
Waiting in line for the movies, for the ATM,
for your latte and croissant, offer your plea.
Make your eating and drinking a supplication.
Make your slicing of carrots a holy act,
each translucent layer of the onion, a deeper prayer.
To Hawk or Wolf, or the Great Whale, pray.
Bow down to terriers and shepherds and Siamese cats.
Fields of artichokes and elegant strawberries.
Make the brushing of your hair
a prayer, every strand its own voice,
singing in the choir on your head.
As you wash your face, the water slipping
through your fingers, a prayer: Water,
softest thing on earth, gentleness
that wears away rock.
Making love, of course, is already prayer.
Skin, and open mouths worshipping that skin,
the fragile cases we are poured into.
If you’re hungry, pray. If you’re tired.
Pray to Gandhi and Dorothy Day.
Shakespeare. Sappho. Sojourner Truth.
When you walk to your car, to the mailbox,
to the video store, let each step
be a prayer that we all keep our legs,
that we do not blow off anyone else’s legs.
Or crush their skulls.
And if you are riding on a bicycle
or a skateboard, in a wheelchair, each revolution
of the wheels a prayer as the earth revolves:
less harm, less harm, less harm.
And as you work, typing with a new manicure,
a tiny palm tree painted on one pearlescent nail,
or delivering soda or drawing good blood
into rubber-capped vials, twirling pizzas–
With each breath in, take in the faith of those
who have believed when belief seemed foolish,
who persevered. With each breath out, cherish.
Pull weeds for peace, turn over in your sleep for peace,
feed the birds, each shiny seed
that spills onto the earth, another second of peace.
Wash your dishes, call your mother, drink wine.
Shovel leaves or snow or trash from your sidewalk.
Make a path. Fold a photo of a dead child
around your Visa card. Scoop your holy water
from the gutter. Gnaw your crust.
Mumble along like a crazy person, stumbling
your prayer through the streets.
–Ellen Bass
how did you learn to pray?
a note in an age of war: when the first reports started seeping in, when the news broke the other night that shelling had started along the northern, eastern, and southern borders of ukraine, it wasn’t long till i found myself thinking of all of you here at the chair. i knew we would all be huddled on the edge of our armchairs, keeping watch, keeping terrible watch. made me wish that every once in a while we could be together in real time, with our real faces and voices. our hearts and souls come to life. maybe after two years without company, without mornings when i set out mugs and bowls spilling with clementines, i am getting hungrier for human contact. made me wonder if maybe one day soon we should gather in a zoom room. i’ll leave this as a thought. i know we’re a gaggle of rather shy souls, but even us shy ones sometimes hunger for company. true company.
my question on this cold february morning of 2025, is what oh what shall we do?




Gorgeous. Heartbreaking. True. Thank you, Barbara, for so poignantly expressing what so many of us can’t yet or are unable to express. Love the Ellen Bass poem. Will share. Must share….
❤
Sweet Barbara. You have so poignantly put onto words what I have been trying to process..grasp that as a nation this is where we are…arriving here at warp speed…I wander around my house trying to understand this version of Christianity…who believes this? Why? No words…
sometimes we can only hold hands tightly and wipe each other’s tears….
there were gremlins aplenty in my laptop this morning, when i tried to save and post this. i then had to scramble to my phone where internet connection was sketchy at best. i have gone through the text above and fixed a couple bloops that snuck in without notice before i sent it off into the wintry wilds of the cyber world. hopefully, all now fixed.
Dear Barbie, you have expressed the inexpressible, with words that stick in my craw, too painful to utter. Please post this to your Facebook page so we can share it widely. Thank you.
i shudder to do so, but this is a time to be brave…so i will post…..oh, lordy….
Such true words, but also such frightening words. Thank you for sharing your thoughts so poignantly. My heart is crushed for the people of Ulkraine, and I’m embarrasssed to live in this country where goodness no longer exists! And what I really can’t imagine is how anyone voted for the current occupant of the White House. I’ve tried to be patient and hopeful about what he may or may not do, but I am already disillusioned, despaired, and disappointed more than I thought possible. Thank you for sharing the lovely poem. It reminds me that prayer should be ongoing throughout every day.
The zoom event might be fun. I’d probably show up, but I don’t talk much. 🙂
amen. and amen.
i too have tried and tried to not expect the worst, but it’s worse than i ever worried. sickening.
as for the zoom, i wrote that end note back when i first posted the exercise in empathy post, when we were all in covid lockdown AND witnessing the bombing of ukraine. i wondered if that would be unclear. but maybe we will resurrect the idea. i too tend to be fairly shy on zooms.
hang in there. we are all here at the table, shaking our heads in unison….
I hope this magnificent piece finds its way to Ukraine to assure its brave citizens that we are not all ugly Americans. The betrayal, a fiction sprung from a demented, cruel and always self-serving ego, is unfathomable, but also not, considering the totally unmuzzled source.
I saw a wonderful, heartbreaking, inspiring movie, Porcelain War, that might be streaming now. It’s a documentary by Ukrainian artists who continue their art as bombs fall and windows shatter while they also take up rifles as volunteers in the army. At the end, I thought, every American should see this movie. These people have a fierce and fearless love of democracy that I’m not seeing widespread here, especially among our so-called leaders in the legislative and judicial branches. I hope there is finally a groundswell of pushback from not-so-ordinary citizens who will not relinquish the ideal of the United States as the world’s beacon of justice, democracy and humanitarianism. Of course we are flawed, but, so far, we have not totally failed. I hope that holds in the coming weeks and months.
i hope and pray so, too. i will look for Porcelain War. sounds powerful!
“unmuzzled.” choice word. “unfathomable,” too.
True confession: I couldn’t read most of this. My soul cannot read one more bit of horror without completely buckling. The helplessness … the “what oh what shall we do,” as you ask, going round and round in my brain, heart, soul … it feels like an anvil in the center of my being. How can we stop this? What can we do? Who will stand? How I wish I knew what to do … and also knew that I would have the courage and strength to do it.
i totally get it. writing an open apology was the only thing i could think of this morning.
So proud of you for always saying what needs to be said and focusing us on what’s important.
So moving. xox
thank you.
OMG babs! You dare to give voice, and you do, you do stand proud. You are heard. And then the “Exercise in Empathy.” I am brought low, to my knees.
you are heard. Stay the course.
love you, david.
good morning. good saturday morning. i know that many who come to the chair might also be seeing Krista Tippett’s new OnBeing letter, but i found her nod to her Grounding Virtues, the essence of her envisioning long ago, a serious something to pay attention to. maybe maybe there is the faintest shift stirring….
check out this list of Grounding Virtues: Words That Matter, Hospitality, Humility, Patience, Generous Listening, Adventurous Civility.
The latter is teased out thusly: “Adventurous civility honors the difficulty of what we face and the complexity of what it means to be human.”
We will find our way. I believe it.
here’s the link: https://onbeing.org/the-six-grounding-virtues-of-the-on-being-project/?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email
This piece has haunted me since reading it. I too carry the depth of this grief which you so perfectly express. I have spent time in prayer, meditation, literature and conversations with trusted and dear souls about, “what to do”. I awaken in the night with the same question spinning through my thoughts and on my conscience. What can I do?
I am trying to find one loose strand from this ever growing and tightening spool of a nightmare; one strand to pull on and begin the unwinding. I know I can’t attend to each loose end but I can commit to holding one. I will share my gifts as generously as I can to untangle that one strand. I know I can attend to my one part.
I have started my summer garden by starting seeds for all the herbs and vegetables I will grow. I will have hundreds of plants to tend when all the germination and potting on is done. I have again partnered with an urban garden to give the bulk of these plants to so that folks trying to feed their families can get a start come spring. I cannot feed a city but I can at least make plants available to help in my one small way.
I am reading, Midwinter Light – Meditations for the Long Season by Marilyn McEntyre. It is a book that will not only take you through the seasonal darkness of winter but also through this long season of political/societal darkness. It is based on poetry with a short meditation after each poem.
I’m rereading my notes from, This Here Flesh: Spirituality, Liberation, and the Stories That Make Us by Cole Arthur Riley. In her book she writes;
“In lament, our task is never to convince someone of the brokenness of this world; it is to convince them of the world’s worth in the first place. True lament is not born from the trite sentiment that the world is bad but rather from the deep conviction that it is worthy of goodness.” “I think that when God bears witness to our lament, we discover that we are not calling out to a teacher but inviting God as a nurturer – a mother who hears her child crying in the night. She wakes, rises, and comes to the place where we lie. She rushes her holy warmth against our flesh and says, ‘I’m here”.”
I am praying and lamenting with all I’ve got and doing what small thing I can trusting that what I can’t do, someone else can and will. There are enough loose ends for us all. Thank you, Barbara, for pulling the string that keeps us connected to one another in love, friendship and empathy. There is light in this darkness, may we shine it on the groaning world.
oh my gracious, this is such a profoundly beautiful comment to read. and, uncannily, the percussion of raindrops hitting my windows began, almost as if tears to fall as i read.
your image of the thread to pull. just one loose thread….
and finally your meditation on lament, and cole arthur riley’s insightful seeing that we ache because we love what we’re losing or have lost. that is a new sense in terms of this country. hearing we voted along with russia, north korea, iran…….in my lifetime, i’ve not so knowingly seen ourselves as the big bad bully. and, i am crushed by what we’re losing, who we’ve become….
i am right here with you. and thank you for bringing your voice — yes, even in its pain — here to this old table where we can hold hands, shed tears, and pray….
bless you.