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Tanya Kalmanovitch's avatar

Thank you for the notion, from Havel, that risk inheres in truth. As a musician, I'm always looking for language to describe why it matters that we sing and sound our truth; and how to outline in sharp, clear detail where it is that music sounds the truth, and where it serves, instead, to conceal or deny it. Your voice has been helpful to me in this, and in much else, and I'm grateful for your work and to all those whose works have shaped yours.

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Laura Donna's avatar

A friend sent me something about Jesus giving His life and I couldn’t engage with it. Distracted by Christian white nationalists, exhausted by conversation with hardline pacifists, angry about any suggestion that rolling over and playing dead is a redemptive act, I decided that Easter isn’t working right now. My husband went to church and I mapped the news about mayors, intellectuals, public servants and children bound for “lustration,” filtration camps and pits against language from the genocide handbook you shared. Then I printed and stuffed your piece above into my bag in order to read it out loud (and to doodle flowers around paragraph four) from the passenger seat on our way to wherever for ham.

As you correctly say: “ 'To live in truth' means accepting a measure of existential danger…but death is not the point.” It is certainly not to be glamorized or glorified. I’ve been sensing just that happening and, before you spoke, couldn’t say why it felt so wrong. Each who fights, stays or keeps the record is to be praised, loved and remembered for living in truth more than for dying a martyr’s death.

Thank you, as always, Tim. Please know that you are inspiring not just thinking, talking and writing, but also action.

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