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T. S. Eliot’s “Little Gidding”
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The Need of Refugees
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Listening to Silence
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Editors’ Picks Issue 12
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The Happy Nuns
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Traudl Wallbrecher
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The Man Who Welcomed Immigrants
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The Soil of Friendship
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Thomas Müntzer
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A Time for Courage
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“What is Truth?”
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Readers Respond Issue 12
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At the March For Life
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Why the Death Penalty Must Die
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God’s Cop
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The Teacher Who Never Spoke
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Bonhoeffer in China
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The Comandante and the King
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Confronted by Dorothy
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Insights on Courage
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The Art of Courage
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Why We Hope
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I.
Palm Sunday
(Amsterdam Avenue at 142nd Street)
High noon, and an azure sky,
waving branches, a festive crowd;
the shimmer of heat and springtime silk.
(Tomorrow, of course, the forgotten fronds
will be swept together, bagged, and burned.
One day’s enough for praise – and besides,
the city streets have to be kept clean.)
II.
Via Crucis
(Central Park West at 110th Street)
Good Friday, and the endless rain
is streaming down the wet black face
of the rocks that tower above the park.
Rain, and red-flecked crabapple petals:
tears from a thorn crown, dropping like blood.
Rain, drip-dropping in the echoing cave
of the crowded subway, where a man stands tall.
He’s regal, despite the harried mob.
“Jesus is coming!” he cries with fervor.
“Jesus is coming! Are you ready?”
III.
Easter Morning
(Morningside Avenue at 127th Street)
Here comes the sun, to light the alleys,
to flood each lonely garret and caress each stiffened limb.
Here comes the sun, to search out the dejected,
to warm the huddled drunk and make the panhandler sing.
Here comes the Son, to satisfy the hungry,
to mend the broken spirit, and lift the gravest sin.
Photography by Dave Beckerman, beckermanphoto.com.
edits books for Plough and is a former resident of Harlem.
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