REPARATIONS TODAY 🤞🏾
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REPARATIONS TODAY 🤞🏾
"Language Series I" (1964-2004) by Channa Horwitz ⬣ Black circles plot an eight-count system
"The Universe Favors Us Now Ep"
(Poetry project)
11 poems
5/1/25
©abpoetry2025.
Systematic
Tell me that
You’ve never seen a system with a crack
That however improbable
And however small
Someone fell down
And wasn’t welcomed back up.
Because only so many times
Can the nail be hammered
Before the wood begins to warp
And only so long
Can the earthquake go on
Before the ground begins to fail.
System failure, system failure
Throw the dying ones a rope
But cut off their hands before you do
Or this systematic failure could be fixed.
Tell me how you’ve never seen
Someone fall and fall and fall
Down a hole so deep
It swallowed them up
Never to be noticed again.
Letters on a paper
Ruining lives
Laws for people
Who have never been seen.
System failure, system failure
The hammer keeps on hitting
So cut off their hands
And keep shaking their world
So the systematic failure can thrive.
‘Fighting for their release keeps me strong’: Ex-Ukrainian POW on mission to reveal horrors of Russian captivity - Geneva Solutions
As thousands of Ukrainian fighters and civilians remain in Russian custody, one former prisoner of war who endured torture is determined to
As thousands of Ukrainian fighters and civilians remain in Russian custody, one former prisoner of war who endured torture is determined to expose the harsh conditions they face. He was in Geneva to tell his story, where UN experts have also been working to locate those who are missing. Oleksii Anulia has the body build one would expect from a kickboxing champion. It was hard to believe that the tall person standing in the hallways of the Palais des Nations in Geneva, a year and a half ago, was a frail body with protruding ribs, as seen in the picture he held up in his smartphone. The 31-year-old from the Chernihiv region was among the many Ukrainians who joined the military in February 2022 to resist the Russian invasion. He was also among the unlucky ones to be captured by the enemy forces, being a prisoner of war from 9 March 2022 until a swap of 140 Ukrainian POWs on New Year’s Eve of the same year. During his 10 months of captivity, Anulia was starved, beaten and tortured to the point of resulting in 36 hospitalisations since his release, he said. Despite that, Anulia told Geneva Solutions that “he has no time to feel depressed”. “Fighting for the release of those who are still captive keeps me strong,” he said. That’s what brought him to Geneva earlier this month for the United Nations Human Rights Council’s summer session at the invitation of the Oslo-based Human Rights Research League. In front of a room packed mostly with western diplomats, Anulia described in detail his ordeal, how he was captured in Lukashivka, a small town a few kilometres south of Chernihiv city, while his father was burned alive in a local church nearby. He was then driven to a place near Belarus in a truck carrying potatoes, ammunition and Russian corpses, where a Russian soldier who recognised him from his kickboxing days saved him from being raped. He recounted being moved through six different detention centres, including a notorious correctional colony in Donskoy town, in the Russian Tula province, south of Moscow. There, he endured horrid conditions, subsisting on nothing but two spoons of porridge at times, drinking his own urine and toilet water, and being electrocuted.
‘Widespread and systematic’ Though harrowing, Anulia’s story is not unique. The Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine, set up by the Human Rights Council in 2022 to investigate violations during the war, released a report in March detailing the “horrific treatment” and torture of POWs in at least 11 detention centres across Russia and Russian-controlled areas in Ukraine. The document described the practices as “widespread and systematic”, potentially amounting to war crimes.
I love local live music shows so much. There's something so beautiful about sharing the night with 50 or so other people, hearing music only a few thousand (at most) others will ever hear, and having an experience that will never be captured digitally in any meaningful way. Big concerts are great and if it's an artist of band that you love then it's absolutely worth it, but watching some 21 year old film student ascend to the astral plain in a parking lot is free and just as fun.
Working is a scam lol little man understands