A hospital patient who managed to talk a man out of detonating a bomb in a maternity wing said the would-be attacker “asked for a cuddle” before standing down. Nathan Newby, who stopped an atrocity through an act of kindness, spoke publicly for the first time about his encounter with Mohammad Farooq before receiving the George Medal [from King Charles, above] for bravery. Farooq, a clinical support worker who took a viable pressure cooker bomb into St James’s hospital in Leeds intending to “kill as many nurses as possible” was jailed for at least 37 years last year. After asking for a cuddle, Farooq told Newby to “phone the police before I change my mind.’ —The Guardian, March 24, 2026 Oh, the layers of life right now— sweet family visit with my thirty-something god-nephew and our goddess-niece, his wife. Calming, evocation of belonging, togetherness, as we commune deeply with them. They are artists, teachers, such loving creatures, here with their stray-rescued-as-a-puppy-ten-years-ago, Navajo, to spend the night with us. Bearing down on that layer is a dangerous one above it, malignant, narcissistic, Machiavellian, sadistic, hanging by a thread— a heavy concrete cloud, just above our heads, visible, threatening, seeded with stress and dread. I fly above into the stratosphere of compassion, look down through the conflicting, complex layers of our human race in this era. Kindness, not war and hate, rescues minds from harmful ideas. Will we learn to weave empathic ropes to throw, not just to those we love, but to those who other us as well? Can humanity, we, reel away from our constant collapse into competing cultiness, a tendency in all of us? Broader belonging, expansive, Transcendent Human Tribe is now our mental moon shot challenge. How will it come? I wonder as I land back on earth from my imaginary skyward travel. Perhaps Eroding Othering should be a sibling category to the Nobel Prize for Peace. All this I think as anxious rescue Navajo finally stops pacing, settles out of her traumatic memories of her early life on the reservation, on the streets— packless, othered, bitten, diseased. At last, she welcomes our acceptance, lets us pet her, relaxes on her fluffy, gray, perfect circle of bed. Lynne Barnes' poetry memoir Falling into Flowers won the 2017 Goodreads Rainbow Award for Best Gay and Lesbian Poetry, was a finalist for the 2018 Eric Hoffer Book Awards, and received Honorable Mention in both the Gay and Poetry categories for the 2018 San Francisco Book Festival Awards. |
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Friday, March 27, 2026
WARM AND CUDDLY BELONGING FOR ALL
Thursday, March 26, 2026
DISTRACTIONS
forget about the pedophiles
the wars,
the ICE raids,
the killing of nonviolent protesters,
the abduction and incarceration of children,
the deportation of immigrants
who are not criminals,
the grifting and the lies,
the evil that spews forth every day,
trying to silence us,
eviscerate the truth
that we see with our eyes,
bully us into abdicating our rights,
turn us against one another
so they can continue their unholy alliances
retain unwarranted power,
feed their insatiable greed,
make money off of countless atrocities.
But we are not distracted.
We are focused, lightning bright,
brave and unstoppable.
We will not look away.
We will not pretend that
war crimes are not being committed.
We see that cruelty is the law of the land.
We believe the women and children
who have been raped, silenced, forgotten.
We stand with the men with integrity who fight for justice.
We the people march to demand an end to the horrors,
to honor truth and decry genocide,
racism, misogyny, xenophobia
and all the many uncivil actions
and policies that seek to undo us
deny us our sacred humanity.
Together we shout: “No kings. No autocrats. No Oligarchs.
Never, ever again!”
Mary Saracino is a novelist, memoir writer, and poet. Her book of poetry Motherlines was published by Pearlsong Press (February 2026). She is the author of four novels: Heretics: A Love Story (Pearlsong Press 2014), The Singing of Swans (Pearlsong Press 2006), No Matter What (Spinsters Ink 1993), and Finding Grace (Spinsters Ink 1999), and the memoir, Voices of the Soft-bellied Warrior (Spinsters Ink 2001). She co-edited (with Mary Beth Moser) She Is Everywhere! Volume 3: An anthology of writings in womanist/feminist spirituality (iUniverse 2012), which earned the 2013 Enheduanna Award for Excellence in Women-Centered Literature from Sofia University.
A DIFFERENT KIND OF KOSHER
by Todd Friedman
Dirt under your fingernails, backbone straight,
you would be the New Jew.
Clearing the swamp, rifle ready,
no more lambs to the slaughter.
The world was with you, Israel,
Buchenwald’s emaciated ghosts still searing.
My grandmother shouted through tears for you
in a jam-packed Madison Square Garden.
You were our Samson fighting
the entire Philistine army.
When you captured Jerusalem, shofars blowing,
it was the Red Sea parting anew.
Who can forget that photo of your “crying paratroopers”
standing in front of the Wailing Wall?
But now every day your settlers descend the hills masked:
smashing cars, bashing heads, burning villages.
And like Joshua’s sun your army stands still—
or even aids in the slaughter.
This is what my grandfather fled from in Russia—
only there it was called a pogrom.
So here you are, the New Jew,
with ancient real estate “deed” and a different kind of kosher.
We now know that Samson
was blind to begin with—
and so were we.
Todd Friedman is a retired NYC high school English teacher who now revels in having time to write. His poems have been published in Tikkun, The Reform Jewish Quarterly, Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Haight Ashbury Literary Journal, Blue Collar Review, and Vox Populi.
WHEN YOUR EYES DON'T WORK ANYMORE
by Kyle Hunter
I keep adjusting my glasses.
My blurry eyes feel older than me,
like I’ve been lending them out
and they’ve come back all used up.
There’s no way of telling how many bodies
will decompose enough to float up
and how many will stay on the bottom of the sea
or be carried by currents out to the Atlantic.
I shouldn’t be surprised, the loose
and languid skin around my eyes is not taut
anymore, it slouches against my sockets
waiting to hear it’s time to go.
As the bodies fill with gases
and distend sometimes layers
of skin will detach and float away
like a second ghost leaving the body.
I have known for many months
that I should set up an appointment
and talk to an expert.
There are solutions to this.
The governments involved refuse to talk
about the more than 655 migrants that died
in two months, the deadliest start ever
to any year in the Mediterranean.
But it’s easy to get distracted,
and sometimes it’s easier
not to see.
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
THERE IS NOT ENOUGH SNOW
by David A. Goodrum
![]() |
To cover the battlefields.
To soften the blows.
To fill the caskets with snowmen.
No blizzard to interfere
with news transmission, offer
the comfort of momentary quiet.
The country drifts
into one war then another.
There will never be enough snow
to blanket the lies of politicians,
which seep out like the blood
of eviscerated rabbits.
Whichever way the wind blows
there is never enough snow
to level-fill the trenches.
There is always a hollow
a depression that shows
where the civilians are buried.
David A. Goodrum is the author of Abrupt Edges (Bass Clef Books, 2025), Vitals and Other Signs of Life (The Poetry Box, 2024) and Sparse Poetica (Audience Askew, 2023). Recent journal publications have appeared in The Orchards Poetry Journal (which awarded his poem “Winter Inquisition” a Pushcart Nomination), Cirque, and Triggerfish Critical Review, among others. David lives in Corvallis, Oregon.
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
HOMELESS
![]() |
| Dharmik Vibes |
What is madness but nobility of soul
at odds with circumstance?
—Theodore Roethke, “In a Dark Time”
At home once in the universe,
the old physicist
used to weave theories of everything
in the cat’s cradle
of his mind. How orderly the atoms
danced, how fleeting the
half-life of years. Wrapped now in rags,
his words spoken
only to the wind, he signs the language
of loss, hands tangled
in mudras, like a manic Buddhist, or an
operator at the
switchboard of chaos, pulling wires,
answering calls,
frantically making connections on the
streets
of the fallen.
Monday, March 23, 2026
#INMOURNING
When Democracy dies
I’ll arrive
Graveside
Plum plumped lips
Dramatic smoky eyes
Crystal tear adhered
To my right cheek
It’s giving despondent chic
Vintage veil
Black velvet dress
Pinterest-curated and
Shipped fast with Prime
Second-hand combat boots
Purchased for the rallies
Followed online
I’ll walk slowly
In the procession
Place a red rose
On the coffin
Shawl falls solemnly
Around my shoulders
Rest in peace
Democracy
(Takes a selfie)
![]() |
AI-generated graphic by NightCafé for The New Verse News.
Britt Fairchild is a technical writer and editor based in Paso Robles, California. She is the author of The Work (2025), a debut poetry collection tracing her breast cancer journey through themes of patience, perseverance, gratitude, and grace. Her poems have appeared in Wildfire magazine. A proud theater mom, she can often be found cheering her sons on from the front row.
Sunday, March 22, 2026
CONVERSATIONS
| In his later years, Jürgen Habermas was sometimes described as “the last European” – a reference to his passionate commitment to the ideals of the European Union (although not always its modern reality). The great German philosopher was also the last surviving exemplar of a generation of postwar intellectuals formed by the experience of the second world war. Like Jean-Paul Sartre in France, Habermas was as at home in the public square as the seminar room, debating the future of a continent that needed to be rebuilt ethically as well as physically. In the new age of unreason, where brute exercise of power is explicitly prized above the force of moral argument, the loss of any such figure is to be mourned. But Habermas’s death at the age of 96, as the US and Israel wage an illegal war of choice, and the far right is in the ascendant in France and Germany, feels particularly poignant. A member of the Hitler Youth as a boy, Habermas then made it his life’s work to philosophically ground the democratic values which are now under threat again. A renewed focus on the great insight that drove his thinking would be an appropriate legacy. The Theory of Communicative Action, his 1980s magnum opus, was not (to put it mildly) as accessible as some of his newspaper opinion pieces. But its central idea – that our nature as linguistic beings puts reason and the search for consensus at the core of who we are – remains an antidote both to intellectual relativism and Trumpian “realism”, which elevates national or individual self-interest above all other sources of human motivation. —The Guardian, March 18, 2026 |
my own small contribution
to the project of democracy
going door to door at evening time
arguing the merits of my candidate.
And I know there isn’t time enough
to trace each reason back to source
and I know, between my tired feet
and families readying meals,
this is not the ideal public sphere
that you described.
In your obituary the familiar gripes –
too much Enlightenment,
too out of its time,
too emphatically rational.
But that’s what I liked, the ambition of it all,
the long conversations
step by step to consensus.
The horror of holocaust formed you.
You saw the mirage of Nazism
and its brutal reality.
Your “never again” meant reckoning
with the whole story of modernity.
You sought to rescue its promise
from the twisted wreckage around you.
And with the recent turn from talk,
all the strong men who do because they can,
might is right, and all that gab,
the giddy march of atavistic nativism,
it can be said that you failed.
But I thank you for the ideal you sketched
of undistorted conversation
of reasons advanced and scrutinised
in the slow careful business
of building understanding and agreement.
Saturday, March 21, 2026
24/7 PRECARITY
![]() |
“The Awakening,” 1941, painting by Colonel Louis Keene, Canadian War Museum |
I fear
going to sleep
and waking up
to war
REMINDERS
![]() |
Israeli settlers beat a Palestinian man in the occupied West Bank, stripped him naked, tied his arms and legs and then zip-tied his penis, he, his family members and another witness said on Wednesday. “I thought I was going to die,” the man, Suhaib Abualkebash (above), a 29-year-old shepherd, told The New York Times. “I thought this was the end.” Photo by Afif Amireh. |
Friday, March 20, 2026
HOW DO YOU SURVIVE A WAR?
by Bruce Black
It’s the stories that you don’t read
in the news that break your heart.
The old dog who can’t make it to the safe room
in the one minute you have to get downstairs.
The young children who blow out the candles on their
birthday cakes in the darkness of bomb shelters.
The couples whose weddings are held as missiles explode
overhead, bride and groom weeping in joy and sadness.
Life, I’m told, goes on in wartime but the war
changes the way you live your life.
Love still exists but hides in the bomb shelter
with you in order to survive.
Kindness still exists but stays out of sight
while the missiles are falling.
Hope huddles under an overpass or in the shelter of underground
stations where it can breathe and show itself again.
How do you survive a war without losing the ability to love,
to show others kindness, to safeguard and preserve one’s humanity?
Even when you live miles away from the war zone
and can’t hear the bombs exploding.
Even when you can only read about them or watch them fall
on the news or in your Facebook feed.
How do you hold onto faith
in the goodness of people?
How do you trust in kindness and love
to prevail?
How do you hope and believe—in spite of the bleakness
of the present moment—in a better future?
In a future without war? In a future of peace?
How do you survive a war?
Bruce Black received his MFA from Vermont College. He is the author of Writing Yoga (Shambhala) and editorial director of The Jewish Writing Project. His poetry, personal essays, and stories have appeared in numerous publications, including The MidAtlantic Review, The Amethyst Review, Write-Haus, Bearings, Super Poetry Highway, Poetica, The Lehrhaus, Soul-Lit, and elsewhere. He lives in Highland Park, IL.




