March 2026 - The cold is still within us
Welcome, my dear friends, to News from the Margin. Pull your chair a little closer to the fire. The nights are still cold here in Prague, and the soul, too, feels the chill of the modern age. We are gathered again in this small, quiet corner to look back at the month that has just left us, March of 2026. A month of feverish human striving, of profound sorrows, and, perhaps, if we look closely enough, a flicker of eternal light. Let us examine the ledger of our shared human spirit.
We began the month with the thunder of the cannons and the tearing of the heavens. In the ancient lands of the Middle East, the conflict escalated with a sudden, terrible ferocity. Missiles rained down from the skies, and the great men of the world spoke of "strategy" and "geopolitical necessity." But what is strategy to the trembling heart of a child hiding in a cellar? We build our grand theories of war, we justify our strikes and our retaliations, but we are merely repeating the ancient sin of Cain. We have forgotten our brotherhood. We strike at our neighbor, thinking it will secure our own peace, but we only deepen the abyss in our own souls.
On the eighth of the month, the world paused for International Women's Day. A great rally was held by the United Nations, reminding us that even in our so-called enlightened age, women hold but a fraction of the legal rights of men. They spoke of justice, of closing the gaps in wealth and safety. And they are right to demand it. For centuries, it is the women, the mothers, the sisters, the silent endurers, who have borne the spiritual and physical weight of man’s pride and destructiveness. They demand earthly justice, but in their eyes, we see the reflection of our own moral poverty. We cannot heal the world with laws alone until we first learn to look upon one another with genuine, suffering love.
As the month waned, the merchants and the sociologists released their ledgers. The OECD and global surveys warned us of rising inflation, of energy crises, of a world crippled by the anxiety of unemployment and corruption. The modern man was promised a Crystal Palace, an utopia of reason and endless material comfort. Yet, look at us! The price of earthly bread rises, and panic sets into the hearts of millions. We have traded our spiritual freedom for the promise of security, and now even that security is crumbling. We weep over our diminishing bank accounts, entirely blind to the fact that it is our souls that have long been starving.
Then came the voices of the scientists, the cold measurers of our physical reality. The World Meteorological Organization declared that our climate is swinging violently out of balance. The ancient ice of the poles is melting; the oceans are warming and rising. My friends, nature herself is in a state of fever. She is groaning beneath the weight of our arrogance. We thought we could master the earth, extract her riches, and conquer her mysteries without consequence. But the earth is not a dead machine; she is a living participant in our moral drama. When man sins, the very soil beneath his feet weeps.
And yet, how does the month end? I look out my window here in the heart of Prague. Despite the wars, despite the anxiety of the merchants, despite the weeping of the earth, the wooden huts of the Easter Markets have appeared in the Old Town Square. The scent of hot mulled wine and sweet pastries cuts through the damp spring air. Down at the Municipal House, the strings of the orchestra weep and sing the notes of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons. It is a profound, irrational beauty. In the face of all our human tragedy, the snows begin to melt, and the heart stubbornly prepares for Easter, for resurrection. It is the ultimate wisdom: that suffering is not the end. Beauty, my friends, will save the world.
Until next time, keep the vigil. The world is dark, but the light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it. Goodnight from the margin.