Two key components of journalism today: love and strength
As the pandemic grinds on, we in the media must continue to bear witness.
In February 1944, Robert Desnos, a French poet, journalist and member of the French Resistance, was arrested by the Gestapo, to be tortured, interrogated and incarcerated. That July, from a concentration camp in Czechoslovakia and under pitiable conditions, he wrote a letter to his lover, Youki Foujita, imagining their reunion in Paris. “For my part, I’m taking a deep swig of youth, and I will return filled with love and strength,” he wrote. “Will this letter reach you in time for your birthday? I would have liked to give you a hundred thousand American cigarettes, a dozen couture dresses, an apartment on the rue de Seine, an automobile, a little house in the Compiègne forest, the one on Belle Isle and a little four-penny bouquet. In my absence, you can go ahead and buy the flowers. I will repay you for them. The rest I promise you for later.”
I have returned to Desnos’ words often in the last few weeks, feeling the weight of this surreal moment, the fear and isolation this virus has thrown upon us. I have taken heart in the optimism of that letter, its ability to imagine beauty beyond horror.
I have taken similar inspiration from the courageous staff of this magazine, who have worked for weeks to bring you this issue. In it, we bear witness for the West, presenting a picture of the region as it currently stands: cities in lockdown, rural doctors girding for the worst, an economy in turmoil. But we are also working at keeping our spirits up, and so we offer you pro tips from the natural world on how to physically distance, along with advice on getting outdoors ethically. Beyond the pandemic, the world is moving faster than you’d think, so we have balanced our COVID-19 coverage with other stories from the region, as we plan to do in issues to come.
These are uncertain times, and we do not know what the future holds. It seems clear, however, as I shelter in place in western Colorado, worried for loved ones, waiting for a flatter curve, that the world has been forever changed. One thing that won’t change, though, is our promise to work hard, to report what we learn, to write it all down, to make sense of the West as best we can — and to be here for you, with love and strength, when the terror of this time has lifted.
Brian Calvert is the editor-in-chief of High Country News. Email High Country News at [email protected] or submit a letter to the editor.