In a month filled with tragedy, how do we make sense of it all? This week on the podcast, we use a poetic lens to try and find meaning within conflict.

July 2016 is and and and and and and and and and another and another and another - and another. It feels like the news won’t stop. It feels like the second this is published there will be another name to add to the list.
This week on , we turn to poetry. Poetry does not have all the answers or some magic solution, but it connects us, it helps us find meaning, and it inspires us to think and act.
In the first story, host reflects on a simple conversation with a Palestinian refugee that both challenged and changed the way he reports on tragedy. Conflict brings out the full spectrum of human potential. Conflict exposes the unthinkably worst in people, and it simultaneously shines light on the absolute best. Conflict is human, it’s complex, and it can’t just be simplified into sound bites of suffering.

Stories with a Heartbeat closes this week with a poem from the 2011 project . Five years ago Mohammad Moussa, Kane Smego, Sameer Abdel Khalek, and host Will McInerney documented the Arab Spring popular movements in Egypt and Tunisia through poetry and photography. This story, filed from Cairo in July of 2011, looks at the vast spectrum of conflict from within the Egyptian Revolution and seek to find meaning through poetry.
The news is overwhelming this month. But rather than averting our eyes, let's reexamine the way we look. With a poetic lens we can view the spectrum of human stories. We can acknowledge the depth of sorrow and loss, and at the same time, honor the strength and resilience we see. Through this storied and human approach maybe we can heal, maybe we can connect a little more, and maybe we can change ourselves and the world around us. That’s what poetry does, it makes us think and act with creative and passionate force.
Stories with a Heartbeat is a new podcast produced by North Carolina Public Radio and hosted by poet Will McInerney that uses poetry and storytelling to help us understand conflict. You can subscribe to this podcast on , , or your podcast platform of choice.