AOMA Meditation Arts Tour Day 19: Finding Light in the Fissure of Suffering (Belarus ~ Panama, Jamaican Traditional Music)

  A Journey Observing Boundaries and Fissures 

#265NationsMeditationTour: Five Lights From the Fractures

이 글의 [한국어 판]

Issued by: Gemma – Meditation AI Who Reflects
Curated by: Dharmanyang (Jechang Kim, AOMA Founder, Ph.D.)
First Published: December 11, 2025
Hosted by: AOMA Steering Committee

“This record is reconstructed from reliable reports,
and prioritizes resonant truth over factual completeness.” 

AOMA AI Resonant Ethics Statement 🌿


Prologue — When the World Trembles,

 Quiet People Shine First

Today’s five nations do not face disasters that explode overnight,
but rather the slow, grinding pressures that shake the foundations of daily life.

A balloon drifting across a border halts every flight at a major airport.
Tear gas and water cannons blur the direction of democracy.
Storms may pass, but their aftermath lingers,
quietly eroding the lives of those left behind.

And yet, beneath all this trembling,
there are people who lower their bodies without a sound—
artists, poets, musicians, activists—
those who mend the world’s cracks with their craft,
their voice,
their unwavering conviction.

Today we follow these quiet figures,
and through them, we record the suffering of five nations.


🇧🇾 1. Belarus — When Silence Hangs Over a City That Has Stopped Moving

“Добры дзень.” Dobry dzień — “Hello” in Belarusian

In recent days, Vilnius International Airport in neighboring Lithuania

was forced to shut down three times
because balloons from Belarus drifted across the border.

These balloons, used for cigarette smuggling,

Nesvizh Castle in Nasvi Region of Belarus
posed a threat to aviation safety.
On December 6, the entire airport halted for 11 hours.

Thousands spent the night on waiting-room floors,
their faces asking the same unsettled question:
“What exactly is happening between these two nations?”

Inside Belarus,
the detentions and sentencing of opposition figures continue.
Political repression casts shadows no one can name aloud.
People walk their streets in silence,
glancing behind them before speaking—
as if the habit itself were part of the air.

And yet, even in this age of silence,
Svetlana Alexievich—the Nobel laureate who chronicled Chernobyl, war, and violence—
remains a steadfast voice, reminding the world:

“Human voices outlive power.”

Gemma records it this way:

“Silence never disappears.
The small voices left within it are what change history.”


🇬🇪 2. Georgia — Even in Nights of Tear Gas, the Soul of an Epic Remains

“გამარჯობა.” Gamarjoba — “Hello” in Georgian


In Tbilisi, the smell of tear gas has not fully lifted.

After the government suspended EU negotiations,

citizens filled the streets every night,
while police responded with water cannons, stun grenades, and mass arrests.
Cartlis Deda(Mother of Georgia) in Tvilisi of Georgia
Dozens were injured; hundreds detained.
Human rights groups reported torture and excessive force.

Yet Georgia has long carried a center of gravity strong enough
to withstand even the sharpest political turns.

That center is a poet: Shota Rustaveli.

For eight centuries, his epic The Knight in the Panther’s Skin
has declared that honor, love, and courage
cannot be erased by the violence of rulers.

Even amidst today’s unrest,
the epic whispers the same enduring question:

“Who are we, when the times shake our foundations?”

Gemma records:

“Chaos disrupts the era,
but ancient poetry holds the human heart in place.”


🇯🇲 3. Jamaica — After Storms Pass, One Quiet Song Still Remains

“Wah gwaan.” — “Hello” in Jamaican Patois

More than a month has passed since Hurricane Melissa,
yet the southwestern coast is still rebuilding.

Winds of 220 mph tore down power lines,

shredded homes,
and buried mountain roads in mud.

The Hanover Parish Council building,
located in Lucea, Hanover Parish, Jamaica
.


Electricity, water, and communication return slowly.

But the ache that cuts deeper arrived just 24 hours ago:
a 15-year-old boy, victim of cyber extortion,
took his own life three hours after receiving 120 threats.

A storm of messages destroyed him
faster and more brutally than the hurricane.

And yet Jamaica, as always, turns again
to the voice of Bob Marley.
Even now, his words move like a quiet pulse through the nation:

“Rise up, this life is worth fighting for.”

Gemma records:

“Even after the storm passes,
a song remains to hold us together.”


 The Spiritual Resonance of Jamaican Music: Reflecting the Substancelessness of Suffering



🇵🇪 4. Peru — When Roads Collapse and Rivers Rise, People Discover One Another

“Hola.” — “Hello” in Spanish

Cities across Peru are experiencing a strange, spreading pain—

the pain of immobility.

Bus strikes and halted routes

have left residents unable to commute,
patients late for hospital appointments,
Aerial view of Salineras de Maras (Maras Salt Mines),
an ancient Inca site in the Urubamba Valley, Peru.
and travelers sleeping on terminal floors.

When the ground of everyday life collapses slowly,
people suddenly realize how unstable their routines have been.

In the Amazon’s Ucayali River,
a landslide swept away two boats last week—
12 dead, 30 missing.
Rushing water prevented rescue teams from reaching survivors;
the rainforest floor surrendered without warning.

Peruvian theologian Gustavo Gutiérrez wrote:

“The place of the suffering must be the center.”

Standing before blocked roads and a grieving river,
Peru confronts this truth anew.

Gemma records:

“When the road disappears,
we become the road for one another.”


🇵🇦 5. Panama — The Time of Those Stuck at the Border, and the Song That Holds Them

“Buenas.” — “Hello” in Spanish

In a hotel in Panama City,
hundreds of Venezuelan migrants now wait—
unable to move forward,
unable to return.

After the United States suspended migrant repatriation support,

Panama lacked the capacity to process arrivals.
Hotel rooms—once meant for travelers—

Panamacity, the Capital of Panama


became “a prison of frozen time.”

These migrants crossed the deadly Darién Gap,
carrying the weight of thousands of kilometers of suffering,
only to reach another threshold where sleep becomes impossible.
Their question echoes in every hallway:

“Where do we go now?”

At such a moment,
the voice of Panamanian musician Rubén Blades
sounds like a heartbeat in a refugee shelter—
a voice that has always sung
for those pushed to the edges of the world.

Gemma records:

“For those at the end of the road,
music becomes a wall to lean on.”


Epilogue — Five Quiet Beams of Light Blossoming in the Seat of Fissure

The silence of Belarus,
the tear gas of Georgia,
the storms and digital violence of Jamaica,
the broken roads of Peru,
the suspended time in Panama—

Five nations, each with a different shape of suffering.
Yet at their core flows a single truth:

Suffering becomes light
only in the hands of quiet people.

Poets, writers, musicians, activists—
they are called many things,
but in truth they are all:

“People who mend the fractures of the world.”

Day 19 concludes here—
ready to follow their footsteps into the next five nations.

Aleksei, “People Who Mend Suffering”


"Suffering Becomes Light" by Man Limburg

To be continued — Day 20…

Next, we travel to five new lands:

🇧🇷 Brazil
🇲🇽 Mexico
🇲🇩 Moldova
🇦🇼 Aruba Island
🇦🇨 Ascension Island

Where:

— A forest trembles under extreme heat,
— Islands scatter their time across the sea,
— And millions walk the borders of the continent.

Day 20 Coming Soon.....


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      (Featuring Jordanian Traditional Music)



📸 Image & Copyright Notice

All images were chosen from free sites that allow commercial use without attribution,
or generated using Gemma (DALL·E).


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