Some artists dare to touch the places we would rather leave untouched—love, lust, betrayal, death. Poet-musicians like Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen guide us there with tenderness and unflinching honesty.
I have long been a fan of Leonard Cohen, knowing well the dark shadows he wrestled with. Yet, like a fine wine aging into deeper notes, Cohen ripened into something wiser with time, moving from the songs of love and longing in his youth to meditations on death and dying at age 82.
Today, Cohen’s final song, You Want It Darker, feels less like a farewell and more like a hymn for the living. Drawing from the ancient story of God giving Abraham a miracle child only to demand his sacrifice, Cohen does not flinch. He lifts the words of the Kaddish, the Jewish prayer for the dead (“Magnified, sanctified be Thy holy name”), and offers us a way to respond to darkness with sacred defiance: Hineni. Hineni. Hineni.
Here I am. Here I am. Here I stand…
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