What we really hate about the pandemic and the constant political upheaval across the world is the lack of clarity for the future
We constantly feel like weβre stuck on the threshold of something new. Yet, outside factors prevent us from proceeding towards it.
Perhaps what lies ahead is ominous, perhaps, joyful: we have no certainty yet.
We can only muse, try to predict whatβs looming while feeling useless, and tired.
Like Winnie the Pooh suspended between inside and outside, breakfast and lunch, coming and leaving.
Time is aspic-like, and nothing is definite.
So we decided to look at some creative works that explore liminal spaces. To feel more rooted in our rootlessness, and assured in our confusion.
Here is the map:

No place on earth communicates βtransitionβ better than Transnistria. A so-called βfrozen conflictβ zone, itβs been striving for recognition and struggling with arrested development for a while now. But no matter the outside factors, life continues, and for some, youth blossoms. A breathtaking veritΓ© documentary, βTransnistraβ follows a bunch of young people growing up in the territory, and shows how futures are shaped when nothing else is certain.
FROM TRANSNISTRIA, SWEDEN, DENMARK and BELGIUM:
The Breakaway State on the Cusp of AdulthoodββTransnistraβ, dir. Anna Eborn, 2019
An intimate and haunting portrait of six teenagers in rural Transnistria shows the splintered prospects and the many limitations of growing up in a melancholy landscape
Fijian artist Rusiate Lali knows something about being on the threshold: after all, islanders are always near to where the ocean meets the land. But in his paintings, these borders are up in the airβsometimes, quite literally,βas he imagines fantastic worlds full of beasts and visions, where nothing is grounded, except for deep care about nature.
FROM FIJI:
A reverence for the art of his ancestors and a deep love for the South Pacific Ocean make this Melanesian artistβs paintings urgent, bold and full of otherworldly serenity

Salvadoran rapper Zaki knows full well what itβs like to be stuck in the middle. Not only does he currently live in Guatemala, which informs his music with a new culture thatβs in many ways similar to El Salvadorβs, and in many ways, different. He is also a big champion of Central America in general: the region that too often gets ignored for its bigger siblings to the North and South, but is, in fact, where itβs all at: think of your sandwichβs filling. Zakiβs beats and rhymes are all about that, and just as delicious.
FROM EL SALVADOR and GUATEMALA:
Rapping and Repping for Central AmericaβZaki & WEEDMACKER, βCentraka,β 2020
Salvadoran hip-hop prodigy Zaki now lives in Guatemala, but that only means a broader range of exploration of musical genres, cultural heritage and societyβs discontents
Maybe being suspended in a jelly-like substance isnβt that bad when you have a good film, fresh art, and juicy music to listen to?
Thatβs whatβs been keeping us going in the current climate, and amidst the sickness.
We might not know when weβll get to travel next, or when weβll go home, or when things will go back to normalβas if normality ever existed.
But we know that there is a life where we are right now. And even if itβs not sustainable in the long term, nothing will prevent us from making this liminal space livable.
And, most definitely, beautiful.
Hope you enjoy Supamodu and feel compelled to forward this email to your friends.
Thank you for being with us! π
β Katya Kazbek,
editor-in-chief