When Russian forces invaded Ukraine on February 24, 2022, few outside observers believed the Ukrainians would be able to hold off Putin's brutal war machine for long. To the astonishment of the world, three years later they continue to fight back, offering an inspiring example of true heroism in resisting tyranny. During this time so full of memories, it is my privilege to unveil the New Iconography of Lviv III page in the Schools of Sacred Art Section as a tribute to Ukrainian Greek Catholic artists who are waging their own struggle to keep culture alive and uphold morale with stark, soul-stirring images of how the life of the spirit can go on in desperate times. In two icons, Kateryna Shadrina underscores the supreme importance of community in a time of war. Natalya Rusetska shows the cosmic consequences of conflct in an image painted on a dimantled ammunition crate. Ulyana Tomkevych places timeless iconographic prototypes in scenes of wartime devastation, while Hlafira Shcherbak offers harrowing views of the faithful in dark places. Irina Solonynka has created a martyrology linking Ukrainian war atrocities to the saints' days on the church calendar when they were committed (above). There are three pages on view from Ulyana Krekhovets' wartime diary of quick sketches and watercolors from Danylo Movchan, who has used the free-form medium to create symbolic studies of the human figure in war that serve as spiritual x-rays of good and evil. I will be featuring Movchan's watercolors in an upcoming series of Lenten Meditations. Glory to Ukraine. Glory to the heroes! (John Kohan)