The exhibition features examples of Ukrainian sacred art - forty icons that escaped destruction and found a temporary safe haven in Lithuania. The works that have come to Lithuania are only a very small part of the vast treasure trove of Ukrainian cultural heritage. Some of the icons would be more in need of restoration than display, but the meaning of their display is huge: in this difficult time for the Ukrainian state, they become ambassadors of creative power and have a specific mission - they become a place of spiritual respite, first of all, for Ukrainians temporarily living in Lithuania. Jurgita Kristina Pačkauskienė, the President of the Lithuanian Society of Art Historians and the head of the icon painting studio "Ut unum sint" at the Dominican Monastery in Vilnius, and Doctor of Arts, said, after seeing the works on display, that the works of art have a very strong sense of the spirit of the margin between the Orthodox and the Catholic traditions. Both in the way they are depicted and in the content of their subject matter, the icons of houses and Orthodox churches seem to tell the universal story of Christianity. The idea of transferring at least a part of Ukrainian art treasures to Lithuania, which was born during the war, was realised by the owner of the collection - the founder of the Museum of Ukrainian House Icons and Antiquities "The Spirit of Ukraine", Olga Bogomolets, and the director of the Museum, Yuriy Rudnitsky, in cooperation with the Honorary Ambassador of the Anykščiai region to the Ukraine, Virginius Strolia. This exhibition is a continuation of the tradition of exchange of exhibitions between Anykščiai and Radomyshl Museums, which started in 2019. However, this is happening now in extraordinary conditions, when Ukraine is fighting for its independence, so the exhibition "Their Eyes Look at Conscience" is an expression of solidarity between Ukraine and Lithuania.