โ
The true birthplace is that wherein for the first time one looks intelligently upon oneself; my first homelands have been books, and to a lesser degree schools.
โ
โ
Marguerite Yourcenar (Memoirs of Hadrian)
โ
Language is the only homeland.
โ
โ
Czesลaw Miลosz
โ
Celaena Sardothien wasnโt in league with Aelin Ashryver Galathynius.
Celaena Sardothien was Aelin Ashryver Galathynius, heir to the throne and rightful Queen of Terranes.
Celaena was Aelin Galathynius, the greatest living threat to Adarlan, the one person who could raise an army capable of standing against the king. Now, she was also the one person who knew the secret source of the kingโs powerโand who sought a way to destroy it.
And he had just sent her into the arms of her strongest potential allies: to the homeland of her mother, the kingdom of her cousin, and the domain of her aunt, Queen Maeve of the Fae.
Celaena was the lost Queen of Terrasen.
Chaol sank to his knees.
โ
โ
Sarah J. Maas (Crown of Midnight (Throne of Glass, #2))
โ
So in the sweltering heat of a July night, I sang a Christmas carol to a room full of fae, who had been driven out of their homelands by Christians and their cold-iron swords.
โ
โ
Patricia Briggs (Blood Bound (Mercy Thompson, #2))
โ
Go for broke. Always try and do too much. Dispense with safety nets. Take a deep breath before you begin talking. Aim for the stars. Keep grinning. Be bloody-minded. Argue with the world. And never forget that writing is as close as we get to keeping a hold on the thousand and one things--childhood, certainties, cities, doubts, dreams, instants, phrases, parents, loves--that go on slipping , like sand, through our fingers.
โ
โ
Salman Rushdie (Imaginary Homelands: Essays and Criticism 1981-1991)
โ
ูู ููู
ุฃูุชุดู ูู ูุทูู ู
ุฌุฏุงู ุฌุฏูุฏุงู
ูุนุงุฑุงู ุฌุฏูุฏุงู
ุฃุฎุจุงุฑุงู ุชุฑูุน ุงูุฑุฃุณ
ูุฃุฎุฑู ุชุฑูุน ุงูุถุบุท
โ
โ
ู
ุญู
ุฏ ุงูู
ุงุบูุท
โ
ุซู
ุฉ ุดูุก ููุณุงู ูู ุฒุญู
ุฉ ุงูุชุณุงุจู ุนูู ุญูุธ ุงูุฌูู
ู ุงูุซูุฑูุฉ ุงูุฌู
ููุฉ. ูุฐุง ุงูุดูุก ูู ุงููุฑุงู
ุฉ ุงูุฅูุณุงููุฉ. ููุณ ูุทูู ุฏุงุฆู
ุงู ุนูู ุญู. ูููููู ูุง ุฃุณุชุทูุน ุฃู ุฃู
ุงุฑุณ ุญูุงู ุญููููุงู ุฅูุง ูู ูุทูู.
โ
โ
Mahmoud Darwish (ููู
ูุงุช ุงูุญุฒู ุงูุนุงุฏู)
โ
To those who no longer have a homeland, writing becomes home
โ
โ
Theodor W. Adorno
โ
Where can I free myself of the homeland in my body?
โ
โ
Mahmoud Darwish (Unfortunately, It Was Paradise: Selected Poems)
โ
Sometimes the strength of motherhood is greater than natural laws.
โ
โ
Barbara Kingsolver (Homeland and Other Stories)
โ
When we settle down in the homeland of love, let us not forget to choose an uplifting horizon, where humor and joyfulness are along the way, and our heartbeat guides the rhythm of our day and composes the song of our passion. ("Crystallization under an umbrella" )
โ
โ
Erik Pevernagie
โ
Sometimes a homeland becomes a tale. We love the story because it is about our homeland and we love our homeland even more because of the story.
โ
โ
Refaat Alareer (Gaza Writes Back)
โ
No fiction, no myths, no lies, no tangled webs - this is how Irie imagined her homeland. Because homeland is one of the magical fantasy words like unicorn and soul and infinity that have now passed into language.
โ
โ
Zadie Smith (White Teeth)
โ
God is not an employer looking for employees. He is an Eagle looking for people who will take refuge under his wings. He is looking for people who will leave father and mother and homeland or anything else that may hold them back from a life of love under the wings of Jesus.
โ
โ
John Piper (A Sweet and Bitter Providence: Sex, Race, and the Sovereignty of God)
โ
A freshman congresswoman was demanding an investigation into whoever hacked her Flat Earth support group. It could spell the end of the entire flat planet if the FBI, Homeland Security, and her hometown library couldnโt track the subversive bastards down.
โ
โ
William Kely McClung (LOOP)
โ
Courage consists, however, in agreeing to flee rather than live tranquilly and hypocritically in false refuges. Values, morals, homelands, religions, and these private certitudes that our vanity and our complacency bestow generously on us, have many deceptive sojourns as the world arranges for those who think they are standing straight and at ease, among stable things
โ
โ
Gilles Deleuze (Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia)
โ
Out of my ignorance, I called you a homeland and I forgot homelands are taken away.
โ
โ
Mahmoud Darwish
โ
We are foreign because this nation has marked us so, and as long as weโre punished daily for our ties to our homelands, we might as well defend them. No, Letty, we canโt maintain this fantasy. The only one who can do that is you.
โ
โ
R.F. Kuang (Babel)
โ
The wars will end and the leaders will shake hands, and that old woman will remain waiting for her martyred son, and that girl will wait for her beloved husband, and the children will wait for their heroic father, I do not know who sold the homeland but I know who paid the price.
โ
โ
Mahmoud Darwish
โ
The word 'translation' comes, etymologically, from the Latin for 'bearing across'. Having been borne across the world, we are translated men. It is normally supposed that something always gets lost in translation; I cling, obstinately to the notion that something can also be gained.
โ
โ
Salman Rushdie (Imaginary Homelands: Essays and Criticism 1981-1991)
โ
ููุณ ูุทูู ุฏุงุฆู
ุงู ุนูู ุญู. ูููููู ูุง ุงุณุชุทูุน ุงู ุงู
ุงุฑุณ ุญูุงู ุญููููุงู ุงูุง ูู ูุทูู .
โ
โ
Mahmoud Darwish
โ
I learnt all the words worthy of the court of blood
So that I could break the rule
I learnt all the words and broke them up
To make a single word:
Homeland..
โ
โ
Mahmoud Darwish
โ
My life was a wandering; I never had a homeland. It was a matter of being constantly tossed about, without rest; nowhere and never did I find a home.
โ
โ
Jan Amos Komenskรฝ (Labyrint svฤta a rรกj srdce)
โ
every man has a map in his heart of his own country and that the heart will never allow you to forget this map. (p. 18)
โ
โ
Alexander McCall Smith (The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency (No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency, #1))
โ
Step one: Invade your opponet's mind. This is just like using mind-speak. Try it on me."
"That's easy," I said, casting my mental nets toward Dante, ensnaring his mind, and pushing words into his conscious thought. I'm in your mind, having a look around, and it's awfully empty in here.
Wiseacre, Dante returned.
Nobody says that anymore. Speaking of which, how old are you in Nephilim years? I'd never thought to ask.
I swore fealty during Napoleon's invasion of Italy-my homeland.
And that was in what year...? Help me out. I'm not a history buff.
Dante smiled. 1796.
Wow. You're old.
โ
โ
Becca Fitzpatrick (Finale (Hush, Hush, #4))
โ
The homeland does not leave the body until the last moment, the moment of death.
The fish,
Even in the fisherman's net,
Still carries
The smell of the sea.
โ
โ
Mourid Barghouti (ุฑุฃูุช ุฑุงู
ุงููู)
โ
She would have an adventure. For herself. This one time. She would see her homeland, and smell it and breathe it in. See it from high above, see it racing as fast as the wind. She owed herself that much.
โ
โ
Sarah J. Maas (Tower of Dawn (Throne of Glass, #6))
โ
If you're not at least willing to die for something- something that really matters- in the end, you die for nothing.
โ
โ
Andrew Klavan (The Truth of the Matter (The Homelanders, #3))
โ
It may be argued that the past is a country from which we have all emigrated, that its loss is part of our common humanity.
โ
โ
Salman Rushdie (Imaginary Homelands: Essays and Criticism 1981-1991)
โ
I wonder what it felt to move to a country where you didn't grow up. I had thought about that often since my sister got married. Do you become a character in a story native to that land, or do you, somewhere in your heart, want to return to your homeland.
โ
โ
Banana Yoshimoto (N.P)
โ
Battle for the sake of honor may be a fine thing for bards to sing of, but it is no way to preserve one's homeland
โ
โ
Jacqueline Carey (Kushiel's Chosen (Phรจdre's Trilogy, #2))
โ
I know that everything essential and great originated from the fact that the human being had a homeland and was rooted in tradition.
โ
โ
Martin Heidegger
โ
I heard you in the other room asking your mother, 'Mama, am I a Palestinian?' When she answered 'Yes' a heavy silence fell on the whole house. It was as if something hanging over our heads had fallen, its noise exploding, then - silence. Afterwards...I heard you crying. I could not move. There was something bigger than my awareness being born in the other room through your bewildered sobbing. It was as if a blessed scalpel was cutting up your chest and putting there the heart that belongs to you...I was unable to move to see what was happening in the other room. I knew, however, that a distant homeland was being born again: hills, olive groves, dead people, torn banners and folded ones, all cutting their way into a future of flesh and blood and being born in the heart of another child...Do you believe that man grows? No, he is born suddenly - a word, a moment, penetrates his heart to a new throb. One scene can hurl him down from the ceiling of childhood onto the ruggedness of the road.
โ
โ
ุบุณุงู ูููุงูู
โ
ORESTES: Never shall I see you again.
ELECTRA: Nor I see myself in your eyes.
ORESTES: This, the last time I'll talk with you ever.
ELECTRA: O my homeland, goodbye. Goodbye to you, women of home.
ORESTES: Most loyal of sisters, do you leave now?
ELECTRA: I leave with tears blurring all that I see.
โ
โ
Euripides (Electra)
โ
Fine,โ Navani said. โI hope when you dieโknowing your homeland is doomed, your families enslaved, your queen executedโyou feel satisfied knowing that at least you maintained a slight market advantage.
โ
โ
Brandon Sanderson (Rhythm of War (The Stormlight Archive, #4))
โ
There is no pain greater than this; not the cut of a jagged-edged dagger nor the fire of a dragon's breath. Nothing burns in your heart like the emptiness of losing something, someone, before you truly have learned of its value.
โ
โ
R.A. Salvatore (Homeland - The Dark Elf Trilogy #1 of 3)
โ
After graduation, due to special circumstances and perhaps also to my character, I began to travel throughout America, and I became acquainted with all of it. Except for Haiti and Santo Domingo, I have visited, to some extent, all the other Latin American countries. Because of the circumstances in which I traveled, first as a student and later as a doctor, I came into close contact with poverty, hunger and disease; with the inability to treat a child because of lack of money; with the stupefaction provoked by the continual hunger and punishment, to the point that a father can accept the loss of a son as an unimportant accident, as occurs often in the downtrodden classes of our American homeland. And I began to realize at that time that there were things that were almost as important to me as becoming famous for making a significant contribution to medical science: I wanted to help those people.
โ
โ
Ernesto Che Guevara
โ
Travel opens windows to a rich and diverse world,
which you can never see from your homeland.
โ
โ
Mouloud Benzadi
โ
Meaning is a shaky edifice we build out of scraps, dogmas, childhood injuries, newspaper articles, chance remarks, old fillms, small victories, people hated, people loved; perhaps it is because our sense of what is the case is constructed from such inadequate materials that we defend it so fiercely, even to death.
โ
โ
Salman Rushdie (Imaginary Homelands: Essays and Criticism 1981-1991)
โ
Itโs a Belgian beer, sweetie. Please tell me youโve at least heard of it. (Blaine)
Boy, I was born in Brussels and the last time I checked, this was my new homeland, America, not my birthplace. So you can either order an American-made beer or Iโll bring you water and you can sit there and act all superior until you puke, okay? (Aimee)
โ
โ
Sherrilyn Kenyon (Unleash the Night (Dark Hunter, #8; Were-Hunter, #2))
โ
For years I've been searching for a homeland, finally I found it in you..
โ
โ
Seja Majeed (The Forgotten Tale of Larsa)
โ
It is the narrow, hidden tracks that lead back to our lost homeland, what contains the solution to the last mysteries is not the ugly scar that life's rasp leaves on us, but the fine, almost invisible writing that is engraved on our body.
โ
โ
Gustav Meyrink (The Golem)
โ
My body knew what to do, what it wanted , even though my brain was firing off so many warnings I felt like Homeland Security during a Code Red.
โ
โ
J. Lynn (Wait for You (Wait for You, #1))
โ
I want Thy plan, O God, for my life. May I be happy and contented whether in the homeland or on the foreign field; whether married or alone, in happiness or sorrow, health or sickness, prosperity or adversity -- I want Thy plan, O God, for my life. I want it; oh, I want it.
โ
โ
Oswald J. Smith
โ
I don't care what is written," Meyer Landsman says. "I don't care what supposedly got promised to some sandal-wearing idiot whose claim to fame is that he was ready to cut his own son's throat for the sake of a hare-brained idea. I don't care about red heifers and patriarchs and locusts. A bunch of old bones in the sand. My homeland is in my hat. It's in my ex-wife's tote bag.
โ
โ
Michael Chabon (The Yiddish Policemen's Union)
โ
Sometimes we feel we straddle two cultures; at other times, that we fall between two stools.
โ
โ
Salman Rushdie (Imaginary Homelands: Essays and Criticism 1981-1991)
โ
The first step is to care, Tukksโs voice seemed to whisper. Some talk about being emotionless in battle. Well, I suppose itโs important to keep your head. But I hate that feeling of killing while calm and cold. Iโve seen that those who care fight harder, longer, and better than those who donโt. Itโs the difference between mercenaries and real soldiers.
Itโs the difference between fighting to defend your homeland and fighting on foreign soil.
Itโs good to care when you fight, so long as you donโt let it consume you. Donโt try to stop yourself from feeling. Youโll hate who you become.
โ
โ
Brandon Sanderson (The Way of Kings (The Stormlight Archive, #1))
โ
I have traveled all over the world and gone to the highest peaks, and the densest jungles. The Carpathain Mountians will always be my homeland, but my home is a woman. Solange Sangria. You are home to me. Your body is my home. Your mind. Your heart and soul. It matters little to me where we are.
โ
โ
Christine Feehan (Dark Peril (Dark, #18))
โ
I am not weak," Loki said. "I am not your villain, and I am not your fool. I am a protector of my homeland." He thrust his hand in the air. "For Asgard!
โ
โ
Mackenzi Lee (Loki: Where Mischief Lies)
โ
Two Catholics who have never met can nevertheless go together on crusade or pool funds to build a hospital because they both believe that God was incarnated in human flesh and allowed Himself to be crucified to redeem our sins. States are rooted in common national myths. Two Serbs who have never met might risk their lives to save one another because both believe in the existence of the Serbian nation, the Serbian homeland and the Serbian flag. Judicial systems are rooted in common legal myths. Two lawyers who have never met can nevertheless combine efforts to defend a complete stranger because they both believe in the existence of laws, justice, human rights โ and the money paid out in fees. Yet none of these things exists outside the stories that people invent and tell one another. There are no gods in the universe, no nations, no money, no human rights, no laws, and no justice outside the common imagination of human beings.
โ
โ
Yuval Noah Harari (Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind)
โ
I have always had a special affinity for libraries and librarians, for the most obvious reasons. I love books. (One of my first Jobs was shelving books at a branch of the Chicago Public Library.) Libraries are a pillar of any society. I believe our lack of attention to funding and caring for them properly in the United States has a direct bearing on problems of literacy, productivity, and our inability to compete in today's world. Libraries are everyman's free university.
โ
โ
John Jakes (Homeland (Crown Family Saga, #1))
โ
Boast of Quietness
Writings of light assault the darkness, more prodigious than meteors.
The tall unknowable city takes over the countryside.
Sure of my life and death, I observe the ambitious and would like to
understand them.
Their day is greedy as a lariat in the air.
Their night is a rest from the rage within steel, quick to attack.
They speak of humanity.
My humanity is in feeling we are all voices of that same poverty.
They speak of homeland.
My homeland is the rhythm of a guitar, a few portraits, an old sword,
the willow grove's visible prayer as evening falls.
Time is living me.
More silent than my shadow, I pass through the loftily covetous multitude.
They are indispensable, singular, worthy of tomorrow.
My name is someone and anyone.
I walk slowly, like one who comes from so far away he doesn't expect to arrive.
โ
โ
Jorge Luis Borges
โ
...We leave our homeland, our property and our friends. We give up the familiar ground that supports our ego, admit the helplessness of ego to control its world and secure itself. We give up our clingings to superiority and self-preservation...It means giving up searching for a home, becoming a refugee, a lonely person who must depend on himself...Fundamentally, no one can help us. If we seek to relieve our loneliness, we will be distracted from the path. Instead, we must make a relationship with loneliness until it becomes aloneness.
โ
โ
Chรถgyam Trungpa (The Myth of Freedom and the Way of Meditation)
โ
But do you know this idea of the imaginary homeland? Once you set out from shore on your little boat, once you embark, you'll never truly be at home again. What you've left behind exists only in your memory, and your ideal place becomes some strange imaginary concoction of all you've left behind at every stop.
โ
โ
Claire Messud (The Woman Upstairs)
โ
Station is the paradox of the world of my people, the limitation of our power within the hunger for power. It is gained through treachery and invites treachery against those who gain it. Those most powerful in Menzoberranzan spend their days watching over their shoulders, defending against the daggers that would find their backs. Their deaths usually come from the front." -Drizzt Do'Urden
โ
โ
R.A. Salvatore (Homeland - The Dark Elf Trilogy #1 of 3)
โ
And if we dare to look into those eyes, then we shall feel their suffering in our hearts. More and more people have seen that appeal and felt it in their hearts. All around the world there is an awakening of understanding and compassion, and understanding that reaches out to help the suffering animals in their vanishing homelands. That embraces hungry, sick, and desperate human beings, people who are starving while the fortunate among us have so much more than we need. And if, one by one, we help them, the hurting animals, the desperate humans, then together we shall alleviate so much of the hunger, fear, and pain in the world. Together we can bring change to the world, gradually replacing fear and hatred with compassion and love. Love for all living beings.
โ
โ
Jane Goodall
โ
You're lost, brother. You're a ship adrift, searching for familiar shores. I understand what it is you want. I sought it too. But there is no homeland. It's gone." He paused beside Robin on his way to the door. His fingers landed on Robin's shoulder, squeezed so hard they hurt. "But realize this, brother. You fly no one's flag. You're free to seek your own harbour. And you can do so much more than tread water.
โ
โ
R.F. Kuang (Babel)
โ
Children, language, lands: almost everything was stripped away, stolen when you werenโt looking because you were trying to stay alive. In the face of such loss, one thing our people could not surrender was the meaning of land. In the settler mind, land was property, real estate, capital, or natural resources. But to our people, it was everything: identity, the connection to our ancestors, the home of our nonhuman kinfolk, our pharmacy, our library, the source of all that sustained us. Our lands were where our responsibility to the world was enacted, sacred ground. It belonged to itself; it was a gift, not a commodity, so it could never be bought or sold. These are the meanings people took with them when they were forced from their ancient homelands to new places.
โ
โ
Robin Wall Kimmerer (Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants)
โ
The Politician's goal is to build a fortune, ours is to build our homeland flowering and strong. For her we will work and we will build. For her we will make each Romanian a hero, ready to fight, ready to sacrifice, ready to die.
โ
โ
Corneliu Zelea Codreanu (The Nest Leader's Manual)
โ
The footpath curves right, and my homeโs roof ridge is visible through the coconut fronds. A streak of happiness lights up in my heart. I know itโs just a building, but I hear its frantic call, reaching out to me like a mother cow that has lost its calf. Is this what differentiates a home from a houseโthe life in the former, the soul breathed in by my grandparents, my parents, and me?
โ
โ
Merlin Franco (Saint Richard Parker)
โ
A rock is harder than a feather, you can talk and jabber and make exceptions, but in the end, if you have to choose which one is gonna hit you on the head, you'll choose the feather every single time.
โ
โ
Andrew Klavan (The Truth of the Matter (The Homelanders, #3))
โ
Everything in this world was so new, so wonderful and strange--like things in my old world, but better []For sixteen years my soul had been drawn towards this place, this alien homeland, toward its rainbow sunrises and whispering trees"
Breena Bitter Frost (on the brink of discovery; about why she never quite felt like she belonged in the land over the Crystal River)
โ
โ
Kailin Gow
โ
What does it mean to grow rich?
Is it to have red-blooded adventures and to make a โfortune,โ which is what brought the whalers and other entrepreneurs north?
Or is it, rather, to have a good family life and to be imbued with a far-reaching and intimate knowledge of oneโs homeland, which is what the Tununirmiut told the whalers at Pondโs Bay wealth was?
Is it to retain a capacity for awe and astonishment in our lives, to continue to hunger after what is genuine and worthy? Is it to live at moral peace with the universe?
โ
โ
Barry Lopez (Arctic Dreams)
โ
In order to gain their freedom, survivors may have to give up almost everything else. Battered women may lose their homes, their friends, and their livelihood. Survivors of childhood abuse may lose their families. Political refugees may lose their homes and their homeland. Rarely are the dimensions of this sacrifice fully recognized.
โ
โ
Judith Lewis Herman (Trauma and Recovery: The Aftermath of Violence--From Domestic Abuse to Political Terror)
โ
ุงูุฃูุทุงู ูุง ุชูุจุงุน ูู ุงูู
ุฒุงุฏ ููุง ุชูุฎุชุงุฑ ู
ู ูุงุฆู
ุฉ ุงูุฃูุถู ูุงูุฃุณุนุฏ ูุงูุฃุฌู
ู. ุงููุทู ูู ุงูุญูุงุฉ ุจูู ู
ูุบุตุงุชูุง ูุขูุงุชูุง ูุจุณู
ุงุชูุง ูุฃุญูุงู
ูุง.. ุฎุทูุ ูุฒุงููุฉู ูุบูู
ุฉู ูุดู
ุณู ุชุดุฑู ูู ุณู
ุงุก ูุทูู ูุฌุจ ุฃู ูููู ุฌู
ููุงู ุจููุงุญูุง ุนูู ุฃุฑุถู..
โ
โ
ุซุงู
ุฑ ุนุฏูุงู ุดุงูุฑ (ููุง ุชููุชุฑ)
โ
The whole concept of 'wild' was decidedly European, one not shared by the original inhabitants of this continent. What we called 'wilderness' was to the Indian a homeland, 'abiding loveliness' in Salish or Piegan. The land was not something to be feared or conquered, and 'wildlife' were neither wild nor alien; they were relatives.
โ
โ
Doug Peacock (Grizzly Years: In Search of the American Wilderness)
โ
My comrades, hardly strangers to pain before now, we all have weathered worse. Some god will grant us an end to this as well. You've threaded the rocks resounding with Scylla's howling rabid dogs, and taken the brunt of the Cyclops' boulders, too. Call up your courage again. Dismiss your grief and fear. A joy it will be one day, perhaps, to remember even this. Through so many hard straits, so many twists and turns our course holds firm for Latium. There Fate holds out a homeland, calm, at peace. There the gods decree the kingdom of Troy will rise again. Bear up. Save your strength for better times to come.
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Virgil (The Aeneid)
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Confined on the ship, from which there is no escape, the madman is delivered to the river with its thousand arms, the sea with its thousand roads, to that great uncertainty external to everything. He is a prisoner in the midst of what is the freest, the openest of routes: bound fast at the infinite crossroads. He is the Passenger par excellence: that is, the prisoner of the passage. And the land he will come to is unknownโas is, once he disembarks, the land from which he comes. He has his truth and his homeland only in that fruitless expanse between two countries that cannot belong to him.
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Michel Foucault (Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason)
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In 1931, when Ambedkar met Gandhi for the first time, Gandhi questioned him about his sharp criticism of the Congress (which, it was assumed, was tantamount to criticising the struggle for the Homeland). โGandhiji, I have no Homeland,โ was Ambedkarโs famous reply. โNo Untouchable worth the name will be proud of this land.โ61
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B.R. Ambedkar (Annihilation of Caste: The Annotated Critical Edition)
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Death is only dreadful for those who live in dread and fear of it. Death is not wild and terrible, if only we can be still and hold fast to Godโs Word. Death is not bitter, if we have not become bitter ourselves. Death is grace, the greatest gift of grace that God gives to people who believe in him. Death is mild, death is sweet and gentle; it beckons to us with heavenly power, if only we realize that it is the gateway to our homeland, the tabernacle of joy, the everlasting kingdom of peace.
How do we know that dying is so dreadful? Who knows whether, in our human fear and anguish we are only shivering and shuddering at the most glorious, heavenly, blessed event in the world? Death is hell and night and cold, if it is not transformed by our faith. But that is just what is so marvelous, that we can transform death.
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Eric Metaxas (Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr, Prophet, Spy)
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The established majority takes its "we" image from a minority of its best and shapes a "they" image of the despised outsiders from a minority of their worst.
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Ayad Akhtar (Homeland Elegies)
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Sign on, young man, and sail with me. The stature of our homeland is no more than the measure of ourselves. Our job is to keep her free. Our will is to keep the torch of freedom burning for all. To this solemn purpose we call on the young, the brave, the strong, and the free. Heed my call, Come to the sea. Come Sail with me.
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John Paul Jones
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The scientist who says her life is meaningful because she increases the store of human knowledge, the soldier who declares that his life is meaningful because he fights to defend his homeland, and the entrepreneur who finds meaning in building a new company are no less delusional than their medieval counterparts who found meaning in reading scriptures, going on a crusade or building a new cathedral.
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Yuval Noah Harari (Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind)
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It is, therefore, a great source of virtue for the practiced mind to learn, bit by bit, first to change about in visible and transitory things, so that afterwards it may be possible to leave them behind altogether. The man who finds his homeland sweet is still a tender beginner; he to whom every soil is as his native one is already strong; but he is perfect to whom the entire world is as a foreign land. The tender soul has fixed his love on one spot in the world; the strong man has extended his love to all places; the perfect man has extinguished his. From boyhood I have dwelt on foreign soil and I know with what grief sometimes the mind takes leave of the narrow hearth of a peasant's hut, and I know too how frankly it afterwards disdains marble firesides and panelled halls.
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Hugh of Saint-Victor (The Didascalicon of Hugh of Saint Victor: A Medieval Guide to the Arts)
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This is why Jesus would urge Mari [Mary Magdalene] to look after the women noting, ''Cultivate their regard for you because those women who are naturally drawn to you are exceptional people, sensitive women who are very close to spiritual freedom. However, before they can achieve this ultimate goal, you must first tend to their psychological wounds, the visible and the invisible lesions they have experienced at the hands of men, just as we once did in your homeland. It is only if these existential traumas are healed properly that these women can finally reach equanimity of spirit and heart.
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Anton Sammut (The Secret Gospel of Jesus, AD 0-78)
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I have keen eyes. I once caught a leprechaun you know."
I looked at him skeptically. "Aren't those Irish?"
"Sure. He was over in the homeland on an exchange basis. We sent the Irish three turnips and a sheep's bladder in trade."
"Doesn't seem like much of a trade."
"Oh, I think it was a sparking good one, seeing as to leprechauns are imaginary and all. Hello, Prof. How's your kilt?"
"As imaginary as your leprechaun
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Brandon Sanderson (Steelheart (The Reckoners, #1))
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Where you are born--what you are born into, the place, the history of the place, how that history mates with your own-- stamps who you are, whatever the pundits of globalisation have to say.
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Jeanette Winterson (Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?)
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A day spent reading is not a great day. But a life spent reading is a wonderful life.
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Ayad Akhtar (Homeland Elegies)
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Surely those who know the great passionate heart of Jehovah must deny their own loves to share in the expression of His. Consider the call from the Throne above, "Go ye," and from round about, "Come over and help us," and even the call from the damned souls below, "Send Lazarus to my brothers, that they come not to this place." Impelled, then, by these voices, I dare not stay home while Quichuas perish. So what if the well-fed church in the homeland needs stirring? They have the Scriptures, Moses, and the Prophets, and a whole lot more. Their condemnation is written on their bank books and in the dust on their Bible covers. American believers have sold their lives to the service of Mammon, and God has His rightful way of dealing with those who succumb to the spirit of Laodicea.
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Jim Elliot
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Love
My soul was a light-blue gown, sky-coloured;
I left it on a cliff by the sea
and naked I came to you, resembling a woman.
And like a woman I sat at your table
and drank a toast with wine and breathed in the scent of several roses.
You found me beautiful, resembling something you'd seen dreaming,
I forgot everything, I forgot my childhood and my homeland,
I knew only that your caresses held me captive.
And, smiling, you took up a mirror and bade me look.
I saw that my shoulders were made of dust and crumbled away,
I saw that my beauty was sick and had no desire other than to - disappear.
Oh, hold me close in your arms, so tightly that I need nothing.
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Edith Sรถdergran (Poems)
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Our gathering was not as strange a thing as it might have appeared. A xenophobe would see a company of foreigners in camouflage uniforms, carrying out military drills and calisthenics, and might imagine us to be the lead element of some nefarious Asian invasion of the American homeland, a Yellow Peril in the Golden State, a diabolical dream of Ming the Merciless sprung to life. Far from it. The General's men, by preparing themselves to invade our now communist homeland, were in fact turning themselves into new Americans. After all, nothing was more American than wielding a gun and committing oneself to die for freedom and independence, unless it was wielding that gun to take away someone elseโs freedom and independence.
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Viet Thanh Nguyen (The Sympathizer (The Sympathizer, #1))
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If we are looking for insurance against want and oppression, we will find it only in our neighbors' prosperity and goodwill and, beyond that, in the good health of our worldly places, our homelands. If we were sincerely looking for a place of safety, for real security and success, then we would begin to turn to our communities - and not the communities simply of our human neighbors but also of the water, earth, and air, the plants and animals, all the creatures with whom our local life is shared.
(pg. 59, "Racism and the Economy")
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Wendell Berry (The Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays)
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But human beings do not perceive things whole; we are not gods but wounded creatures, cracked lenses, capable only of fractured perceptions. Partial beings, in all the senses of that phrase. Meaning is a shaky edifice we build out of scraps, dogmas, childhood injuries, newspaper articles, chance remarks, old films, small victories, people hated, people loved; perhaps it is because our sense of what is the case is constructed from such inadequate materials that we defend it so fiercely, even to the death.
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Salman Rushdie (Imaginary Homelands: Essays and Criticism 1981-1991)
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Fuck what is written," Landsman says. โYou know what?" All at once he feels weary of ganefs and prophets, guns and sacrifices and the infinite gangster weight of God. He's tired of hearing about the promised land and the inevitable bloodshed required for its redemption. โI don't care what is written. I don't care what supposedly got promised to some sandal-wearing idiot whose claim to fame is that he was ready to cut his own son's throat for the sake of a hare-brained idea. I don't care about red heifers and patriarchs and locusts. A bunch of old bones in the sand. My homeland is in my hat. It's in my ex-wife's tote bag.
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Michael Chabon (The Yiddish Policemen's Union)
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Just as I can't see a clear brook without at least stopping to dangle my feet in it, I can't see a meadow in May and simply pass by. There is nothing more seductive then such fragrant earth, the blossoms of clover swaying above it like a light foam, and the petal-bedecked branches of the fruit trees reaching upward, as if they wanted to rescue themselves from this tranquil sea. No, I have to turn from my path and immerse myself in this richness . . .
When I turn my head, my cheek grazes the rough trunk of the apple tree next to me. How protectively it spreads its good branches over me. Without ceasing the sap rises from its roots, nuturing even the smallest of leaves. Do I hear, perhaps, a secret heartbeat? I press my face against its dark, warm bark and think to myself: homeland, and am so indescribably happy in this instant.
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Sophie Scholl
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If the Palestinian people really wish to decide that they will battle to the very end to prevent partition or annexation of even an inch of their ancestral soil, then I have to concede that that is their right. I even think that a sixty-year rather botched experiment in marginal quasi-statehood is something that the Jewish people could consider abandoning. It represents barely an instant in our drawn-out and arduous history, and it's already been agreed even by the heirs of Ze'ev Jabotinsky that the whole scheme is unrealizable in 'Judaea and Samaria,' let alone in Gaza or Sinai. But it's flat-out intolerable to be solicited to endorse a side-by-side Palestinian homeland and then to discover that there are sinuous two-faced apologists explaining away the suicide-murder of Jewish civilians in Tel Aviv, a city which would be part of a Jewish state or community under any conceivable 'solution.' There's that word again...
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Christopher Hitchens (Hitch 22: A Memoir)
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All over the ancient world populations were now set against populations, as men were set against women and against other men. Wandering over the width and breadth of this disintegrating world, masses of refugees were everywhere fleeing their homelands, desperately searching for a haven, for a safe place to go.
But there was no such place left in their new world. For this was now a world where, having violently deprived the Goddess and the female half of humanity of all power, gods and men of war ruled. It was a world in which the Blade, and not the Chalice, would henceforth be supreme, a world in which peace and harmony would be found only in the myths and legends of a long lost past.
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Riane Eisler (The Chalice and the Blade: Our History, Our Future (Updated With a New Epilogue))
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Bleak as the scene was, though, there was growing joy in Inman's heart. He was nearing home; he could feel it in the touch of thin air on skin, in his longing to see the lead of hearth smoke from the houses of people he had known all his life. People he would not be called upon to hate or fear. He rose and took a wide stance on the rock and stood and pinched down his eyes to sharpen the view across the vast propect to one far mountain. It stood apart from the sky only as the stroke of a poorly inked pen, a line thin and quick and gestural. But the shape slowly grew plain and unmistakable. It was to Cold Mountain he looked. He had achieved a vista of what for him was homeland.
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Charles Frazier (Cold Mountain)
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I believe that in the process of locating new avenues of creative thought, we will also arrive at an existential conservatism. It is worth asking repeatedly: Where are our deepest roots? We are, it seems, Old World, catarrhine primates, brilliant emergent animals, defined genetically by our unique origins, blessed by our newfound biological genius, and secure in our homeland if we wish to make it so. What does it all mean? This is what it all means: To the extent that we depend on prosthetic devices to keep ourselves and the biosphere alive, we will render everything fragile. To the extent that we banish the rest of life, we will impoverish our own species for all time. And if we should surrender our genetic nature to machine-aided ratiocination, and our ethics and art and our very meaning to a habit of careless discursion in the name of progress, imagining ourselves godlike and absolved from our ancient heritage, we will become nothing.
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Edward O. Wilson (Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge)
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So often, we're told that women's stories are unimportant. After all, what does it matter what happens in the main room, in the kitchen, or in the bedroom? Who cares about the relationships between mother, daughter, and sister? A baby's illness, the sorrows and pains of childbirth, keeping the family together during war, poverty, or even in the best of days are considered small and insignificant compared with the stories of men, who fight against nature to grow their crops, who wage battles to secure their homelands, who struggle to look inward in search of the perfect man. We're told that men are strong and brave, but I think women know how to endure, accept defeat, and bear physical and mental agony much better than men. The men in my lifeโmy father, Z.G., my husband, my father-in-law, my brother-in-law, and my sonโfaced, to one degree or another, those great male battles, but their heartsโso fragileโwilted, buckled, crippled, corrupted, broke, or shattered when confronted with the losses women face every day...Our men try to act strong, but it is May, Yen-yen, Joy, and I who must steady them and help them bear their pain, anguish, and shame.
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Lisa See (Shanghai Girls (Shanghai Girls, #1))
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The term 'black' was given a rebirth by the black youth revolt. As reborn, it does not refer to the particular color of any particular person, but to the attitude of pride and devotion to the race whose homeland from times immemorial was called 'The Land of the Blacks.' Almost overnight our youngsters made 'black' coequal with 'white' in respectability, and challenged the anti-black Negroes to decide on which side they stood. This was no problem for many who are light or even near-white in complexion, for they themselves were among the first to proclaim with pride, 'call me black!' Those who hate the term but hold the majority of leadership positions feel compelled to use it to protect their leadership roles.
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Chancellor Williams (Destruction of Black Civilization: Great Issues of a Race From 4500 B.C. To 2000 A.D.)
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As the floods of God
Wash away sin city
They say it was written
In the page of the Lord
But I was looking
For that great jazz note
That destroyed
The walls of Jericho
The winds of fear
Whip away the sickness
The messages on the tablet
Was valium
As the planets form
That golden cross Lord
I'll see you on
The holy cross roads
After all this time
To believe in Jesus
After all those drugs
I thought I was Him
After all my lying
And a-crying
And my suffering
I ain't good enough
I ain't clean enough
To be Him
The tribal wars
Burning up the homeland
The fuel of evil
Is raining from the sky
The sea of lava
Flowing down the mountain
The time will sleep
Us sinners by
Holy rollers roll
Give generously now
Pass the hubcap please
Thank you Lord
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Joe Strummer
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The fact is that the modern implementation of the prison planet has far surpassed even Orwellโs
1984
and the only difference between our society and those fictionalized by Huxley, Orwell and others, is that the advertising techniques used to package the propaganda are a little more sophisticated on the surface.
Yet just a quick glance behind the curtain reveals that the age old tactics of manipulation of fear and manufactured consensus are still being used to force humanity into accepting the terms of its own imprisonment and in turn policing others within the prison without bars.
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Paul Joseph Watson
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How did Homo sapiens manage to cross this critical threshold, eventually founding cities comprising tens of thousands of inhabitants and empires ruling hundreds of millions? The secret was probably the appearance of fiction. Large numbers of strangers can cooperate successfully by believing in common myths. Any large-scale human cooperation โ whether a modern state, a medieval church, an ancient city or an archaic tribe โ is rooted in common myths that exist only in peopleโs collective imagination. Churches are rooted in common religious myths. Two Catholics who have never met can nevertheless go together on crusade or pool funds to build a hospital because they both believe that God was incarnated in human flesh and allowed Himself to be crucified to redeem our sins. States are rooted in common national myths. Two Serbs who have never met might risk their lives to save one another because both believe in the existence of the Serbian nation, the Serbian homeland and the Serbian flag. Judicial systems are rooted in common legal myths. Two lawyers who have never met can nevertheless combine efforts to defend a complete stranger because they both believe in the existence of laws, justice, human rights โ and the money paid out in fees.
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Yuval Noah Harari (Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind)
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ุงูุฎุชููุงูู ุงููููุงุฑู ููุงูููููู ูููุณู ุงูุฐููุฑุง ูููู ุงูุตูุจุง ููุฃูููุงู
ู ุฃููุณู
ููุตููุง ูู ู
ููุงููุฉู ู
ูู ุดูุจุงุจู ุตููููุฑูุช ู
ูู ุชูุตููููุฑุงุชู ููู
ูุณูู
ุนุตูุชู ูุงูุตููุจุง ุงููุนูุจู ูู
ุฑูุช ุณููุฉ ู ุญูููุฉ ูุ ููุฐููุฉ ู ุฎูููุณ
ูุณูุง ู
ุตุฑู : ูู ุณูุง ุงูููุจู ุนููุง ุฃูู ุฃูุณุง ุฌูุฑุญูู ุงูุฒู
ุงู ุงูู
ุคุณููุ
ููู
ุง ู
ุฑูุช ุงูููุงูู ุนููู ุฑููู ุ ูุงูุนูุฏู ูู ุงูููุงูู ุชูุณููู
ู
ูุณุชูุทุงุฑู ุฅุฐุง ุงูุจูุงุฎูุฑู ุฑูููุชู ุฃูููู ุงูููููุ ุฃูู ุนูููุชู ุจุนุฏ ุฌูุฑูุณ
ุฑุงูุจู ูู ุงูุถููุน ููุณููู ููุทูู ููู
ุง ุซูุฑููู ุดุงุนููู ุจูููุณู
ูุง ุงุจูุฉ ู ุงููู
ูู ุ ู
ุง ุฃุจููู ุจุฎููู ู
ุง ูู ู
ููุน ุจู
ูุน ูุญุจุณ
ุฃูุญุฑุงู
ู ุนููู ุจููุงุจููููู ุงูุฏูู ุญู ุญููุงูู ูููุทููุฑู ู
ูู ููููู ุฌููุณู
ููููู ุฏุงุฑู ุฃูุญูููู ุจูุงูุฃูููู ุฅูููุง ูู ุฎูุจูุซู ู
ููู ุงูู
ูุฐุงููุจู ุฑูุฌุณู
ูููุณู ู
ูุฑุฌููู ูููููุจู ุดูุฑุงุนู ุจูููู
ุง ูู ุงูุฏูู
ูุนู ุณูุฑู ููุฃูุฑุณู
ููุงูุฌุนููู ููุฌูููู ุงููููุงุฑู ููู
ูุฌุฑุง ูู ููุฏู ุงูุซูุบุฑู ุจูููู ุฑูู
ูู ููู
ููุณู
ููุทููู ููู ุดูุบููุชู ุจูุงูุฎููุฏู ุนูููู ูุงุฒูุนูุชูู ุฅูููููู ูู ุงูุฎููุฏู ูููุณู
โ
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ุฃุญู
ุฏ ุดููู
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The Greek word for "return" is nostos. Algos means "suffering." So nostalgia is the suffering caused by an unappeased yearning to return. To express that fundamental notion most Europeans can utilize a word derived from the Greek (nostalgia, nostalgie) as well as other words with roots in their national languages: aรฑoranza, say the Spaniards; saudade, say the Portuguese. In each language these words have a different semantic nuance. Often they mean only the sadness caused by the impossibility of returning to one's country: a longing for country, for home. What in English is called "homesickness." Or in German: Heimweh. In Dutch: heimwee. But this reduces that great notion to just its spatial element. One of the oldest European languages, Icelandic (like English) makes a distinction between two terms: sรถknuour: nostalgia in its general sense; and heimprรก: longing for the homeland. Czechs have the Greek-derived nostalgie as well as their own noun, stesk, and their own verb; the most moving, Czech expression of love: styska se mi po tobe ("I yearn for you," "I'm nostalgic for you"; "I cannot bear the pain of your absence"). In Spanish aรฑoranza comes from the verb aรฑorar (to feel nostalgia), which comes from the Catalan enyorar, itself derived from the Latin word ignorare (to be unaware of, not know, not experience; to lack or miss), In that etymological light nostalgia seems something like the pain of ignorance, of not knowing. You are far away, and I don't know what has become of you. My country is far away, and I don't know what is happening there. Certain languages have problems with nostalgia: the French can only express it by the noun from the Greek root, and have no verb for it; they can say Je m'ennuie de toi (I miss you), but the word s'ennuyer is weak, cold -- anyhow too light for so grave a feeling. The Germans rarely use the Greek-derived term Nostalgie, and tend to say Sehnsucht in speaking of the desire for an absent thing. But Sehnsucht can refer both to something that has existed and to something that has never existed (a new adventure), and therefore it does not necessarily imply the nostos idea; to include in Sehnsucht the obsession with returning would require adding a complementary phrase: Sehnsucht nach der Vergangenheit, nach der verlorenen Kindheit, nach der ersten Liebe (longing for the past, for lost childhood, for a first love).
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Milan Kundera (Ignorance)
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an old man with no destiny with our never knowing who he was, or what he was like, or even if he was only a figment of the imagination, a comic tyrant who never knew where the reverse side was and where the right of this life which we loved with an insatiable passion that you never dared even to imagine out of the fear of knowing what we knew only too well that it was arduous and ephemeral but there wasn't any other, general, because we knew who we were while he was left never knowing it forever with the soft whistle of his rupture of a dead old man cut off at the roots by the slash of death, flying through the dark sound of the last frozen leaves of his autumn toward the homeland of shadows of the truth of oblivion, clinging to his fear of the rotting cloth of death's hooded cassock and alien to the clamor of the frantic crowds who took to the streets singing hymns of joy at the jubilant news of his death and alien forevermore to the music of liberation and the rockets of jubilation and the bells of glory that announced to the world the good news that the uncountable time of eternity had come to an end.
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Gabriel Garcรญa Mรกrquez (The Autumn of the Patriarch)
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All things carefully considered, I believe they come down to this: what scares me is the Church as a social thing. Not solely because of her stains, but by the very fact that it is, among other characteristics, a social thing. Not that I am by temperament very individualistic. I fear for the opposite reason. I have in myself a strongly gregarious spirit. I am by natural disposition extremely easily influenced in excess, and especially by collective things. I know that if in this moment I had before me twenty German youth singing Nazi songs in chorus, part of my soul would immediately become Nazi. It is a very great weakness of mine. . . . I am afraid of the patriotism of the Church that exists in the Catholic culture. I mean โpatriotismโ in the sense of sentiment analogous to an earthly homeland. I am afraid because I fear contracting its contagion. Not that the Church appears unworthy of inspiring such sentiment, but because I donโt want any sentiment of this kind for myself. The word โwantโ is not accurate. I knowโ I sense with certaintyโ that such sentiment of this type, whatever its object might be, would be disastrous in me. Some saints approved the Crusades and the Inquisition. I cannot help but think they were wrong. I cannot withdraw from the light of conscience. If I think I see more clearly than they do on this pointโ I who am so far below themโ I must allow that on this point they must have been blinded by something very powerful. That something is the Church as a social thing. If this social thing did such evil to them, what evil might it not also do to me, one who is particularly vulnerable to social influences, and who is infinitely feebler than they?
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Simone Weil (Waiting for God)
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My mother once told me that trauma is like Lord of the Rings. You go through this crazy, life-altering thing that almost kills you (like say having to drop the one ring into Mount Doom), and that thing by definition cannot possibly be understood by someone who hasnโt gone through it. They can sympathize sure, but theyโll never really know, and more than likely theyโll expect you to move on from the thing fairly quickly. And they canโt be blamed, people are just like that, but thatโs not how it works.
Some lucky people are like Sam. They can go straight home, get married, have a whole bunch of curly headed Hobbit babies and pick up their gardening right where they left off, content to forget the whole thing and live out their days in peace. Lots of people however, are like Frodo, and they donโt come home the same person they were when they left, and everything is more horrible and more hard then it ever was before. The old wounds sting and the ghost of the weight of the one ring still weighs heavy on their minds, and they donโt fit in at home anymore, so they get on boats go sailing away to the Undying West to look for the sort of peace that can only come from within. Frodos canโt cope, and most of us are Frodos when we start out.
But if we move past the urge to hide or lash out, my mother always told me, we can become Pippin and Merry. They never ignored what had happened to them, but they were malleable and receptive to change. They became civic leaders and great storytellers; they we able to turn all that fear and anger and grief into narratives that others could delight in and learn from, and they used the skills they had learned in battle to protect their homeland. They were fortified by what had happened to them, they wore it like armor and used it to their advantage.
It is our trauma that turns us into guardians, my mother told me, it is suffering that strengthens our skin and softens our hearts, and if we learn to live with the ghosts of what had been done to us, we just may be able to save others from the same fate.
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S.T. Gibson
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Poor old Jean Valjean, of course, loved Cosette only as a father; but, as we noted earlier, into this fatherly love his lonely single status in life had introduced every other kind of love; he loved Cosette as his daughter, and he loved her as his mother, and he loved her as his sister; and, as he had never had either a lover or a wife, as nature is a creditor that does not accept nonpayment, that particular feeling, too, the most indestructible of all, had thrown itself in with the rest, vague, ignorant, heavenly, angelic, divine; less a feeling than an instinct, less an instinct than an attraction, imperceptible and invisible but real; and love, truly called, lay in his enormous tenderness for Cosette the way a vein of gold lies in the mountain, dark and virginal.
We should bear in mind that state of the heart that we have already mentioned. Marriage between them was out of the question, even that of souls; and yet it is certain that their destinies had joined together as one. Except for Cosette, that is, except for a child, Jean Valjean had never, in all his long life, known anything about love. Serial passions and love affairs had not laid those successive shades of green over him, fresh green on top of dark green, that you notice on foliage that has come through winter and on men that have passed their fifties. In short, and we have insisted on this more than once, this whole inner fusion, this whole set, the result of which was lofty virtue, had wound up making Jean Valjean a father for Cosette. A strange father, forged out of the grandfather, son, brother, and husband that were all in Jean Valjean; a father in whom there was even a mother; a father who loved Cosette and worshipped her, and for whom that child was light, was home, was his homeland, was paradise.
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Victor Hugo (Les Misรฉrables)