Abubakar > Abubakar's Quotes

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  • #1
    Sergei Dovlatov
    “I had three long conversations with Marusya over a cup of coffee. She told me her whole rather silly story. To some degree we became friends. I like people like that--doomed, dying, helpless, and brazen. I always say, if you're in trouble, you're not sinning.”
    Sergei Dovlatov, A Foreign Woman

  • #2
    Sergei Dovlatov
    “Let's assume there really is no such thing as happiness, no such thing as peace, and no freedom either. But there are kind of attacks of senseless ecstasy. Can this be me?”
    Sergei Dovlatov

  • #3
    Sergei Dovlatov
    “Три вещи может сделать женщина для русского писателя. Она может кормить его. Она может искренне поверить в его гениальность. И наконец, женщина может оставить его в покое. Кстати, третье не исключает второго и первого.”
    Сергей Довлатов, The Suitcase

  • #4
    نزار قباني
    “He who fights the destinies to stay with you,
    He who finds his life better beside you, and clings to you despite of all the events,
    He who hates your sadness, and tires himself to put a smile on your face,
    He who cries when you’re away before smiling when you’re here,
    But God didn’t decide that you’d stay with them despite of all this strugle,
    Is the only one who deserves immortality in your memory.”
    Nizar Qabbani

  • #5
    نزار قباني
    “Life doesn't stop after losing someone, but it goes on without them differently.”
    Nizar Qabbani

  • #7
    Reza Aslan
    “A Persian, a Turk, an Arab, and a Greek were traveling to a distant land when they began arguing over how to spend the single coin they possessed among themselves. All four craved food, but the Persian wanted to spend the coin on angur; the Turk, on uzum; the Arab, on inab; and the Greek, on stafil. The argument became heated as each man insisted on having what he desired. A linguist passing by overheard their quarrel. “Give the coin to me,” he said. “I undertake to satisfy the desires of all of you.” Taking the coin, the linguist went to a nearby shop and bought four small bunches of grapes. He then returned to the men and gave them each a bunch. “This is my angur!” cried the Persian. “But this is what I call uzum,” replied the Turk. “You have brought me my inab,” the Arab said. “No! This in my language is stafil,” said the Greek. All of a sudden, the men realized that what each of them had desired was in fact the same thing, only they did not know how to express themselves to each other. The four travelers represent humanity in its search for an inner spiritual need it cannot define and which it expresses in different ways. The linguist is the Sufi, who enlightens humanity to the fact that what it seeks (its religions), though called by different names, are in reality one identical thing. However—and this is the most important aspect of the parable—the linguist can offer the travelers only the grapes and nothing more. He cannot offer them wine, which is the essence of the fruit. In other words, human beings cannot be given the secret of ultimate reality, for such knowledge cannot be shared, but must be experienced through an arduous inner journey toward self-annihilation. As the transcendent Iranian poet, Saadi of Shiraz, wrote, I am a dreamer who is mute, And the people are deaf. I am unable to say, And they are unable to hear.”
    Reza Aslan, No God But God: The Origins, Evolution and Future of Islam

  • #8
    Reza Aslan
    “Today, Medina is simultaneously the archetype of Islamic democracy and the impetus for Islamic militancy. Islamic Modernists like the Egyptian writer and political philosopher Ali Abd ar-Raziq (d. 1966) pointed to Muhammad’s community in Medina as proof that Islam advocated the separation of religious and temporal power, while Muslim extremists in Afghanistan and Iran have used the same community to fashion various models of Islamic theocracy. In their struggle for equal rights, Muslim feminists have consistently drawn inspiration from the legal reforms Muhammad instituted in Medina, while at the same time, Muslim traditionalists have construed those same legal reforms as grounds for maintaining the subjugation of women in Islamic society. For some, Muhammad’s actions in Medina serve as the model for Muslim-Jewish relations; for others, they demonstrate the insurmountable conflict that has always existed, and will always exist, between the two sons of Abraham. Yet regardless of whether one is labeled a Modernist or a Traditionalist, a reformist or a fundamentalist, a feminist or a chauvinist, all Muslims regard Medina as the model of Islamic perfection. Simply put, Medina is what Islam was meant to be.”
    Reza Aslan, No God But God: The Origins, Evolution and Future of Islam

  • #9
    Reza Aslan
    “It took many years to cleanse Arabia of its “false idols.” It will take many more to cleanse Islam of its new false idols—bigotry and fanaticism—worshipped by those who have replaced Muhammad’s original vision of tolerance and unity with their own ideals of hatred and discord. But the cleansing is inevitable, and the tide of reform cannot be stopped. The Islamic Reformation is already here. We are all living in it.”
    Reza Aslan, No God But God: The Origins, Evolution and Future of Islam

  • #10
    Reza Aslan
    “Whether for good or for bad, the Iran that ultimately rises out of the ashes of last summer's uprising will be unlike the Iran we know today, and for that we can thank the Green Movement, not another round of useless sanctions.”
    Reza Aslan

  • #13
    Reza Aslan
    “As a text, the Quran is more than the foundation of the Islamic religion; it is the source of Arabic grammar. It is to Arabic what Homer is to Greek, what Chaucer is to English: a snapshot of an evolving language, frozen forever in time”
    Reza Aslan, No god but God: The Origins, Evolution and Future of Islam

  • #15
    Reza Aslan
    “Do not think that I have come to bring peace on earth. I have not come to bring peace, but the sword. MATTHEW 10:34”
    Reza Aslan, Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth

  • #16
    Reza Aslan
    “How one in the modern world views Jesus's miraculous actions is irrelevant. All that can be known is how the people of his time viewed them. And therein lies the historical evidence. For while debates raged within the early church over who Jesus was—a rabbi? the messiah? God incarnate?—there was never any debate, either among his followers or his detractors, about his role as an exorcist and miracle worker.”
    Reza Aslan, Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth

  • #17
    Frantz Fanon
    “O my body, make of me always a man who questions!”
    Frantz Fanon, Black Skin, White Masks

  • #18
    Frantz Fanon
    “They realize at last that change does not mean reform, that change does not mean improvement.”
    Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth

  • #19
    Frantz Fanon
    “A government or a party gets the people it deserves and sooner or later a people gets the government it deserves.”
    Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth



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