The Reluctant Fundamentalist Quotes
The Reluctant Fundamentalist
by
Mohsin Hamid84,029 ratings, 3.73 average rating, 8,354 reviews
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The Reluctant Fundamentalist Quotes
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“If you have ever, sir, been through a breakup of a romantic relationship that involved great love, you will perhaps understand what I experienced. There is in such situations usually a moment of passion during which the unthinkable is said; this is followed by a sense of euphoria at finally being liberated; the world seems fresh as if seen for the first time then comes the inevitable period of doubt, the desperate and doomed backpedaling of regret; and only later, once emotions have receded, is one able to view with equanimity the journey through which one has passed.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“Time only moves in one direction. Remember that. Things always change.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“It seems an obvious thing to say, but you should not imagine that we Pakistanis are all potential terrorists, just as we should not imagine that you Americans are all undercover assassins.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“As a society, you were unwilling to reflect upon the shared pain that united you with those who attacked you. You retreated into myths of your own difference, assumptions of your own superiority. And you acted out these beliefs on the stage of the world, so that the entire planet was rocked by the repercussions of your tantrums, not least my family, now facing war thousands of miles away.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“She was struggling against a current that brought her inside herself.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“I responded to the gravity of an invisible moon at my core, and I undertook journeys I had not expected to take.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“You're a watchful guy. you know where that comes from?" I shook my head. "It comes from feeling out of place," he said. "Believe me. I know.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“She attracted people to her; she had presence, an uncommon magnetism. Documenting her effect on her habitat, a naturalist would likely have compared her to a lioness: strong, sleek, and invariably surrounded by her pride.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“Four thousand years ago, we, the people of the Indus River basin, had cities that were laid out on grids and boasted underground sewers, while the ancestors of those who would invade and colonize America were illiterate barbarians.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“...status, as in any traditional, class-conscious society, declines more slowly than wealth.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“Some of my relatives held on to imagined memories the way homeless people hold onto lottery tickets. Nostalgia was their crack cocaine, if you will, and my childhood was littered with the consequences of their addiction : unserviceable debts, squabbles over inheritances, the odd alcoholic or suicide.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“You're never rude,' she said, smiling, 'and I think it's good to be touchy sometimes. It means you care.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“Such journeys have convinced me that it is not always possible to restore one's boundaries after they have been blurred and made permeable by a relationship: try as we might, we cannot reconstitute ourselves as the autonomous beings we previously imagined ourselves to be.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“It is the effect of scarcity; one’s rules of propriety make one thirst for the improper.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“It is remarkable indeed how we human beings are capable of delighting in the mating call of a flower while we are surrounded by the charred carcasses of our fellow animals.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“I felt suddenly very young - or perhaps I felt my age.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“For we were not always burdened by debt, dependent on foreign aid and handouts; in the stories we tell of ourselves we were not the crazed and destitute radicals you see on your television channels but rather saints and poets and — yes — conquering kings. We built the Royal Mosque and the Shalimar Gardens in this city, and we built the Lahore Fort with its mighty walls and wide ramp for our battle-elephants. And we did these things when your country was still a collection of thirteen small colonies, gnawing away at the edge of a continent.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“I felt suddenly very young - or perhaps I felt my age: an almost childlike twenty-two, rather than that permanent middle-age that attaches itself to the man who lives alone and supports himself by wearing a suit in a city not of his birth.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“What happens is my mind starts to go in circles, thinking and thinking, and then I can't sleep. And once a couple of days go by, if you haven't slept, you start to get sick. You can't eat. You start to cry. It just feeds on itself.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“I did not grow up in poverty. But I did grow up with a poor boy's sense of longing, in my case not for what my family had never had, but for what we had had and lost.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“You have reminded me of how alien I found the concept of acquaintances splitting the bill when I first arrived in your country. I had been raised to favour mutual generosity over mathematical precision in such matters; given time both work equally well to even a score.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“[...] I stated to them among other things that no country inflicts death so readily upon the inhabitants of other countries, frightens so many people so far away, as America.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“When my turn came, I said I hoped one day to be the dictator of an Islamic republic with nuclear capability; the others appeared shocked, and I was forced to explain that I had been joking.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“But surely it is the gist that matters; I am, after all, telling you a history, and in history, as I suspect you—an American—will agree, it is the thrust of one’s narrative that counts, not the accuracy of one’s details.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“A common strand appeared to unite these conflicts, and that was the advancement of a small coterie’s concept of American interests in the guise of the fight against terrorism, which was defined to refer only to the organized and politically motivated killing of civilians by killers not wearing the uniforms of soldiers. I recognized that if this was to be the single most important priority of our species, then the lives of those of us who lived in lands in which such killers also lived had no meaning except as collateral damage. This, I reasoned, was why America felt justified in bringing so many deaths to Afghanistan and Iraq, and why America felt justified in risking so many more deaths by tacitly using India to pressure Pakistan.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“They try to resist change. Power comes from becoming change.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“Glaring is something we men of Lahore take seriously...”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“I was, in my own eyes, a veritable James Bond — only younger, darker, and possibly better paid.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“It seemed to me then—and to be honest, sir, seems to me still—that America was engaged only in posturing. As a society, you were unwilling to reflect upon the shared pain that united you with those who attacked you. You retreated into myths of your own difference, assumptions of your own superiority…. Such an America had to be stopped in the interests not only in the rest of humanity, but also in your own.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
“In a subway car, my skin would typically fall in the middle of the color spectrum. On street corners, tourists would ask me for directions. I was, in four and a half years, never an American; I was immediately a New Yorker.”
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
― The Reluctant Fundamentalist
