"As the Koran promises, patience is rewarded, and there are many surprises — a degree of environmental awareness for instance and of humans as mere stewards of God’s creation, unmatched in the Bible. And where the Bible is addressed exclusively to men, using the second and third person masculine, the Koran includes women — talking, for instance, of believing men and believing women — honorable men and honorable women. Or take the infamous verse about killing the unbelievers. Yes, it does say that, but in a very specific context: the anticipated conquest of the sanctuary city of Mecca where fighting was usually forbidden. And the permission comes hedged about with qualifiers. Not, you must kill unbelievers in Mecca, but you can, you are allowed to, but only after a grace period is over and only if there’s no other pact in place and only if they try to stop you getting to the Kaaba, and only if they attack you first. And even then — God is merciful, forgiveness is supreme — and so, essentially, better if you don’t. (Laughter) This was perhaps the biggest surprise — how flexible the Koran is, at least in minds that are not fundamentally inflexible."
-Lesley Hazleton sat down one day to read the Koran. And what she found — as a non-Muslim, a self-identified “tourist” in the Islamic holy book — wasn’t what she expected. Listen to her luminous thoughts in her TED talk.
And on the horrible misunderstanding about the 72 virgins promised? Here’s the truth: “Because the Koran is quite clear when it says that you’ll be “a new creation in paradise” and that you will be “recreated in a form unknown to you,” which seems to me a far more appealing prospect than a virgin. (Laughter) And that number 72 never appears. There are no 72 virgins in the Koran. That idea only came into being 300 years later, and most Islamic scholars see it as the equivalent of people with wings sitting on clouds and strumming harps. Paradise is quite the opposite. It’s not virginity, it’s fecundity, it’s plenty, it’s gardens watered by running streams.”
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Forever reblog
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Are you reading this in whispers? If you do, the words become richer, and then they’ll have more to spend, but with their weight, they’d drown; the deep-end. Gold coins that weigh a ton, dragging you down to the bottom of this big sink. Dance in the rain, dance along the drain.
Does anyone know who started these UC Davis-related pepper spray art pieces?
Some more examples and commentary here.
Being stressed to the core has given me a lot of insight as to what I want to actually do in my life and it is by no means to be stressed for the rest of my life.
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When you’re young, you think everything you do is disposable. You move from now to now, crumpling time up in your hands, tossing it away. You’re your own speeding car. You think you can get rid of things, and people too — leave them behind. You don’t yet know about the habit they have, of coming back.
Time in dreams is frozen. You can never get away from where you’ve been.






