Divine Forbearance
Having cheated my way through four years of high school Latin, I had to google for the translation of the "Carpe diem” quotes, and came across this delightful page, with translations and sketches:
http://www.waxoil.com/oilwax/life/carpe-diem.php
Reading this thread makes me think of Islam in general as much as Iraq in particular.
Some months ago, I joined
http://www.progressiveislam.org ,
which is founded and run by Laury Silvers, daughter of the late Phil Silvers, comedian of the 1950s-60s situation comedy, "Sergeant Bilko". I was an avid fan of that show during my early childhood.
The above website frequently posts photos of Muslim scenes of worship. Those photos strike me because of one thing in that they all possess in common, namely, an enormous group of identically clad people moving in precise unison. Today, I watched on PBS educational television some film clips of the crowds of one million, encircling the Kaba during Hajj. The next scene was of crowds of Shia males, rhythmically marching/dancing in unison as they flagellate their backs. Such scenes remind me of the society of bees or ants. People who are attracted to such things find beauty and strength, security and comfort in conformity. There is safety in numbers.
Personally I detest conformity. I admire freedom and individuality. After years of experimenting with various different religions and forms of corporate, congregational worship, I reject it as something unrewarding, and choose instead, solitary, introspective activity producing words and ideas.
During the first two years of the Prophet Mohammed’s ministry, the direction of Kibla or bowing was Jerusalem. There is an account in the Hadith about the day when, during public prayer, the Prophet was bowing toward Jerusalem, when suddenly, he leapt up, swung about, and bowed to Mecca. Of course, the entire crowd who was following him, also leapt up and swung about. Allah has revealed His will. The Kaba was now captured and cleansed, and a suitable direction for bowing. However does someone like Thoreau or Jefferson or T.S. Eliot or Camus or Emily Dickenson come to be and thrive in such a culture?
Freedom and Democracy are words which point to certain ideas, beliefs and values.
It is hard for us to comprehend the mind-set of peoples in a distant land of such radically different culture and religion.
We cannot help but notice how angry Muslims become if they feel that Islam or their Prophet Mohammed has been insulted. The remarks of Pope Benedict are only one recent example of such a reaction. There is one Surah in the Qur'an which goes on at some great length about some old man and woman who insulted Mohammed. That Surah elaborates how wretched things will be for that old man and his wife in the afterlife.
It is curious to compare such reactions of indignation with the passages in the Gospels where one is told to expected to be insulted and reviled and deemed the off-scourings of the earth, and falsely accused of various things. America and Australia were magnets for misfits and nere-do-wells who don't quite fit in where they came from.
I compare the Christian world's reaction to Kazanzakis' "The Last Temptation" with the Islamic world’s reaction to Rushdie's "Satanic Verses."
In the 16th century, Tulsidas, who re-wrote the Ramayan epic in Hindi, stated that “God abides in forbearance.” Forbearance and equanimity are two very important keywords for me.
If there is a supreme being behind all this creation of ours, then I find it hard to image such a being getting very angry or very pleased about any one particular person or event.