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Journal by nostyle

There is a school of thought that posits that Adam - of Genesis fame - was not actually the first man, but rather the first prophet in the line of prophets that spawned the Abrahamic faiths. The crux of this is that there was nothing good nor evil prior to the teachings of the creator having reached us - hence like the ravening wolf or the ferocious lion, there was nothing intrinsically wrong in anything we did since it was only natural. Once the concept was introduced that there was a purpose-driven, life-loving God, however, good and evil could be finally identified as those behaviors which departed from that purpose and interfered with that life. Hence the tale of Cain and Abel and most everything else in the Torah.

Now I am not here to argue this idea today. I am more interested in the location. Adam is said to have appeared in the garden of Eden, and of all the locales that have been proposed as the "real" Eden, I have been most convinced by the suggestion of David Rohl that it might have been Tabriz. I think it was the documentary, In Search of Eden - which can be found on You Tube that mostly convinced me. I may well be mistaken, however, so do your own research.

What intrigues me about this location is that some six thousand years later, around 1844, another man appeared in Iran claiming to be next in the Adamic line of prophets. Ignoring every gory detail about this, I will merely note that the Islamic clergy of Iran had this man executed on July 9, 1850 in what was then downtown Tabriz.

In a sense, then, what began with Adam in Eden came full circle and was brought to a close in the same location. Curious.

So, if Iran was in fact the host to the original garden of Eden, then it would follow that some of the oldest cultural elements of civilization may have sprung from that region, and one might expect that some of the most mature concepts regarding life the universe and everything have been and continue to be evolving there.

Sadly, Iran is mostly being demonized these days - not without good reason, mind you - to the citizens of the USA, so it is a knee-jerk reaction of many in the West to eschew everything associated with Iran. In fact, most of the evils that issue out of that country seem to be caused by a minority of fanatics who have a stranglehold on governance and their oppressions are evident and well documented. To some extent, the people of that country are rising up against that oppression, so there may well be an end one day to that circumstance.

All of this is a long way around to recommending that every "educated" American should be familiar with the story of Layla and Majnun - perhaps the original "Romeo and Juliette". It is a tale familiar to most every Iranian, one that inspired Eric Clapton in composing perhaps his most famous tune. Maybe one day, Hollywood will grace us with a worthy film depiction of it.

Likewise, those who would account themselves as culturally informed might wish to peruse some of the poetry of Rumi:


Beyond

Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and rightdoing,
there is a field.
I'll meet you there.

When the soul lies down in that grass,
the world is too full to talk about.

Ideas,
language,
even the phrase "each other"
doesn't make any sense.

and Hafez:


Will Beat You Up

Jealousy
And most all of your sufferings
Are from believing
You know better than God.
Of course,
Such a special brand of arrogance as that
Always proves disastrous,
And will rip the seams
In your caravan tent,
Then cordially invite in many species
Of mean biting flies and
Strange thoughts-
That will
Beat you
Up.

So just some ideas on how to fill your new year, or whatever.

Oh yeah, and if any of your neighbors are Iranian refugees, consider going out of your way to talk with them. For the record, I am not Iranian, but one of my neighbors is.

--
"So make the best of the situation before I finally go insane", -Derek and the Dominos, Layla

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 31, @07:22PM (4 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 31, @07:22PM (#1289511)

    We've all probably worshiped false gods, along the way. They were burned by the green flame. How were we to know? Old movie idols, you know what you're getting... you know that they turned dark, later on. Only the good die young? There's probably more to that than it seems.

    Could tell you a story... a few, added today to this page.

  • (Score: 1) by nostyle on Tuesday January 31, @08:47PM (3 children)

    by nostyle (11497) on Tuesday January 31, @08:47PM (#1289530) Journal

    I was thinking this conversation was sounding familiar. See the lyrics in the sig. Nothing is new.

    Maybe this is as good a place as any to sneak chapter 113 in:

    113  Al Falaq     (The Daybreak)

    1  Say, "Refuge I take                                  (Lit: I seek refuge)
          in [the] Lord [of] the daybreak
    2  From [the] evil                                         (Alt: harms, ills)
          [of] what He hath created,                    (Alt: [of] His creation)
    3  And from [the] evil
          [of] darkness
          when it falls,                                          (Lit: spreads)
    4  And from [the] evil
          [of] the {bewitchers},                           (Lit: blowers in the knots)
    5  And from [the] evil
          [of] an envier when he envies."

    --

    It's a God-awful small affair
    To the girl with the mousy hair
    But her mummy is yelling no
    And her daddy has told her to go

    But her friend is nowhere to be seen
    Now she walks through her sunken dream
    To the seat with the clearest view
    And she's hooked to the silver screen

    But the film is a saddening bore
    For she's lived it ten times or more
    She could spit in the eyes of fools
    As they ask her to focus on

    Sailors fighting in the dance hall
    Oh man look at those cavemen go
    It's the freakiest show
    Take a look at the lawman
    Beating up the wrong guy
    Oh man wonder if he'll ever know
    He's in the best selling show
    Is there life on Mars?

    It's on America's tortured brow
    That Mickey Mouse has grown up a cow
    Now the workers have struck for fame
    'Cause Lennon's on sale again
    See the mice in their million hordes
    From Ibiza to the Norfolk Broads
    Rule Britannia is out of bounds
    To my mother, my dog, and clowns
    But the film is a saddening bore
    'Cause I wrote it ten times or more
    It's about to be writ again
    As I ask you to focus on

    Sailors fighting in the dance hall
    Oh man look at those cavemen go
    It's the freakiest show
    Take a look at the lawman
    Beating up the wrong guy
    Oh man wonder if he'll ever know
    He's in the best selling show
    Is there life on Mars?

    -David Bowie

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 31, @10:10PM (1 child)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 31, @10:10PM (#1289546)

      Okay, I get it, the girl and sailor are Olive Oyl and Popeye, the Caveman is Bluto, the Clown is of course Koko. Then it falls down a bit, unless the Mouse is a simile for Eugene the Jeep (wasn't he from Mars?). And I liked Tom Hatten much more than Lennon; better than Engineer Bill (drink your milk!), Skipper Frank... regionalisms, lost to the ravages of time. Back In The Inkwell, for all of them.

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 31, @10:17PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 31, @10:17PM (#1289549)

        Oh, right the Caveman was Toar. Bluto's been left on the cutting room floor. Right next to Brutus. Bluto looked like Tyrone Power's father (also called Tyrone Power), but Brutus... I think he looked like Roy Disney.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 31, @11:40PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 31, @11:40PM (#1289559)

      BTW, perhaps the best cover performance of that tune evar is done by Postmodern Jukebox and can be found on you tube. Search "pmj life on mars".

      I dream of being as good as the guitarist on the countertop.