28 November 2009
Posted in
Getting Real
Some time ago, I took a straw poll among my blog readers regarding a
few issues. Here are their opinions on marriage and xenophobia (fear or
hatred of anything strange or foreign):Marriage
Stella:
I am condemned to love you, and that is my salvation. I shall have to
live for ever in the shadow of your eyes, accept the fact that
everything your hand touches arouses the best in me. All that I know is
your love, nothing else interests me.
Prajakta: Two people join together, love provokes more love. Two imperfect beings unite, and perfection becomes possible.
Dasha:
The ceremony of marriage is just a symbol, and we could live very well
without all the pressures that it implies. Love is free and wild, and
the more we feel this state of freedom, the more aware we are of the
joy that it means to live with another person we have chosen, rather
than with someone that society has obliged us to be with.
Leila:
In my religion (Islamism), marriage amounts to many ways of worshipping
God. I cannot understand religions that preach celibacy and asceticism,
which severs human beings from their natural condition.
Nadia:
I need love. I need someone to tell me that he is in love with me, and
that’s all. I have no need for a white dress and a church blessing, but
I seem to be the only one among my friends to think this way. They are
all afraid of loneliness; if I don’t find someone who understands me
deeply, what’s wrong about being alone? But the pressure is so great
that I think that I am gong to have to accept it sooner or later, or
else my self-esteem will be seriously damaged.
Liz:
I’m going to get married in two weeks, and I’ve been talking
compulsively about it. What conclusion have I reached? With or without
a formal ceremony, a couple will always be what they can be. The only
thing that changes is that we will have to disguise our fighting with
one another.
Neel P.: I
believe that a couple that puts God at the center of their lives will
also know where to put marriage where it belongs. Being with another
person doesn’t mean making a god of them, this should be seen as part
of the divine blessings that affect our lives every day – like love,
sex, music, solitude, and even suffering. Marriage is by no means
destiny, but rather part of our path, and I am sure that God uses this
union for a reason that goes far beyond perpetuating the species.
Paulo Coelho:
I love writing these columns in bars, which is what I am doing at this
very moment. In front of me sits a woman wearing dark glasses and
leafing through a magazine. Some minutes ago she asked if I was hungry,
I told her no, and she went back to her reading.
She could be at home, or at the cinema, or in another restaurant with
friends, but I need her to be at my side. Sometimes she brings her
sketch pads (she’s a painter), other times she has something else to
do, but whenever possible she accompanies me to the many bars in life.
We have been together for 27 years. We have lived through many a
crisis, and survived them all. We build and rebuild our marriage each
and every day, and though she seems to be the same woman that I met in
1979, she has known how to change and adapt with time, time that
teaches us and makes us move ahead.
Just a
few moments ago, a little boy came over to our table. He displayed a
small bag of free samples of perfume and said that his mother was
sending it to us as a present. I looked at the woman, and she smiled.
She certainly understands that although there is a computer between me
and the woman with dark glasses who sits in front of me, our souls are
linked together.
Xenophobia
Ruth:
Life means adventure, change, things that not everybody has the courage
to face and accept. When one sees someone who is unfamiliar, a
subconscious fear springs up: “why dare he take two steps forward and
run risks where nobody knows him? I wonder if he wants to infiltrate
his ideas and destroy the world that we have built with so much toil?”
D.H.:
For a few months in 2001 I had an Arab student living in my home here
in Boston. Everyone admired his kindness, and on many an evening we
would gather in a local bar to chat about the customs of his country.
Right after the attacks of the 11th September, the very same people who
had laughed the day before at his stories began to hate him.
Dasha:
Xenophobia isn’t just the fear of strangers, it’s being afraid of what
happens between different generations. Most people are afraid of today,
they prefer to live in the past. My country (Russia) is an excellent
example of this.
Aspen: Every
child, if he is raised with the necessary amount of strictness and
freedom, could collaborate infinitely to make this planet a better
place to live. But one of the first things we learn is “not to talk to
strangers”.
Warrior of Running Water:
Here in Denmark we have a festival that lasts about a week and attracts
100,000 strangers to celebrate life, share common interests and learn
from the differences. People embrace for no reason except being on the
same path, they sing and get drunk together. When the festival is over,
a strange atmosphere takes over the town again, and strangers are once
more seen as a threat.
Neel P.:
We have to trust in love. We have to remember what we were told: “love
your neighbor as yourself”. If we trust in love, we don’t need to fear
anything any more, but the truth is that we never trust enough...
Radek:
People in my country (Poland) lived through the tyranny of Hitler and
the Soviet oppression, and they don’t seem to have learned anything. It
terrifies me to see people who experienced the horrors of Nazism
behaving the same way today, avoiding everything that is unknown or
different. The worst of it all is that they use religion to justify
their acts, arguing that all those who aren’t Christians should be
banished from society. This blind faith is worse than having no faith
at all.
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