Thursday, August 17, 2006

On war

What's appalling about war is that it deprives man of his own individual battle.

~~Jules in Jules and Jim

Saturday, July 29, 2006

On silence

Under all speech that is good for anything there lies a silence that is better.

~~Thomas Carlyle

Silence is the great bipolar force in film. It enhances the sinister. Yet it weaponises the good. It stirps the film-goer's nerves for scenes of terror and suspense. Yet it reassures him when a hero refuses to speak, steadfast against betrayal or self-betrayal. Silence extends the horizon of possibility in both directions. ... Silence in great films is a far frontier. We peer over the lip of existence, as if over the edge of a waterfall. The makeshift of words is drowned by the roar of the infinite. We are presented with something unearthly, unworldly; something that urges us to enter the work of art, to inhabit it, to be remade by it. Or be rendered, in some cases, powerless by it.

~~Nigel Andrews, "Seen But Not Heard", Financial Times Weekend, July 29, 2006

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

If you can do something for others, to help, to be there, even if it's only a little thing, you know you are needed, and life becomes brighter somehow.

~~Irena in The Decalogue: One, directed by Kryzstof Kieslowski

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

Respect Peace

"Just as non-democratic Muslim states have no right to use Islam to advance their own agenda, democratic states have no right to use democratization to adavance theirs."

~Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi of Iran speaks at UC Berkeley on May 10, 2006

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Freeman for President

"Diplomacy-free foreign policy", coined by Chas Freeman at the 2006 Asilomar Conference at Pacific Grove, Monterey.

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

Milosz on memory

"To see" means not only to have before one's eyes. It may mean also to preserve in memory. "To see and to describe" may also mean to reconstruct in imagination. A distance achieved, thanks to the mystery of time, must not change events, landscapes, human figures into a tangle of shadows growing paler and paler. On the contrary, it can show them in full light, so that every event, every date becomes expressive and persists as an eternal reminder of human depravity and human greatness. Those who are alive receive a mandate from those who are silent forever. They can fulfill their duties only by trying to reconstruct precisely things as they were, and by wrestling the past from fictions and legends.

~from Czeslaw Milosz's Nobel Lecture in 1980.

On Shanghai

"The neon lights of Pudong skyscrapers throb luridly at night, making the "peaceful rise" of China appear, apart from everything else, an occasion for lovers of kitsch. But things are not so peaceful behind the glittering surfaces. The soil is subsiding in newly built-up Pudong; chemical poisons contaminate river waters elsewhere in China; and aggrieved peasants hold hundreds of demonstrations every week.

None of this seems to worry the hundreds of thousands of Chinese cheerfully moving through the shopping malls and the waterfront park in Shanghai. One feels in these great crowds, overhwhelming even to an Indian, not so much life itself, dense, rank or clotting, as the poignancy of the desires of the Chinese people for a better life. It is always a shock to remember the immense suffering China has known in the previous century and it seems petty to begrudge the Chinese shoppers a bit of consumerist self-indulgence."

~From "Steeped in history but striding forward", an article by Pankaj Mishra in the Weekend section of the Financial Times, April 8 and 9, 2006

Sunday, April 02, 2006

The only truth?

When someone is honestly 55% right, that's very good and there's no use wrangling. And if someone is 60% right, it's wonderful, it's great luck, and let him thank God. But what's to be said about 75% right? Wise people say this is suspicious. Well, and what about 100% right? Whoever says he's 100% right is a fanatic, a thug, and the worst kind of rascal.

~An old Jew of Galicia

Sunday, February 26, 2006

In her own words

"It was no excuse to be young, and that it would have been possible to find things out." ~~Traudl Junge, Hitler's last secretary

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Primo!

My second blog. Let's keep scribbling.