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Forum Messages Posted by Roswitha

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Thread: Closure case against ruling party shocks Turkey

1871.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 16 Mar 2008 Sun 04:51 am

Please write more about it in detail if you wish. Thanks.



Thread: The Stone Woman By Tariq Ali

1872.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 16 Mar 2008 Sun 04:41 am

No, the woman wasn’t made of stone but the stone showed fading traces of a woman who probably was a pagan goddess. And it is to her that the novel’s characters disgorge their secrets – it must be her silence that made her a worthy listener.

The Stone Woman is Tariq Ali’s third book in the celebrated Islam Quintet. It is a lyrical portrait of the lives of the members of Iskander Pasha’s family as they live under the sky of a deceasing empire, the Ottoman Empire to be precise. Nilofer, the determined daughter, returns home after nine years of banishment as her father forgives her for running away with an ugly, skinny, Greek Dimitri. On returning she runs to the stone woman and deposits all her hidden pain in the stone. This is definitely the most interesting aspect of the novel. The readers gain an in-depth look on the emotions of the characters as each of them confesses to the stone woman. And the entire novel is unfolded mostly through these confessions and a few bits through Nilofer.

Pasha suffers a stroke and the family members are called for from different places. Along with the increasing number of characters, the stone woman fills to the brim with sinister secrets, violent emotions and conspiracy. Each character is furnished with complexities of relationships, heart-beating worries about their survival in the dying empire, narrow-mindedness towards each other, hopelessness and vice versa. In fact the existence of the stone woman is very crucial to the development of the novel as Tariq Ali’s mastery over creating profound characters shines through the confessions that are made and hence the name: The Stone Woman.

If you are a historical-political-fiction lover, this is the kind of book that will leave you with a lot to ponder over as Ali also attempts to show the growth of a generation that is uncompromising to the myths and half truths of the good old religious days. I am tempted to add that if Orhan Pamuk portrays the westernized modern days of the fallen empire, Tariq Ali shows how it was in its last days; if Orhan Pamuk talks about what the king’s men did to Humpty Dumpty, Tariq Ali narrates who was Humpty Dumpty and what he was doing sitting on the wall.

Well, in a few places in the novel you might lose patience when it becomes tedious or find it hyperbolic but then you must keep in mind that it is a historical fiction and above all, the lyrical nature of this novel arises from its dense use of intriguing metaphors to describe actions as well as emotions. Say for an example think about a palmyra rising between somebody’s legs!

Tariq Ali also takes much time in breaking the stereotypical image of lives under Islam. Most western readers expect the seductive images of harems, silently praying conservative masses and poignant tales of oppressed women in novels that have an Islamic core. But Ali shatters that expectation with the characters indulging in rational arguments about political systems, debates on various philosophies and questioning the odds of their own religion though they don’t miss any prayer. Even the female characters join these conversations with much enthusiasm and contradictorily to the usual scene, in her bedroom Nilofer is the person in charge.

There’s a lot that Tariq Ali wishes to tell his readers and I recommend you this book if you are tolerant even to ideas that are totally unacceptable to you because in The Stone Woman Tariq Ali reveals the vista of a Muslim family like never seen before.


http://www.library.southlanarkshire.gov.uk/SystemMaintenance.aspx
http://www.newsline.com.pk/NewsMay2001/books.htm



Thread: NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS

1873.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 16 Mar 2008 Sun 03:46 am

For Caliptrix:
Humor Has Proven To Be A Powerful Ally In Enhancing Your Overall Health And Well Being.

Laughter is one of the best antidotes for reducing the day to day stress and anxiety that so many in this day and age experience and has proven to be an extremely effective way to increase the positive energy which is responsible and necessary for achieving Abundance, Happiness and harmony in life.



Thread: NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS

1874.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 16 Mar 2008 Sun 03:27 am

Of course it is. Has nothing to do with you.

Occasionally the road of life can lead us into unknown territory.
Sometimes all we need is a different perspective which allows us
to see the beauty of that which we may have previously feared.

"Do not let your fire go out, spark by irreplaccable spark, in the hopeless
swamps of the approximate, the not quite, the not at all. Do not let the
hero in your soul perish in lonely frustration for the life you deserved, but
have never been able to reach. Check your road and the nature of your battle.
The world you desired can be won. It exists, it is real, it is possible, it is yours.
-Ayn Rand

"Do not under estimate the Power Of Thoughts.
Just as water has the power to change earths landscape,
your thoughts have the power to change the landscape
of your life" -Chuck Danes



Thread: NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS

1875.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 16 Mar 2008 Sun 01:19 am

than I am also an insult to TLC for posting inflammatory topics.



Thread: NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS

1876.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 16 Mar 2008 Sun 01:06 am

My dear, now take a deep breath..........there will be ALWAYS others like him joining TLC.....you cannot stop war and peace in TLC



Thread: NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS

1877.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 16 Mar 2008 Sun 01:02 am

One thing though, he knew archeology.



Thread: NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS

1878.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 16 Mar 2008 Sun 12:41 am

These words by Yilgun will not change anything, it won't bring Adonis back.



Thread: Closure case against ruling party shocks Turkey

1879.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 16 Mar 2008 Sun 12:36 am

AKP: TURKEY IS FACING A SHAME
The closure case had great repercussions in Turkey and in the world. Speaking on behalf of the AKP, deputy chairman Dengir Mir Mehmet Firat said Turkey's democracy is face to face with a big shame. "This appeal is a third-class legal understanding. This is an injustice against stability," Firat said.



Thread: NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS

1880.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 15 Mar 2008 Sat 11:08 pm

"Punish"?



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