Kayy > Kayy's Quotes

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  • #1
    Sarah J. Maas
    “He thinks he'll be remembered as the villain in the story. But I forgot to tell him that the villain is usually the person who locks up the maiden and throws away the key. He was the one who let me out.”
    Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury

  • #2
    Sarah J. Maas
    “To the stars who listen—and the dreams that are answered.”
    Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury

  • #3
    Sarah J. Maas
    “I fell in love with you, smartass, because you were one of us—because you weren’t afraid of me, and you decided to end your spectacular victory by throwing that piece of bone at Amarantha like a javelin. I felt Cassian’s spirit beside me in that moment, and could have sworn I heard him say, ‘If you don’t marry her, you stupid prick, I will.”
    Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury

  • #4
    Sarah J. Maas
    “When you spend so long trapped in darkness, Lucien, you find that the darkness begins to stare back.”
    Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury

  • #5
    Sarah J. Maas
    “There are good days and hard days for me—even now. Don’t let the hard days win.”
    Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury

  • #6
    Sarah J. Maas
    “There are different kinds of darkness,” Rhys said. I kept my eyes shut. “There is the darkness that frightens, the darkness that soothes, the darkness that is restful.” I pictured each. “There is the darkness of lovers, and the darkness of assassins. It becomes what the bearer wishes it to be, needs it to be. It is not wholly bad or good.”
    Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury

  • #7
    Sarah J. Maas
    “I am broken and healing, but every piece of my heart belong to you.”
    Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury

  • #8
    Sarah J. Maas
    “No one was my master— but I might be master of everything, if I wished. If I dared.”
    Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury

  • #9
    Sarah J. Maas
    “And so Tamlin unwittingly led the High Lady of the Night Court into the heart of his territory.”
    Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury

  • #10
    Sarah J. Maas
    “And I wondered if love was too weak a word for what he felt, what he’d done for me. For what I felt for him.”
    Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury

  • #11
    Siddharth Kara
    “Our daily lives are powered by a human and environmental catastrophe in the Congo.”
    Siddharth Kara, Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives

  • #12
    Siddharth Kara
    “               The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little. —Franklin D. Roosevelt, second inaugural address, 1937”
    Siddharth Kara, Sex Trafficking: Inside the Business of Modern Slavery

  • #13
    Siddharth Kara
    “Now you understand how people like us work?”
    “I believe so.”
    “Tell me.”
    “You work in horrible conditions and—”
    “No! We work in our graves.”
    Siddharth Kara, Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives

  • #14
    Thomas Fuller
    “It is said that the darkest hour of the night comes just before the dawn.”
    Thomas Fuller, A Pisgah Sight of Palestine and the Confines Thereof: With the History of the Old and New Testament Acted Thereon

  • #15
    Mahatma Gandhi
    “Palestine belongs to the Arabs in the same sense that England belongs to the English or France to the French. It is wrong and inhuman to impose the Jews on the Arabs... Surely it would be a crime against humanity to reduce the proud Arabs so that Palestine can be restored to the Jews partly or wholly as their national home”
    Mahatma Gandhi

  • #16
    Christopher Hitchens
    “Actually—and this was where I began to feel seriously uncomfortable—some such divine claim underlay not just 'the occupation' but the whole idea of a separate state for Jews in Palestine. Take away the divine warrant for the Holy Land and where were you, and what were you? Just another land-thief like the Turks or the British, except that in this case you wanted the land without the people. And the original Zionist slogan—'a land without a people for a people without a land'—disclosed its own negation when I saw the densely populated Arab towns dwelling sullenly under Jewish tutelage. You want irony? How about Jews becoming colonizers at just the moment when other Europeans had given up on the idea?”
    Christopher Hitchens, Hitch 22: A Memoir

  • #17
    Susan Abulhawa
    “We come from the land, give our love and labor to her, and she nurtures us in return. When we die, we return to the land. In a way, she owns us. Palestine owns us and we belong to her”
    Susan Abulhawa, Mornings in Jenin

  • #18
    Angela Y. Davis
    “It is in collectivities that we find reservoirs of hope and optimism.”
    Angela Y. Davis, Freedom is a Constant Struggle: Ferguson, Palestine and the Foundations of a Movement

  • #19
    Refaat Alareer
    “There's a Palestine that dwells inside all of us, a Palestine that needs to be rescued: a free Palestine where all people regardless of color, religion, or race coexist; a Palestine where the meaning of the word "occupation" is only restricted to what the dictionary says rather than those plenty of meanings and connotations of death, destruction, pain, suffering, deprivation, isolation and restrictions that Israel has injected the word with.”
    Refaat Alareer, Gaza Writes Back

  • #20
    Refaat Alareer
    “Sometimes a homeland becomes a tale. We love the story because it is about our homeland and we love our homeland even more because of the story.”
    Refaat Alareer, Gaza Writes Back

  • #21
    Refaat Alareer
    “If a Palestinian bulldozer were ever invented (Haha, I know!) and I were given the chance to be in an orchard, in Haifa for instance,I would never uproot a tree an Israeli planted. No Palestinian would. To Palestinians, the tree is sacred, and so is the Land bearing it”
    Refaat Alareer, Gaza Writes Back

  • #22
    Refaat Alareer
    “All that I can tell you is that nothing can justify it, not even the most sacred ends in the world, not even peace itself, understand me?'

    'Yes, Mom. Nothing can justify our scars.”
    Refaat Alareer, Gaza Writes Back
    tags: scars

  • #23
    Refaat Alareer
    “It is when darkness prevails that I sit by the window to look past all those electricity-free houses, smell the sweet scent of a calm Gazan night, feel the fresh air going straight to my heart, and think of you, of me, of Palestine, of the crack, of the blank wall, of you, of Mama, of you, of my history class, of you, of God, of Palestine—of our incomplete story.”
    Refaat Alareer, Gaza Writes Back

  • #24
    Refaat Alareer
    “Of all the people around me, you know best that it takes two to complete a story; it always does”
    Refaat Alareer, Gaza Writes Back

  • #25
    Refaat Alareer
    “The refugee card was and continues to be an insult to remind us of the little that refugees get in comparison with what they have really lost. Would a bag of flour compensate for the farmland they once had? Would a bag of sugar make up for the bitter misery those people have always felt after losing their sweet homes to dwell in refugee camps? Would the two bottles of oil make them forget their olive trees, which had been mercilessly uprooted as they themselves were? Or maybe it is simply a declaration that they are temporary refugees who once had the land which, as long as this card is still in their hands, would still be waiting for them to return. Only a shot of sharp pain brought me back to the present.”
    Refaat Alareer, Gaza Writes Back

  • #26
    Refaat Alareer
    “Gaza tells stories because Palestine is at a short story's span. Gaza narrates so that people might not forget. Gaza writes back because the power of imagination is a creative way to construct a new reality. Gaza writes back because writing is a nationalist obligation, a duty to humanity, and a moral responsibility”
    Refaat Alareer, Gaza Writes Back

  • #27
    Refaat Alareer
    “It grew darker, and thus harder to read, as the sun peacefully, sank to bestow a new life on other people. Hamza, sinking into the darkness struggled to read the dark lines lying lifelessly before him. It dawned on him earlier that as long as we sought life, we could give it, and there always must be life close to us, closer than we imagine.”
    Refaat Alareer, Gaza Writes Back

  • #28
    Refaat Alareer
    “a free Palestine where all people regardless of color, religion, or race coexist;”
    Refaat Alareer, Gaza Writes Back: Short Stories from Young Writers in Gaza, Palestine

  • #29
    Refaat Alareer
    “That an Israeli soldier could bulldoze 189 olive trees on the Land he claims is part of the "God-given Land" is something I will never comprehend. Did he not consider the possibility that God might get angry? Did he not realize that it was a tree he was running over? If a Palestinian bulldozer were ever invented (Haha, I know!) and I were given the chance to be in an orchard, in Haifa for instance, I would never uproot a tree an Israeli planted. No Palestinian would. To Palestinians, the tree is sacred, and so is the Land bearing it. And as I talk about Gaza, I remember that Gaza is but a little part of Pales tine. I remember that Palestine is bigger than Gaza. Palestine is the West Bank; Palestine is Ramallah; Palestine is Nablus; Palestine is Jenin; Palestine is Tulkarm; Palestine is Bethlehem; Palestine, most importantly, is Yafa and Haifa and Akka and all those cities that Israel wants us to forget about.”
    Refaat Alareer, Gaza Writes Back

  • #30
    Adolf Hitler
    “While the Zionists try to make the rest of the World believe that the national consciousness of the Jew finds its satisfaction in the creation of a Palestinian state, the Jews again slyly dupe the dumb Goyim. It doesn't even enter their heads to build up a Jewish state in Palestine for the purpose of living there; all they want is a central organisation for their international world swindler, endowed with its own sovereign rights and removed from the intervention of other states: a haven for convicted scoundrels and a university for budding crooks.
    It is a sign of their rising confidence and sense of security that at a time when one section is still playing the German, French-man, or Englishman, the other with open effrontery comes out as the Jewish race.”
    Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf



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