Mojtaba > Mojtaba's Quotes

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  • #1
    Bertolt Brecht
    “میان همه ی چیزهای قطعی،قطعی ترینشان تردید است”
    برتولت برشت

  • #2
    “نمی‌دانم این "چیزی شدن" را چه کسی توی دهان ما انداخت؟ از کی فکر کردیم باید کسی شویم یا کاری کنیم. این همه آدم در دنیا دارند نباتی زندگی می‌کنند. بیدار می‌شوند و می‌خورند و می‌دوند و می‌خوابند، همین. مگر به کجای دنیا برخورده؟”
    نسیم مرعشی

  • #3
    Robert Collier
    “Visualize this thing you want. See it, feel it, believe in it. Make your mental blueprint and begin.”
    Robert Collier

  • #4
    Jalal ad-Din Muhammad ar-Rumi
    “بشنو از نی چون حکایت می کند
    از جدایی ها شکایت می کند

    کز نیستان تا مرا ببریده اند
    از نفیرم مرد و زن نالیده اند

    سینه خواهم شرحه شرحه از فراق
    تا بگویم شرح درد اشتیاق

    هر کسی کو دور ماند از اصل خویش
    بازجوید روزگار وصل خویش

    من به هر جمعیتی نالان شدم
    جفت بدحالان و خوشحالان شدم

    هر کسی از ظن خود شد یار من
    از دورن من نجست اسرار من


    سر من از ناله ی من دور نیست
    لیک چشم و گوش را آن نور نیست

    تن ز جان و جان ز تن مستور نیست
    لیک کس را دید جان دستور نیست

    آتش است این بانگ نای و نیست باد
    هر که این آتش ندارد نیست باد

    آتش عشقست کاندر نی فتاد
    جوشش عشق است کاندر می فتاد

    نی حریف هر که از یاری برید
    پرده هایش پرده های ما درید

    همچو نی زهری و تریاقی که دید؟
    همچو نی دمساز و مشتاقی که دید؟

    نی حدیث راه پرخون می کند
    قصه های عشق مجنون می کند

    محرم این هوش جز بیهوش نیست
    مر زبان را مشتری جز گوش نیست

    در غم ما روزها بیگاه شد
    روزها با سوزها همراه شد

    روزها گر رفت گو: رو باک نیست
    تو بمان ای آنکه چون تو پاک نیست

    هرکه جز ماهی ز آبش سیر شد
    هرکه بی روزیست روزش دیر شد


    درنیابد حال پخته هیچ خام
    پس سخن کوتاه باید والسلام


    بند بگسل باش آزاد ای پسر
    چند باشی بند سیم و بند زر

    گر بریزی بحر را در کوزه‌ای
    چند گنجد قسمت یک روزه‌ای

    کوزه چشم حریصان پر نشد
    تا صدف قانع نشد پر د’ر نشد


    هر که را جامه ز عشقی چاک شد
    او ز حرص و عیب کلی پاک شد


    شاد باش ای عشق خوش سودای ما
    ای طبیب جمله علتهای ما


    ای دوای نخوت و ناموس ما
    ای تو افلاطون و جالینوس ما


    جسم خاک از عشق بر افلاک شد
    کوه در رقص آمد و چالاک شد


    عشق جان طور آمد عاشقا
    طور مست و خر موسی صاعقا


    با لب دمساز خود گر جفتمی
    همچو نی من گفتنیها گفتمی


    هر که او از هم زبانی شد جدا
    بی زبان شد گرچه دارد صد نوا


    چونکه گل رفت و گلستان درگذشت
    نشنوی زان پس ز بلبل سر گذشت


    جمله معشوقست و عاشق پرده ای
    زنده معشوقست و عاشق مرده ای


    چون نباشد عشق را پروای او
    او چو مرغی ماند بی پروای او


    من چگونه هوش دارم پیش و پس
    چون نباشد نور یارم پیش و پس


    عشق خواهد کین سخن بیرون بود
    آینه غماز نبود چون بود


    آینت دانی چرا غماز نیست
    زانکه زنگار از رخش ممتاز نیست”
    مولوی

  • #5
    Warren Buffett
    “Honesty is a very expensive gift, Don't expect it from cheap people.”
    Warren Buffett

  • #6
    Seneca
    “True happiness is to enjoy the present, without anxious dependence upon the future, not to amuse ourselves with either hopes or fears but to rest satisfied with what we have, which is sufficient, for he that is so wants nothing. The greatest blessings of mankind are within us and within our reach. A wise man is content with his lot, whatever it may be, without wishing for what he has not.”
    Seneca

  • #7
    Forough Farrokhzad
    “‍من
    در جستجوی
    قطعه ای از
    آسمان پهناور
    هستم،

    که از تراکم
    اندیشه های پَست
    ...تهی باشد”
    Forough Farrokhzad

  • #8
    William C. Chittick
    “For such people, the ruling gods are progress, science, and development. They imagine that we know so much more about the world than those people of olden times, because "we" have science. Of course, they themselves do not have science, they have simply heard and believed that scientific knowledge is real knowledge. They know little about the goals and methods of science, and nothing about the Islamic Intellectual tradition. They are blind imitators in intellectual issues, that is, on the level where they should be striving for their own understanding. What is worse, this is a selective imitation, since they only accept the authority of the "scientists" and the "experts", not that of the great Muslim thinkers of the past. If Einstein said it, it must be true, but if Al-Ghazali or Mulla Sadra said it, then it can't be true, because it isn't scientific.”
    William C. Chittick

  • #9
    Jalal ad-Din Muhammad ar-Rumi
    “Stop acting so small. You are the universe in ecstatic motion.”
    Rumi

  • #10
    Seyyed Hossein Nasr
    “It is for Muslim scholars to study the whole history of Islamic science completely and not only the chapters and periods which influenced Western science. It is also for Muslim scholars to present the tradition of Islamic science from the point of view of Islam itself and not from the point of view of the scientism, rationalism and positivism which have dominated the history of science in the West since the establishment of the discipline in the early part of the 20th century in Europe and America.”
    Seyyed Hossein Nasr, A Young Muslim's Guide to the Modern World

  • #11
    Shahab al-Din Suhrawardi
    “گفتم: ای پیر، چشمه ی زندگانی کجاست؟
    گفت: در ظلمات.
    گفتم: راه از کدام جانب است؟
    گفت: از هر طرف که بروی، می رسی.
    گفتم: نشانی ظلمات چیست؟
    گفت: تو خود در ظلماتی، اما نمی دانی.”
    شهاب‌الدین سهروردی, عقل سرخ

  • #12
    Meister Eckhart
    “The eye through which I see God is the same eye through which God sees me; my eye and God's eye are one eye, one seeing, one knowing, one love.”
    Meister Eckhart, Sermons of Meister Eckhart

  • #13
    C.G. Jung
    “The meeting of two personalities is like the contact of two chemical substances: if there is any reaction, both are transformed.”
    Carl Gustav Jung

  • #14
    “گاهی فرار یا سکوت دست کمی از خیانت یا جنایت ندارد”
    مظفر سالاری, رویای نیمه شب

  • #15
    Sohrab Sepehri
    “کار ما نیست شناسایی راز گل سرخ
    کار ما شاید این است که در افسون گل سرخ شناور باشیم
    کار ما شاید این است
    که میان گل نیلوفر و قرن
    پی آواز حقیقت بدویم”
    Sohrab Sepehri

  • #16
    علي بن أبي طالب
    “مَن اَحَبَّنا
    فَلْیُعِدَّ لِلبلاءِ جِلباباً
    .
    هرکه ما را دوست دارد
    باید ردایی برای بلا مهیا کند”
    علي بن أبي طالب, غرر الحكم ودرر الكلم

  • #17
    محمدرضا شفیعی کدکنی

    نفسم گرفت ازين شب در اين حصار بشكن
    در اين حصار جادويي روزگار بشكن
    چو شقايق از دل سنگ برآر رايت خون
    به جنون صلابت صخره ي كوهسار بشكن
    تو كه ترجمان صبحي به ترنم و ترانه
    لب زخم ديده بگشا صف انتظار بشكن
    ... سر آن ندارد امشب كه برآيد آفتابي؟
    تو خود آفتاب خود باش و طلسم كار بشكن
    بسراي تا كه هستي كه سرودن است بودن
    به ترنمي دژ وحشت اين ديار بشكن
    شب غارت تتاران همه سو فكنده سايه
    تو به آذرخشي اين سايه ي ديوسار بشكن
    ز برون كسي نيايد چو به ياري تو اينجا
    تو ز خويشتن برون آ سپه تتار بشكن

    محمدرضا شفیعی کدکنی

  • #18
    Karl Marx
    “within the capitalist system all methods for raising the social productiveness of labour are brought about at the cost of the individual labourer; all means for the development of production transform themselves into means of domination over, and exploitation of, the producers; they mutilate the labourer into a fragment of a man, degrade him to the level of an appendage of a machine, destroy every remnant of charm in his work and turn it into a hated toil; they estrange from him the intellectual potentialities of the labour process in the same proportion as science is incorporated in it as an independent power; they distort the conditions under which he works, subject him during the labour process to a despotism the more hateful for its meanness; they transform his life-time into working-time, and drag his wife and child beneath the wheels of the Juggernaut of capital. But all methods for the production of surplus-value are at the same time methods of accumulation; and every extension of accumulation becomes again a means for the development of those methods. It follows therefore that in proportion as capital accumulates, the lot of the labourer, be his payment high or low, must grow worse. The law, finally, that always equilibrates the relative surplus population, or industrial reserve army, to the extent and energy of accumulation, this law rivets the labourer to capital more firmly than the wedges of Vulcan did Prometheus to the rock. It establishes an accumulation of misery, corresponding with accumulation of capital. Accumulation of wealth at one pole is, therefore, at the same time accumulation of misery, agony of toil slavery, ignorance, brutality, mental degradation, at the opposite pole, i.e., on the side of the class that produces its own product in the form of capital.”
    Karl Marx, Capital: A Critique of Political Economy Volume 1

  • #19
    Atef Abu Saif
    “For Gazans, war is like the weather, we live through it continually. We have no say in it; it just comes and goes, from the day we’re born. Most Gazans have never left the Strip; they don’t know what life feels like where war is not the norm; they don’t know what freedom is either. They know they want it, but they’ve never really tasted it.”
    Atef Abu Saif, Don't Look Left: A Diary of Genocide

  • #20
    Atef Abu Saif
    “The Israeli Army’s instinct seems to be to kill as many as they can. The death toll’s not important, what’s important is that Gaza dies. To them we are just numbers, and when you’re turned into numbers, it doesn’t matter if it’s ten or ten thousand. It’s just a number.”
    Atef Abu Saif, Don't Look Left: A Diary of Genocide

  • #21
    Atef Abu Saif
    “The only real heroism is survival, to win the prize that is your own life.”
    Atef Abu Saif, The Drone Eats with Me: A Gaza Diary

  • #22
    Atef Abu Saif
    “One of the things you have to do during times like these is listen to the news and follow every statement, every scrap of new information. But at the same time, it’s unbearable to listen. The way they talk about us, refer to us, speak for us, decide things for us, without ever asking any of us to speak, is disgusting.”
    Atef Abu Saif, Don't Look Left: A Diary of Genocide

  • #23
    Atef Abu Saif
    “The Palestinian logic is that in war we should all sleep in different places, so that if one part of the family is killed, another part lives.”
    Atef Abu Saif, Don't Look Left: A Diary of Genocide

  • #24
    Atef Abu Saif
    “A few years ago, someone daubed on the wall of the UNRWA school east of the camp a strange slogan: ‘We progress backwards.’ It had a ring to it. Every new war drags us back to basics, back to the beginning. It destroys our houses, our institutions, our mosques and churches. It razes our gardens and parks to the ground. It leaves us nothing for the future. Every war takes us years to recover from, and before we have recovered from it, a new war arrives. It doesn’t trigger warning sirens or send messages to your phone. It just arrives. We find ourselves suddenly in the middle of it.”
    Atef Abu Saif, Don't Look Left: A Diary of Genocide

  • #25
    Atef Abu Saif
    “Memories of war are strangely positive, because to have them you must have survived.”
    Atef Abu Saif, Don't Look Left: A Diary of Genocide
    tags: war

  • #26
    Atef Abu Saif
    “Some kids have invented a new, clever way of making sure their story is told, or at least recorded, even after they’ve been torn to pieces by an Israeli missile. To make sure their bodies are recognised they have taken to writing their names, with markers, on their hands and legs. They are sharing this practice on social media. Some are even writing their family’s mobile numbers so they can be called and informed of their death. It is almost impossible to think about the world carrying on after we die, but these kids are doing it: putting their loved ones first, hoping to lessen their suffering by saving them from the purgatory of not knowing. They do it also, I think, for themselves: the idea of dying and not being mourned by anyone is unbearable.”
    Atef Abu Saif, Don't Look Left: A Diary of Genocide

  • #27
    Atef Abu Saif
    “Feeling the claustrophobia I look up at the sky, then remember what’s up there.”
    Atef Abu Saif, Don't Look Left: A Diary of Genocide

  • #28
    Atef Abu Saif
    “The challenges facing Palestinians are harder than anything we could have imagined; the moment the challenge isn’t just ‘how to survive today’, a whole world of future suffering will open up to us. I remembered my early thought, when I was in the north, that the real war starts when the military operations end. It’s true, both politically and at the level of human drama. When the guns are shut down, the pain and despair of ordinary people will come to the surface. It will be that moment of realisation: both of the loss they’ve suffered and the new conditions they have to live with. In this sense, thinking of tomorrow is more difficult than thinking of today.”
    Atef Abu Saif, Don't Look Left: A Diary of Genocide

  • #29
    Atef Abu Saif
    “On the first day of the war, a friend of mine texted me: ‘What is happening in Gaza?’ I replied: ‘The proper question is not what is happening, but what has been happening, all this time—for more than 75 years.’ We live in a war film, and the director, who is also the producer and the star, does not want it to end. The Hollywood studio behind the film keeps feeding the script with new scenes, keeps adding millions of dollars to the budget. Early screen tests have proven it’s going to be a blockbuster, but only if they keep filming. And never stop.”
    Atef Abu Saif, Don't Look Left: A Diary of Genocide

  • #30
    Atef Abu Saif
    “As I write this, I hear about an airstrike on Karmel Tower. The building takes its name from the famous high school, opposite it, which in turn is named after the great Carmel Mountain that stands above Haifa. The impressive tower was hit from more than one side. Many media centres and offices are located in the tower. The Israeli’s always go for these kind of buildings: new, impressive, exciting hubs of development and investment. I remember the destruction of Basha Tower, al-Shorouk Tower, and of course the Italian complex in 2014. The aim is always to send us back in time, to make the city look poor and ugly again.”
    Atef Abu Saif, Don't Look Left: A Diary of Genocide



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