Which is Mukalla?

A Google Images search for “Mukalla, Yemen” produced one of these pictures.  Can you guess which one?

coastal-scene.jpg

Stylish Neckwear

If you guessed “The stylish piece of neckwear,” you are wrong!

Long live the blog!

Lefalcon, how are things in Mukalla?  It sounds like quite a change from Aden. 

Monday night I attended a meeting of Ball State’s Orthodox Christian Fellowship.  As you recall, I’d attended once last year and had been meaning to go back.  Someone I hadn’t seen there before asked me if I was an Orthodox Christian.  No, I said, I’m a Quaker.  This was a bit of an exaggeration; I haven’t joined the Friends Church yet, but am planning to do so.  This drew a puzzled look.  “I’m very comfortable with Quakerism and can’t imagine being anything but a Quaker, and that’s precisely why I want to learn more about Orthodoxy.  I want to make sure that I’m not just looking for an excuse for being the sort of person I already am.”  “Well, Quakerism and Orthodoxy are certainly opposite ends of the sprectrum.”  I agreed.  For example, the Orthodox always tend towards the most elaborate possible liturgical forms, while Quaker liturgy consists of sitting still.  

At any rate, the theme of that meeting was  the New Year.  Because 1 September is New Year’s day in the liturgical calendar of the Orthodox Church.  In that spirit, I declare my New Year’s resolution to be posting more stuff on this blog.

An email I sent to P, in which I critiqued your least-favorite blogger

P-funk has been sending me emails lately with his views on society and class in Brazil, a topic whereupon my ignorance is almost total.  So I keep trying to change the subject.  Something he said yesterday reminded me of a recent posting on Steve Sailer’s blog, so I took the opportunity to introduce him to that site and my reservations about it.  With P’s permission, I copy the message below.   Read the full post »

The Imp of the Perverse

Keith Knight on an odd psychological phenomenon.

http://www.buzzle.com/showImage.asp?image=20240

beer commercial

Have you ever wondered what it would have been like if Salvador Dali and Luis Bunuel had collaborated on a beer commercial?  Neither have I.  But somebody has- look at this Stella Artois spot.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1s-aXtrrdpU&mode=related&search=

Twin Critters

twin-critters.jpg
One of the more disgusting things I’ve been involved in here, has been killing rats.  The title “twin critters” refers to a small pair, caught in my house last night.  It was a “live capture.”

I don’t set up rat traps, for this reason:  You will definitely catch a rat.  This opens us all kinds of issues, like, what will you do with (or to) it?

Naturally, somebody walked by their little cage and sprayed them with Raid.  Why kill them when you can just douse them with insecticide and watch them suffer?

Rats are repulsive, and I really don’t care if they get killed.  But even these foul little creatures deserve a merciful swift death.

I was so grossed out by these miserable, Raid-dripping little rats.  They had no prospect that anybody would “process” them for many hours.

So I filled a garbage can with water and drowned them.  What is really gross is, they could still be submerged.  (I was in a hurry and didn’t have time to drive them to the dump.)

Hopefully someone has finished their processing, by now.  As I indicated above, I don’t set up these traps, because I don’t care to deal with the processing.

Women’s Dress

I got this off the Internet.  (I’ve modified it slightly for readability.):“God, the Most Merciful, gave us three basic rules for the dress code for women in Islam:

“1.The BEST garment is the garment of righteousness.

“2.Whenever you dress, cover your chest (bosoms).

“3.Lengthen your garment.

“While these three BASIC rules may not sound enough for those who do not trust God, the TRUE believers know that God is ENOUGH.  God could have given us more details to the point of having graphs, designs and color rules, but He, the Most Merciful, wants to give us exactly these very basic rules and leave the rest for us.  After these three basic rules every woman is more aware of her circumstances and can adjust her dress for her situation.  Any addition to these basic Quranic rules is an attempt to correct God or improve on His merciful design.

“What better than to quote God’s words in description of this trait of the human race:

“‘We have cited in this Quran every kind of example, but the human being is the most argumentative creature.’ (18:54)

“We have no obligation to follow but God’s rules, just as His messenger did all the time.  Innovations and fabrications that added thousands of rules to the women’s dress code are nothing but idol-worship and should be refused.

“STAY WITH GOD.  That is where the winners go.

“May God bless us with His mercy and guidance.”

 

My reason for being interested in the passage above is as follows:

I have heard people make statements about what is (supposedly) obligatory dress for Muslim women, statements in which these people claim to have very specific information about the guidelines and the permissible range of choices prescribed in the Islamic religious system.  However, people can be a bit vague about where these guidelines are located.  Maybe the fault is mine, for not pressing them hard enough to give me “chapter and verse.”

In any case, it is easy to throw around religious claims.  It is more challenging to cite passages of Qur’an and Hadith and then to explain how you interpret these passage to arrive at the desired conclusion.

I cannot verify the 100% accuracy of the quoted material above.  However, if it is indeed the case that the Qur’anic injunctions regarding women’s dress are that sparse and that open to interpretation, then I would say the following:

The position that the absolute minimum for women’s public dress is a loose-fitting black garment called abaya and a head cover with a face opening, seems much less authoritative than some would maintain.

 

Slow Start

hindenburg.jpg

So the blog is off to a slow start.  I haven’t had much time lately for the sort of wide-ranging reading that would support a lot of postings, and I know you guys have a lot going on as well.  But I think that email would be at a lull right now as well, for the same reason.  So I still believe that going to a blog format was the right move, and that future developments will vindicate this judgement.  I call for a surge of comments, posts, and new links. 

Here’s a link to linguist Larry Trask’s very engaging article, “Where do Mama/Papa words come from?”  I may have included a link in an email a while back, but it’s a really fun read and very convincing.  If you’re at all interested in what historical linguists do, you’ll enjoy it.  The file is pdf, but worth it.  http://www.sussex.ac.uk/linguistics/documents/where_do_mama2.pdf

And another youtube clip from The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain.  I love them. 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GeWH1wP9tM8

Speaking of youtube, here’s a Viewmaster commercial from 1971 featuring Henry Fonda and Jodie Foster.  Also a kid who may or may not have been on The Brady Bunch

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q5QGd-0X3bg

The Word Origins class I teach includes the Greek word phobos, meaning fear, the uncontrollable urge to run away.  Of course that gives us lots of English words ending in the six letters phobia, words that refer to irrational, unmanageable fears.  People get interested in lists of paronyms like that, so the website below has lots of fans.

http://www.phobialist.com/

Murderers! Assassins!

The Guardian

This greets one in the lobby of 1111 3rd Ave. Many such journeys are possible…

A Second Crack

A map of YemenA map of Aden metro area

Besides the map of Aden metro area, I threw in one of Yemen, for the heck of it.  The Yemen map includes several cities I’ve never heard of:  al-Ghaydah, Habarut, Nishtun, al-Salif.  The first three of these, as you can see, are in the extreme east.  This area is called Mahra.  A South Arabian language is still spoken there.  The South Arabian languages are not closely related to Arabic or Hebrew.  They are more akin to Semitic languages of Eritrea and Ethiopia.  I have the impression that in pre-Islamic times, South Arabian languages dominated the southern end of Arabia and that they were only displaced by Arabic after the coming of Islam.  I also noticed that the map indicates Jabal al-Nabi Shu`ayb (Mountain of the Prophet Jethro) near Sanaa.  As a sidenote of possible interest:  Jethro is Moses’ father-in-law, and his tomb is located in Jordan.  “Now Moses was keeping the flock of Jethro his father-in-law, the priest of Midian” (Exodus 3:1).