The Man’s Prayer – A Perfect Gift For Valentine’s Day

man-prayer2 because I love my mom

… May the resonance of that love translate into loving all woman and living things…

                                               Eve Ensler

obrlogo-hindi

Sweden’s Mikael Gustafsson – One Billion a Sign for Change

Mikael Gustafsson

“We can’t allow that half this world’s inhabitants have to live in fear of violence and rape.”

Sweden’s Mikael Gustafsson, MEP, was the first man to be elected the Chair of the European Parliament’s Committee on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality in 2011.

Last December, Mikael Gustafsson produced this video highlighting the upcoming February 14th – One Billion Women Rising – an event highlighting the fact that 1 in 3 women will experience violence and rape during her lifetime.

Good things come from Sweden.

John F Gustafson around 1910 from Iowa

My great, great grandfather was also a Gustafson from Sweden.  In his small Iowa community, where he served as the Justice of the Peace for twenty-four years, John F. Gustafson was “one of the highly honored and esteemed citizens of the community”.

Mikael Gustafsson, a man who declares he is “a feminist”, feels to me like a sign that positive change is on the horizon.

New Beginnings at the Museum of Islamic Art

al sufi serpentarus

In a time when our political leaders are quite polarized and much of science is funded for private gain, it is good to be reminded that where we are today was because great thinkers worked to across language and distance barriers to share their knowledge.

Arabick Roots catalog from Islamic Museum Doha Qatar curator Dr. Rim Turkmani

The Islamic Museum in Doha recently held an exhibit called Arabick Roots.  While Europe was in its long medieval age, the Muslim “Golden Age” was from the 8th to the 16th century.   Much has been written about Europe’s 17th century Renaissance, the enlightened period where new philosophy relied on mathematical demonstration, proof and experimentation.  But Muslim science, medicine and culture’s influence on the West in the 17th and 18th centuries has not been highlighted extensively.

In the 17th century, Arabick meant languages written in Arabic letters such as Arabic, Persian and Ottoman.  Books, ceramics, paintings, astronomical compasses, and more books, demonstrated Europe’s interest in the scholarship of Iran, Iraq, India, Turkey, Syria and Egypt.  Much of the knowledge was spread using the British Levant Company’s trade routes with the east.  European astronomer Edmond Halley, chemist Robert Boyle, and mathematician John Wallis all knew Arabic so they could translate the Arabic texts directly.

The following were my favorite insights from the exhibit.

The Persian, Al-Razi (died 925AD), a pioneer in many areas, was the first doctor to describe and write about measles and smallpox.  Smallpox inoculation was used in the east.  Cassem Aga introduced the Royal Society to the practice in 1728 .   Although smallpox was never eradicated, Al-Razi’s book was still being translated into English as late as 1947 (by Dr. Richard Mead).

One book, out of the 10th Century physician, Abul Qasim Khalaf ibn al-Abbas al-Zhrawi’s (Abulcasis) 30-volume, medical encyclopedia, was displayed.  It was translated into Latin in the 15th century and in high demand by 17th century physicians.

Fixed Stars in the Constellation, Islamic Museum Doha v2

A copy of Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi’s 10th century star catalog, Forms of the Fixed Stars, was on display and compared to astronomer Johannes Hevelius’1690 constellation guide.

Al Sufi scorpio and taurus constellations

Lucky for me, the museum shop sold souvenirs with al-Sufi’s Taurus and Scorpio constellations drawings.

The Arabick exhibit pointed out something I did not read anywhere else on the internet.  Although al-Sufi  initially wrote Forms of the Fixed Stars, it was finished by his daughter, Arajoza Bint al-Sufi (Arajoza the daughter of al-Sufi), after his death.   That tidbit of information was pointed out by the exhibit’s curator, a woman, Dr. Rim Turkmani.

The Arabick exhibit was sponsored by Museum of Islamic Art and the Qatar Museum Authority, both are chaired by women.

To me, the exhibit not only emphasized the 17th century’s interest in Muslim science but it demonstrated that Muslim women have much to contribute in the areas of science and culture.  I thought making these points were good steps towards new beginnings.

Post Script.

I told my friend who used to live in Qatar about this post and asked whether she agreed it was a positive step.

She said, “I have a friend who still lives in Qatar.  She told me the other day that someone decided all perfumes with alcohol should be banned.  Can you imagine?  Only Arabic perfume will be left.  All the Dior perfumes those same, rich Qatari women buy will not be available now.  It will all be become black market.”

Perfume kiosk at Qatar Duty Free highlighting upcoming Chinese New Year of the snake

“But you can buy it in Duty Free.”

“Only on the way out of Qatar.  When you come back, that perfume becomes illegal.”

Okay – you can have the museum, but we’ll take your perfume.

Where Ideas Spring from the Earth…. Iowa

Winter in Iowa.  Five foot snow drifts.

Winter in Iowa. Five foot snow drifts. Two feet icicles.

My mother skyped me yesterday to tell me it was -2 Fahrenheit (-19C) in Iowa.

All children should be lucky enough to live in a place like Iowa for at least a year.  Teaching the seasons would be much, more simple.  The traditional descriptions of the seasons with the sprouting spring leaves; hot, summer sun; colored, fall leaves; and blankets of snow actually happen in Iowa.

iowa farm with wind tower and traditional swedish painting on barn

Along with the seasons, learning that corn comes from a cob, not a plastic bag, and hens lay eggs in nests, not white Styrofoam cartons, can be witnessed across a countryside where acres of seeds are planted in the spring; their bounty harvested in the fall.

Union Township Cemetery near Oskaloosa Iowa by Eva the Dragon 2011_edited-1

Union Township Cemetery near Oskaloosa Iowa by Eva the Dragon 2011

American history comes to life in Iowa.  The native Oneota people which includes the proto-historic Ioways, lived in the Mississippi and Missouri River valleys, an area that today are the states of Iowa, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Missouri, Kansas, and Nebraska.  Their burial mounds and settlements along the Des Moines River speak to the continent’s history before the French, Spanish and English arrived.  The forts built to protect the soldiers who fought with the Native peoples for control of the land can be visited.  Family farms originally belonging to the white settlers, who arrived in the 1800s, still exist.  The cemetery tombstones bear witness to their lives.

It is a place where the old practices and new innovations come together under clear, blue skies.  In Broken Kettle, there is a four thousand acre preserve of native prairie land where bison roam.  The goal is to promote biodiversity, not provide recreational land.  People come from around the world travel to educate themselves at the highest standards in Iowa’s schools and universities.

Out where the tall corn grows….

Big-city people, like the younger me, complain there is “not enough to do” in Iowa.  What we really mean is, “there are not enough outside distractions to keep me busy.”

Iowa carved, wooden bear by water pump house by Eva the Dragon 2011

Iowa carved, wooden bear by water pump house by Eva the Dragon 2011

Iowa is a place where the pace is naturally set by the seasons.  This gives people time to be human: baking a cake to share with your neighbor over coffee; carving a bear totem from an old log; singing in a church choir; building a birdhouse; “visiting” on Sundays; or meditating while mowing acres of grass.  From those moments of silence come inspiration and innovation.  You might be surprised how many enlightened people and new ideas originate in Iowa then spread through the world.

Our Iowa magazine with cardinal in winter on front

One of my favorite magazines is Our Iowa..written by Iowans…for all those who love Iowa.

Our Iowa magazine photo of our prettiest farm

Every summer I leaf through the past issues’ stunning photos and regular columns about the prettiest farm, funny stories about what children say, recipes (toffee-almond sandies) we are proud to share, an Amish farm wife’s diary, and culture (sort of).  And just like in Iowa where the old blends with the new, Our Iowa can be order online, but it is sent to your mailbox, the one by the side of the road.

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