Found in translation
I listen to Thai language lessons as I walk each
morning. It’s not a good way to learn
the language, but I feel I am making a little progress. My mind wonders and I seem to be eavesdropping
rather than learning the language.
Two simple sentences, however, seemed to speak volumes this
morning.
Religion leads people to happiness is the first. This seems true for Buddhism where the mind
is turned inward and the real world is put at a distance. Buddha is almost
always depicted as smiling. Buddhists also believe in the circle of life and
death so your next life may be even happier even if you are a grasshopper.
It seems less true of stern Christianity with its pie in the
sky when you die. Yet there is so much art
and music that ties emotion to a sense of beauty and joy that Christianity
certainly has a place for happiness even if it is in the vestry.
Islam does not countenance happiness. Two colleagues were walking in Riyadh and accosted
by a police officer because they were laughing.
They were told no laughing in Riyadh.
There are no joys in Islam save perhaps that for Muslims it is a joy to
be a boy – and I think this last is a source of uncountable problems.
The second sentence was:
Education leads people to a better life.
For Buddhists the word better sits in the sentence like a half-deflated
balloon. If a good part of the religion
is in distancing yourself from the world, what does better man? Religion (Buddhism) has a muting or dampening
down effect on education in Thailand.
When stern Christian religion was connected to education at
least sloth was a sin and studying was prosecuted with vigor and some pain. Proselytizing at the time of Christian
expansion also led to a sense that Christians were God’s people and therefore
exceptional. Now that religion has
pretty much been separated from education, American exceptionalism seems like a
leftover from another age. After two
world wars and putting a man on the moon, we now seem satisfied when a
Presidential wingtip draws a line in the sand and then moves on to get ahead of
some other issue of the moment. This may
be a safe life, but is it a better one?
In Islam everything you need to know is in the Koran – everything. My American educated Dean at the college I
taught at in Jeddah continually lectured students on sloth generally to no
avail. If one male student knew the answer, the class knew the answer. They too consider themselves exceptional, but
this word is a balloon stretched to the breaking point. When it bursts really bad things happen. To live by in a garden by a flowing stream is
a beautiful metaphor from the Koran for a better life. To be given 27 virgins upon entering heaven I
think much less so . . . no, I don’t need to think, I know this for a fact. Just what my Saudi friends would consider a
better life, I really don’t know.
Probably moving to America would be a start, though.
Ask me to speak these two sentences and I probably could
come close – and therein lays the problem.
Language is something you think in only when you don’t have to think
about it.
FG 12/6/2015
