Jul 30, 2011

Elegance is...


What would happen if we approached each day as if it were Ramadhan?

Our 30 days of fasting for Ramadhan is accompanied by watching one's own thoughts, words, motives and actions. But what happens after 30 days? In fact, what happens after one 'breaks' fast each day? 

When calligraphy, artistry, spirituality, poetry, history collide... 
Today, a receipt was delivered to account for a gifts bought for charity from a small home for handicapped children in Penang. The donation was made several weeks ago via a friend in Penang, and I mentioned that a receipt was not necessary. But when the receipt did arrived today, it spoke volumes of the sender and the ethics of the organisation itself. 

In contrast, another established organisation whom we've been assisting has never offered to do the same and did not send any receipt, despite being more established. 

Assisting brothers and sisters of the Islamic faith, one must ask oneself what it means to be honest and ethical in thoughts, actions, words.

For me, Ramadhan is more than just knocking down dates on a calendar. It is, each year, a new call to once again to do what we were not able to. God's only exhortation, in Mevlana Jelaluddin Rumi's words, is not to be perfect but understand that one should never be ashamed to have fallen:

Come, come, whoever you are. 
Wanderer, worshiper, lover of leaving. 
It doesn't matter. 
Ours is not a caravan of despair. 
Come, even if you have broken your vows a thousand times. 
Come, yet again , come , come.

What would happen if we approached each day as if it were Ramadhan?

When Ramadhan is every day, 30 days lasts a lifetime. Therein is the True Elegance we seek each day...

Elegance



It

Is not easy
To stop thinking ill
Of others.



Usually one must enter into a friendship

With a person



Who has accomplished that great feat himself.

Then



Something

Might start to rub off on you
Of that

True
Elegance.

~ Hafez-e Shirazi

Jul 24, 2011

Another... EARTH?

Note: Dedicated to the misfits, to Wanderers, to those who Despair. And all who wonder if fresh beginnings are possible.

What if there was another Earth out there. A parallel universe in which there was another you... the Alternative You. YOU 2?

What would that world be? Who would YOU 2 be? If we believe the proportions of String Theory and Supergravity... there are 11 dimensions in this world and these 11 dimensions are in contact with another 11, then another...

The possibilities are infinite. What does this mean for us?

A new beginning? A way to undo all the things we might not have done? Would you gain comfort knowing that out there... in at least ONE alternate universe... you probably got it RIGHT?

It is a startling reality to realise. That we are not alone. That perhaps in an infinite world of choice, we got one life right.

A brilliant movie that explores the complex theme of the frontiers of physics. "Another Earth" talks about the dreams of a young brilliant astrophysicist who's been admitted into MIT, whose life takes on a tangential turn when she crashes her car in a night of drunken partying. No more MIT, no more dreams of science but instead she is jailed, destined for a life of obscurity as a janitor, post-incarceration.

In the backdrop, science has just discovered another Earth... dubbed Earth 2. An alternate reality, with the same living conditions and homosapiens who inhabit this Earth. She looks up into the big alternate planet, Earth 2, and wonders in that world... what if I got it right?


The trailer here: 


Jul 22, 2011

4 Great Thinkers

History is written by the victors... Charles Darwin was not the first to come up with the Theory of Evolution yet claimed glory for it. Volkswagon was the brainchild of Hitler, but its survivors have erased its Nazi past.

True knowledge is dangerous. There is a pantheon of uncelebrated geniuses who have changed and shaped our world, but whose views were censured for the implications on our world - the mathematician George Cantor, Ludwig Boltzmann... the aspect of spirituality has been left out in our textbooks, education, despite its crucial place in the evolution of mathematics, science, humanities.

We have censored our own understanding because it is 'uncool' to be spiritual beings, to have inspired moments that give insight into our inner beings... that reveal the deeper mysteries of infinity.

We pretend that the brilliance, elegance and beauty of science... is secular.

Here's a great BBC documentary that brings out the beauty and religiousity of life.

Jul 21, 2011

Angkor's Calling

Some lands can only be experienced. Cambodia is one of them and will always be my land of dreams. It's brought humbling perspective, great peace and invigorated me on each sojourn.

But nothing can equal the first touch down. The awe of approaching Angkor's main gates, the diamond waters sparkling under the sweltering Cambodian heat... the first step is pure magic.

Alone, with little money, knowing no one, caring for little except to find a little peace in my soul searching... Cambodia remains an unknowable, mysterious country whose depth is one of an ancient civilisation lost in the New World Order.

One of my more ignorant moments came riding pillion on a motodop. We had taken the journey from Angkor Wat moving onto Bayon, when I asked an extremely arrogant question without knowing it.

"Why aren't all these children in school?"

My moto driver, a lovely quiet man who spoke some English, was silent.

It was a question that I wondered many times.

Only years later did I realise the superiority complex one has of what a Third World nation needs. Education is secondary when Life is about Surviving the next day.

One of the many lessons that Angkor and Cambodia has taught me. It continues to teach me on each journey - that hard, tough country that has seen little mercy but people blossom and have shown me outstanding kindness.

The height of Angkor is in her people as well as her architectural splendour. The first brought peace, the second blessings... and who knows where the third will go...

Here is one advertorial that captures in some ways, a great culture and enduring legacy that is the Cambodian spirit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oX2OKv2TCtI&feature=aso

And a beautiful guide: http://www.theangkorguide.com/images/download/Angkor.pdf

Jul 18, 2011

About Turn for Charter Schools?

Everyone would have thought that Charter schools would be supported under all circumstances. Yes? Think again.

Affluent Americans are lobbying against specialised Charter schools which cannot prove necessity in areas where local school education is already deemed to be good and available for all.

Is the jury still out? Read it here: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/17/education/17charters.html?_r=1&nl=nyregion&emc=ura1

Jul 7, 2011

Social Entrepreneurs: Real Change, please?

New proposed Legislation in New York

Another salvo for Asian movements to wake up and administer greater MEANINGFUL change for social entrepreneurs... tax break, classification rules, more relevant business structures to aid, not hinder, growth for good business.

What constitutes a social enterprise? Many structures and enterprises in the world classify themselves as Social Enterprises but when queried on the metrics which they use to properly administer their social enterprises - bottom line, profit margins, breakeven point and mechanisms, per unit cost... it normally draws blanks.

It's to be expected that Social Enterprise will eventually go the way of CSR... totally basterdisation of a very good concept for cheap PR spin.

When will we insist on measurable results and quantifiable change?

Accountability is not an option... we should all voluntarily adopt best practices because... well... it's the best practice possible. Social enterprises should be leading the way for better business practices, not following in its footsteps of opt-in clauses when it comes to being accountable and transparent, whilst in the meantime saying to all and sundry, "Thanks, we appreciate the cash. Will get back to ya about that accountability thang, ya!"

Link here with commentary at Columbia Business School: http://columbiasocialenterprise.wordpress.com/2011/07/06/benefit-corporations/