Monday, August 26, 2013

The future of the Sunni Muslim Soul, part I

Thomas Friedman had hi usually provocative op-d article in last Sunday's Times:

The New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/21/opinion/Friedman-close-to-the-edge.html?hp&pagewanted=print

The article is worth reading in full.  Here are some quotations from the article I want to emphases.  My comments are in italics and blue.

In short, I see in Egypt and especially in Syria a battle for those Sunni soul: those Sunni in Turkey and elsewhere who are willing to accept democracy; and those in Saudi Arabia and theEmirates who prefer a secular dictatorship to any Sunni acceptance of any form of democracy.  We'll see how it plays out.
What’s especially depressing is that the leadership and options needed to reverse these trends don’t seem to be on offer. Egyptians today are being given a choice between a military that seems to want to take Egypt back to 1952, when the army first seized power (I think the Saud dictators an those in Dubai prefer either of Friedman's choices.   Eighteen Billion from the Saudi and Dubai (Dick Cheney's preferred tax haven) speaks with a loud voice).— and kept those Muslim Brothers in their place — and the Muslim Brothers, who want to go back to 622, to the birth of Islam and to a narrow, anti-pluralistic, anti-women, Shariah-dominated society — as if that is the answer to Egypt’s ills.
“Egypt’s striking lesson today is that its two most powerful, organized and trusted groups — the Muslim Brotherhood and the armed forces — both proved to be incompetent in the business of governance,”(The US press asserts Brotherhood incompetence as if its truth is self-evident; always without any suggestion of proof.  Did the Saudi and military fore-ordain failure?  Did they help it along?  I don't know; I am unwilling to accept the incompetence assertion on faith.) the political scientist Rami Khouri wrote in The Beirut Daily Star last week.
The lack of other organized and credible indigenous groups of citizens that can engage in the political process and shape new constitutional systems is largely a consequence of how military officers, members of tribes, and religious zealots have dominated Arab public life for decades.

 Images  from Cairo this past week fro rt, a Russian national publication:  Russian point of view; perhaps not always typical but always the most dramatic images.  Don't know the Russian point of view on Egypt's troubles.










Areas of Egypt affected by the curfew.  
Rocket from the Sinai are reported to have landed i Israel.































Friday, August 16, 2013

2013 yağlı güreş (Turkish oil wrestling)

Finally, some good posts:



Spectators, Edirne, Turkey, July 8, 2013

The  bench
This and the next two from Çay with Jim




The following group are fro Les lutteurs huilés de Turquie 3 - Blog de maxxxim  Blog Maxxim has is worth further exploration:
















 This strapping fellow appears 
on at least 48 websites; 
can't verify that these images are all from 
the 2013 yağlı güreş.






This is the text accompanying this interresting picture:

A Turkish oil wrestler rests on July 7, 2013 during the 652nd annual Kirkpinar oil wrestling tournament in Sarayici, near Edirne. In Kirkpinar, contestants are drenched in olive oil from head to toe, are stripped to the waist, and wear specially designed leather trousers. The one-on-one combats staged every summer closely resemble the first ones held nearly 650 years ago. Three tons are of olive oil are used each year.
AFP PHOTO/GURCAN OZTURK 
(Photo credit should read 
GURCAN OZTURK/AFP/Getty Images)


The next group of images is from Fight Lads, published on July17, 2013:  

















Attend to the quality of the light.


The caption for this fine image is "652nd Kırkpınar Oil Wrestling Competition Kicks off in Edirne".  "Kirkpinar" is the name of the annual Turkish oil wrestling competition.  This vigorous action shot is the one selected to represent the competition:



Finally, here are some portraits of some of the competitors, slightly marred by the image owner so he would be sure to get proper credit, which I am please to give.  Though marred, the strength of the charater shines through.


    Getty images