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Turkey heading off to Frankfurt with 300 writers...
Turkey, the guest of honor at this year's Frankfurt Book Fair, is preparing to present its biggest show of national writers and poets in history. An estimated 300 writers and poets from Turkey will attend what is recognized as the world's largest book fair in Frankfurt this year, and the German governing committee of the book fair has already prepared a list that includes such Turkish writers and poets as Fazıl Hüsnü Dağlar-ca, Sezai Karakoç, Orhan Pamuk, Yaşar Kemal, Elif Şafak and Sadık Yalsızuçanlar, among others.
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Discovering the Code of Cinema in a Prophetic Anectode...
The miracles bestowed upon the prophets as divine endowments are instruments of test both for themselves and for the people who are subject to divine revelation, and through its contents beacons the horizon to the mankind. The rod given to Moses carries a message for the Pharaoh and his devotees. Besides; the rod which brought forth water from where it struck has inspired people for such works as drilling.
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Stories by Rumi...
You will find the most beautiful and wise stories selected from the best-known work of Rumi, Mesnevi, in this book, "Stories by Rumi". Stories with lessons by Rumi that inspires many wisdom pursuers from the East and the West...
You will very much enjoy these stories that have been diligently collected by Sadık Yalsızuçanlar...
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The Political Theology of Making Children's Blood Flow in Qana...
While you're reading these lines, I don't know what the number of civilian deaths in Lebanon will read; as of today it's over five hundred.
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The Wail of the Oppressed, not the Oppressor, Inflames the World...
Actually Huseyin Hatemi Hodja knows better, but as far as I know, in Islamic doctrine an armed man (fighter) can only be killed for the purpose of "legitimate defense."
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Selected chapters from The Traveler...
When the Traveler entered the room, the Philosopher rose and gave him a hearty welcome. Eager to show his friendship and affection, he hugged the Traveler, a young man of nineteen. Renowned throughout Andalusia, the Philosopher was an eminent scholar and a close friend of the Traveler's father. The upper floor of his two-story, stone house in the western quarter of the city was packed with books. He and the Traveler now stood in the middle of a room on the second floor, crowded with countless works in Greek and others translated from Greek to Arabic.
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from The Traveler...
One day, the Traveler went to the banks of the Guadalquivir. He had been feeling somewhat strange in the last few days. All through his life, he had always regarded the people he saw, met, listened and talked to as superior to himself. Since the first days of his journey, he had been in trouble with the cravings of the flesh. But then, adopting the words of God's prophet who had a beautiful face which was food for spirits and pleasure and comfort to souls, who said "I shall not exonerate the nafs* for the nafs leads one to evil", he had slowly begun to unfasten the bonds of his body one by one.
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The Traveler...
The novel is about the spiritual life of the great philosopher, poet, sage Muhammad Ibn 'Arabi, one of the world's great spiritual teachers, who was born into the Moorish culture of Andalusian Spain. The story begins with the encounter of Ibn' Rusd, later known as Averroes, and Ibn' Arabi. During this interesting encounter, the two great philosophers spend an hour together, yet they exchange two words only: 'yes' and 'no'. The novel, written by an initiatic approach to story-telling and fiction, does not contain any dramatic, tragic, or absurd elements. The life of the great Sage, especially the stages of his spiritual/inner life and his visions are told in the book.
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Biography...
Sadik Yalsizucanlar was born in 1962 in Malatya. After completing his elementary and secondary education in the same city, he finished Dörtyol Deneme High School. He studied at the Faculty of Social and Administrative Sciences Department of Turcology at Hacettepe University and received his degree in 1983.
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about him...
"The Door", "Snake", "The Parrot that hurts the Truth", struck me. I felt that I met a Turkish Kafka.
İlhan Berk
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Hiç :: Flash e-book...
e-story

Hic Flash
Hic I PDF
Hic II PDF
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