An American in America

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"[I]t seems to me that my generation was defined by the open road, and the accompanying hope that a promise lay at the end of it. The almost trance-like experience of driving down the soft tunnel of a dark highway at night was something I relished. At most, there would be the distant red lights of a car far ahead, and always the murmur of the glowing radio, the hiss of the tires and, at a certain speed on narrower roads, the fizzing past of telephone poles with their rhythmic whiplash.

Late at night, in most places I knew, there was almost no traffic and driving, a meditative activity, could cast a spell. Behind the wheel, gliding along, I was keenly aware of being an American in America, on a road that was also metaphorical, making my way through life, unhindered, developing ideas, making decisions, liberated by the flight through this darkness and silence. With less light pollution, the night sky was different, too ‚Äî starrier, more daunting, more beautiful,’ – Paul Theroux, New York Times.

Faith As An Open Window

Scott Horton pens a poignant rumination on the great Muslim poet, Rumi, and what he says to us today:

On this point, Rumi, Boccaccio and Lessing ‚Äì the Muslim, the Catholic, and the Protestant who launched the drive for the emancipation of Europe’s Jews – see things very much eye-to-eye. But their message is a vital one for our day. We live in an age in which thoughts of crusaders and caliphates have been resurrected for shameful and blood-drenched purposes. This must be overcome with urgency.

So for the New Year, I wish what Rumi wishes ‚Äì not a rejection of faith, but a faith more profound, based on tolerance, compassion and respect for the ties that bind humankind. I wish that the land where Rumi once walked ‚Äì from his native city of Balkh in Afghanistan to his final home in Anatolian Konya – would know his thoughts and hopes again, and the peace that they promise. But I wish the same thing for my fellow citizens at home in the United States, where the poison of religious bigotry seeps ever closer to the groundwater. I hope we all can find that way "between voice and presence" of which Rumi writes. We need it badly. "With disciplined silence it opens/ With wandering talk it closes." So here’s a resolve for the New Year: Let us find the tools to keep that window open. There is nothing that humanity requires more urgently than this.

I couldn’t agree more.

Those Three Brits

Just a major shout-out to my fellow Brits, Clive, Danny and Alex, for their sterling work over the holidays. I stayed the course, as mandated by Aaron, to stay offline altogether for a week: blog-detox of a kind. I feel much fresher after a hectic fall – and I owe that to the capable hands of my three stand-ins. I’d like to thank Clive especially for such dogged work. Filling a blog each day is harder than it looks, and Clive faltered not. Keep reading him at his own blog here. You can read Danny Finkelstein in the Times of London here. Alex Massie blogs and writes for TNR.com, whose group-blog, The Plank, keeps improving. My thanks again to them – and to you for your support of the site while I’m getting some R & R.