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Subject:
From:
Edie Sidibeh <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and Related Issues Mailing List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 5 Jan 2011 20:00:56 +0000
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Thanks for your response but until you are sensible here by reading me loud and 
clear with your mind not your heart, I will remain to be your sincerely Edi



________________________________
From: suntou touray <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: Wed, 5 January, 2011 1:51:07
Subject: Re: opinion (Daffeh on Musa Jeng's compromise)


Edi, Haruna must have missed this posting like i do. However, you have been very 
philosophical as usual. The Rumi bit is interesting though. The UDP will never 
agree with the so-call neutral person. That bogus proposition is the most 
rediculous illicit demand. Who the heck is a neutral person, may be you are, or 
some former sleeping politician. 

Thanks
Suntou


On Wed, Dec 29, 2010 at 7:35 PM, Edie Sidibeh <[log in to unmask]> wrote:


>
>My opinion on this issue as UDP is the biggest party therefore every other party 
>should follow them. This reality is the same reason that UDP should be flexible 
>towards smaller parties to join them to a smooth victory. For-example; Yahya 
>Jammeh wanted to be a king and he is having the largest majority in house of 
>parliament,  but without the support of the smaller house members, it will never 
>go smoothly if it was  constitutional. Therefore, UDP should be ready to create 
>a strategy of compromise and give smaller parties a good reason than saying I am 
>bigger than you. 
>
>This is the same old African style of politics taken roots from the way many 
>where brought-up as such; I can never have a voice in front of my parents or 
>someone elder than I am or richer than me because they are bigger  or elder than 
>me. To counter these, Colonial masters or the West brought out human right laws 
>to give voice to voiceless by reasoning and compromising, which to my 
>understanding is aimed at Africans as we can see, they are the continent taking 
>the hardest blows. What I am trying to say here is the fact that, it is the 
>bigger party who should be able to mobilize strategies to including the smaller 
>parties by leading them to a concrete and profound understanding towards 
>unification to suit each and everyone. UDP can call every political or 
>opposition leaders to put their agenda in front of them for scrutiny and way 
>forwards.
>Even the unity that prevails in other countries was not only the mightiness of 
>the party but the strategies behind which convince the smaller parties to join 
>the bigger one. PDOIS is to my opinion skeptical that if UDP is joined to win, 
>they can at the end of the day, clinch to power beyond the mandated term and 
>this same probability is what the UDP is skeptical of in selecting a neutral 
>person and after two years, different parties can disunite to campaign in 
>replacing the agreed caretaker. In every joint venture, in every corporation, 
>the bigger company or person no matter how rich or big, compromises in different 
>ways than bigness with the smaller person or companies.  MY WAY OR THE HIGH WAY 
>will never win any viable argument or disagreement.
>When we start to question the purpose of life at some point in time, we tend to 
>incline ourselves to a specific faith or religion, to seek the Truth. Here lies 
>the irony. When we seek the Truth by imitating what we should and should not do, 
>we moved ourselves further away from understanding the nature of existence, from 
>Truth, so to speak. We imitate what great masters have shared instead of 
>learning to understand what they are trying to convey (read a person is more 
>beneficial than quoting him). So instead of moving closer to Truth, we are in 
>fact moving further from Truth.  I therefore, stood in the world of Gambian 
>politicians and found them all drunk, and I did not find any of them thirsty 
>thus. They came into the world of politic empty, and they seeking to leave 
>empty. But meanwhile they are drunk by their own ambition different from that of 
>the many population (UNITY). When they could just shake off their wine, they 
>will surely open their eyes (after election). 
>
>
>
>UDP is the bigger party and will remain the bigger party for a long time, 
>therefore it is still in their advantage if a neutral person is selected for a 
>limited time just to procure the changes of government needed then before the 
>end of the term, all parties can campaign on their respective platform to win 
>the confidence of the people. With their divisions going towards the election 
>time, president Jammeh will surely win, and even if he doesn’t win who will 
>notice the fact that there is biasness or unfairness as the opposition is 
>disunited and one bigger party cannot fight it alone but if they are united, 
>there comes power because no one is thereby left behind. If there is no 
>greediness or selfishness as an hidden agenda, this should not be complicated 
>especially when the people’s benefits are on the stake. Bigness or power is 
>nothing but oneness or togetherness is everything. If bigness (power) is 
>everything smaller people or companies will be in a difficult situation. 
>Therefore, taking advantage of others using your power without compromise is 
>against the laws of human right what??  Or is it other wise oooops? Edi
> 
>
>Now  let me share with you a parable by the wise Rumi, adapted by Osho, another 
>wise soul:
>
>One day Jalaluddin Rumi took all his students, disciples and devotees to a 
>field. That was his way to teach them things of the beyond, through the examples 
>of the world. He was not a theoretician; he was a very practical man. The 
>disciples were thinking, "What could be the message, going to that faraway 
>field… and why can't he say it here?"
>
>But when they reached the field, they understood that they were wrong and he was 
>right. The farmer seemed to be almost an insane man. He was digging a well in 
>the field – and he had already dug eight incomplete wells.
>
>He would go a few feet and then he would find that there was no water. Then he 
>would start digging another well and the same story was continued. He had 
>destroyed the whole field and he had not yet found water.
>
>The master, Jalaluddin Rumi, told his disciples, "Can you understand something? 
>If this man had been total and had put his whole energy into only one well, he 
>would have reached to the deepest sources of water long ago.
>
>But the way he is going he will destroy the whole field and he will never be 
>able to make a single well. With so much effort he is simply destroying his own 
>land, and getting more and more frustrated, disappointed: what kind of a desert 
>has he purchased? It is not a desert, but one has to go deep to find the sources 
>of water."
>
>He turned to his disciples and asked them, "Are you going to follow this insane 
>farmer? Sometimes on one path, sometimes on another path, sometimes listening to 
>one, sometimes listening to another… you will collect much knowledge, but all 
>that knowledge is simply junk, because it is not going to give you the 
>enlightenment you were looking for. It is not going to lead you to the waters of 
>eternal life."
>
>
>
>
>
________________________________
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-- 
Surah- Ar-Rum 30-22
"And among His signs is the creation of heavens and the earth, and the 
difference of your languages and colours. Verily, in that are indeed signs for 
men of sound knowledge." Qu'ran

www.suntoumana.blogspot.com
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