MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
I cannot let this one go.
I awaken to my NYT last Saturday nite and come upon my entertainment for the week.
That is my entertainment in my men's room.
And I come upon a critique of a book on (of all people) Vasco da Gama.
I mean, if Word (or a rip off of Word) cannot properly spell Vasco da Gama, who cares?
It took me back to the tenth grade when I had this voice and this voice exclaimed:
WHO IN THE HELL GIVES ONE GODDAMN ABOUT VASCO DA GAMA?
But when nature calls, I am forced to ponder whatever fricking book is lying on the outhouse floor.
Well, it turns out that this critique was probably the most illuminating piece of paper that I had the opportunity to ponder all week.
Vasco it seems had some headstrong antithesis against the theories and the persona of one Christopher Columbus.
Vasco thought, fuck this western approach to India; I am proceeding South....for a ways anyway.
So Vasco takes his team around the Cape of Good Hope and proceeds north to find India.
Now unlike Chris who had no idea what he was doing, no idea where he was really heading and no idea of where he found himself; Vasco found what both these great navigators were looking for.
Da Gama found India.
So what is so fascinating about reading an article on the Crapper that discusses European mercantilism foreshadowing the conquering of India by the barbarian Angles (ultimately even though da Gama was Portuguese)?
Well Vasco had done his homework.
He certainly knew that half of the known world were those goddamnable Muslims.
That was an easy thing for him to know since:
Half of the Mediterranean was made up of Muslims in the 15th century.
Da Gama was Portuguese and half of Spain had been Muslim as of the 12th.
Vasco had access to thousands of books written by the Inquisition that wished to abolish the Muslims as devils.
So Vasco took a quick left at the Horn of Africa and then a quick left and months later ended up in Calicut, India.
He lands with his crew and discovers there are no Mosques.
What a frickin relief.
¶ The ambition was not entirely fanciful; there were Christian communities in India, founded according to legend by St. Thomas the Apostle. Da Gama couldn’t tell an Indian Christian from a cassowary, but on this occasion, ignorance was truly bliss. When his ships finally moored at Calicut, near the southern tip of the subcontinent, he and his crew rejoiced to learn that there were indeed many Christians long settled there. As Cliff recounts, the “landing party had assumed that Hindu temples were Christian churches, they had misconstrued the Brahmins’ invocation of a local deity as veneration of the Virgin Mary and they had decided the Hindu figures on the temple walls were outlandish Christian saints.” True, “the temples were also crammed with animal gods and sacred phalluses,” but these surely reflected exotic local Christian practices. What mattered to the Portuguese was that these long-lost Indian Christians permitted images in their “churches.” Thus, whatever their idiosyncrasies, they could not be Muslims. The Portuguese joined in the chants and invocations with gusto. When the Hindu priests chanted “Krishna,” the Portuguese heard it as “Christ.”
¶ http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/11/books/review/holy-war-by-nigel-cliff-book-review.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=VASCO%20DE%20GAMA&st=cse#h[]
I can understand how someone in the 15th century could mistake a Phallus for a Cross. I mean who wouldn't?
But I could not stop laughing while I sat working out my inner confusions.
This was the funniest thing I have read in months!
And I never gave one goddamn about De Gama before! Ha!]
I mean in my outhouse where would I find such a fine history?
I mean should I look for gossip on Sarah Palin by Joe-Mcginniss?
Something by Mitt?
Rick Perry's new book?
A book by Santorum?
A book by Ron Paul?
A book by Michele Bachmann?
A book by Newt the Gingrich?
No, the outhouse is the library for intellects. Stick with folks like Vasco for chrissakes!
The bowels must move with something that is interesting to read!
Previous attempt @ http://onceuponaparadigm.wordpress.com/2011/09/24/vasco-da-gama-hari-krishna/
Comments
My God Dick . . .
You hit this one all the way out of the ballpark...
It's the best laugh I've enjoyed at 3:41 am PDT ever.
I'm gonna print it and go in camp on the porcelain throne.
~OGD~
by oldenGoldenDecoy on Sat, 09/24/2011 - 6:43am
hahahahahahha
All I kept thinking about was da Gama and his crew singing:
We wish you a Merry Krishna
We wish you a Merry Krishna...
by Richard Day on Sat, 09/24/2011 - 11:15am
I was going to say that for the title alone, you deserve to award yourself your line of the day prize, but then I read the blog and I agree, you hit this one out of the park. Bravo, sir.
Krishna/Christ, phalluses/crosses, three cheers for Vasco da Gama and his world class outhouse.
by MrSmith1 on Sat, 09/24/2011 - 8:59am
Vasco was one real rasco that is for sure!
by Richard Day on Sat, 09/24/2011 - 11:17am
I keep imagining how this would have all appeared on cable tv were it around then. Well done, Mr. Richard
by Barth on Sat, 09/24/2011 - 11:37am
Thanks Barth.
And Merry Krishna to you also. haha
by Richard Day on Sat, 09/24/2011 - 11:59am
A neat book caught my eye at a roadside bookstand in Rajasthan. "Jesus Lived in India."
Synopsis here.
My kind of scholarship.
Also: http://www.jesus-in-india-the-movie.com/html/trailer.html
by Rootman on Sun, 09/25/2011 - 4:14am
Now that is interesting.
One link has the Christ in India during the '18 year gap'--that is the Fortress of Solitude period.
And the other deals with the Post-Crucifiction.
by Richard Day on Sun, 09/25/2011 - 11:27am
Just now found that crazy Jesus in India film in Netflix looking for the Joseph Campbell stuff.
by Rootman on Sun, 09/25/2011 - 3:22pm
A religion called Mahikari (which is supposedly about white light healing) claims that Jesus wasn't crucified, but instead, returned to Japan and lived to be 99 years old. They claim there is a grave which, obviously has become a bit of a tourist attraction.
by MrSmith1 on Mon, 09/26/2011 - 6:32pm
Well if you think that is something you should talk with Mitt!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Church_of_Latter_Day_Saints
I mean talk about latter day saints for chrissakes.
And what about the waffles?
The Clearwater Virgin on Christmas Day 1996.
by Richard Day on Mon, 09/26/2011 - 6:58pm
In my family tree, I have a second, unrelated Smith line on my mother's side, that lived in upstate NY, near where Mormonism has its roots. I keep hoping we're not somehow related to Joseph Smith. Unfortunately, I've only been able to trace that line back to a guy named William LeGrand Smith, who died in 1895 and, I'm happy to say, is NOT the same W. L. G. Smith that wrote a pro-slavery response to Uncle Tom's Cabin and ended up as the U.S. Ambassador to Shanghai (He died in 1874.) Being a Smith is tough when you're doing genealogy research, but sometimes you find out just enough to ease your mind. LOL
by MrSmith1 on Mon, 09/26/2011 - 9:55pm
Very enlightening.
But I thought it was Confucius and not Day or Da Gama who said:
"Inner confusions are best eliminated through laughter."
by Oxy Mora on Sun, 09/25/2011 - 2:19pm
Just so that those damn inner confusions are eliminated.
THAT'S ALL THAT COUNTS!
hahahaha
by Richard Day on Sun, 09/25/2011 - 2:50pm