Nocturnal Wenchy

African Hips Don't Lie


Believing in belief.

Jewish-Padlock

“One day, a girl was sitting on a bench next to an old man, and she said, “I’ve gotta tell ya’, mister, that’s an awfully boring tattoo on your arm there. It’s just a bunch of numbers.”

The man looks at her, and says, “Well, I got it when I was your age, and I kept it as a reminder.” The girl smiles, saying, “Oh, a reminder of happier times?”

The man shakes his head sadly, and says, “No…of a time when the world went mad. Imagine yourself in a land where your countrymen followed the voice of political extremists who didn’t like your religion. Imagine having everything taken from you, and being sent to a camp as slave labour, then systematically murdered. In this place, they even take your name and replace it with a number tattooed on your arm. It was called the Holocaust, where millions of people perished just because of their faith…”

The girl, stunned, start to cry. She asks, “So you kept it to remind yourself of the dangers of political extremism?”

The man shakes his head again. “No, my dear. To remind you.” – Unknown

—*—

Religion is a funny thing. Well, I guess you don’t say that when your ass is stuck in hell. If the powers were kind, I can hope we are at least put according to our musical tastes as my Kevin would say… but I think I will be listening to pigs squealing and Kevin to Patsy Cline.

Plenty introspection for me at the moment with regards to ‘belief’. Since “The Wall” (see Shirley Valentine for details on how to communicate with Wall or rock) answered and “You are the Starlight” keeps playing in my head. Not quite ready to share deeper than that.

If faith is believing in something you cannot see – what is it that made you believe in whatever your belief is?

I wish you enough,

Wenchy



7 responses to “Believing in belief.”

  1. Faith is most definitely a funny yet serious thing in today’s world. There are so many religios views out there.
    I believe in God and what made me belief in Him, was firstly my mother who taught me about Him (thank you Lord for this) and also how He works in my life.
    Most say that we can’t see him. Physical perhaps but spiritually we can see Him daily in many things. We just need to look harder 🙂
    I wish you enough too 🙂
    P.s – did you get my Facebook email last week?

    Like

  2. In Staunton, Virginia,USA in the mid 1970s I noticed tattooed numbers on the arm of my co-surveyor. Turns out he was Ukranian who had been in both Russian and German concentration camps. Amazing gut wrenching stories he shared.

    A few years later I had a patient with numerals tattooed on arm. An amazing man. A NAZI Holocaust survivor.

    The experiences both thse men shared have stayed with me and affected my beliefs. Political extremists and religious fundamentalists of all and any flavor terrify me. When ever they gain power another Holocaust can ad will follow.

    Thank you for sharing.

    Like

  3. Interesting post..

    I don’t believe in one god. I believe you should read up about all religions, and take whatever works best for you from all that.

    Or keep it simple, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you” 🙂

    Like

  4. Still not there yet…

    Like

    1. Some days I ignore “The Wall” – it still just stands there.

      Like

Comment, Like and Share – please. :)

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

About Me

Mom to many, wife to SirNoid. Lover of water, walks in the shade and all things purple.

%d bloggers like this: