West Vs.WorldWest Vs.WorldWest vs. World“Every age , every culture, every custom and tradition has its own character, its own weakness and its own strength, its beauties and cruelties; it accepts certain sufferings as matters of course, puts up patiently with certain evils. Human life is reduced to real suffering, to hell, only when two ages, two cultures and religions overlap.” (Hermann Hesse.) It is difficult for any culture in the world to avoid the blending of cultures. In Marshal Sahlins essay, “Two or Three Things I Know about Culture”, he proved that almost all cultures are derived from another. Many countries do not agree with this theory because they believe that other customs, traditions are wrong and immoral. One the most criticize cultures in the world is Western Society. Although it is very well-known and widely practiced, it is still considered a deceiving, greedy and unethical the “Western way” is highly despised among
s. It allows the people of the world to be happy, productive, and free of harmful habits by simply separating out any culture. It is only a small way of gaining control of them. There are quite a many traditions, religions, and cultures which they may follow. It does so only for money, and because it is so easily used. The most popular of these are the Catholic- Orthodox religions . And there are also a number of cultures and religions which they have their own religion or a sect which they consider to be their own church with a specific creed that they maintain, yet that they claim they do not know. They only speak about their own religion or their sect in common. They often call themselves the Religious Community or the “Other Christian” religions, but this does not mean that they are any more Buddhist, Buddhism, or Hindu. The “Other Christian” Religion is a highly hierarchical (and indeed, a “banned”) group of Buddhist sects, including the Confucian- Taoism, which is the traditional Buddhist faith of Western Europe. It had been originally born as a sect at the end of the 16th Century by the Tsar, a saint that is best known in England and France as Saint Pauli, and is currently enshrined on the Isle of Wight. After the collapse of the Protestant order in the 16th Century, Christianity was a major center of the world. Because of its success, the British West continued to colonize and govern it till the 1930s, and became one of the most prosperous societies in Europe. The rest of the world continued to follow Christian religious traditions and cultures, and with their support of the Allies, became strong secular powers. The Muslim world continued to develop slowly but steadily, but then to be forced into the role of being a global power in the 21st Century. Islam has never stopped developing in most parts of the world. There has never been a time in ancient history when the Muslim world was ruled by the rulers of the “Other,” as Pope John Paul II of Rome put it in his 1594 encyclical. Most Islamic societies exist only because Christians and Jews are on the opposite side of the line. But even if the two main faiths are still the same, the Islamic world’s economic, political, and social power will still continue to be divided between what he called the “Evil” and “Good.”
SECTION 7. The Muslim World.
THE WORLD IS A REFLECTIVE HISTORY OF THE SEVEN SAVANDS OF MARITIME RELIGION IN THE EARTH. Islam, and Islam is like a prism through which light is filtered through the eye. It is filtered through the eyes of the individual. Each of us sees the world through something we do not perceive. Every time someone puts on something they see in the world, and this reflects on the individual. As Islam reflects on itself, so does the Western world’s image of Islam, which often becomes very sad or extremely negative.
The Islamic picture is also filled with many problems, such as racism, xenophobia, and the like. Islamophobia is not unlike homophobia or fear of a non-Muslim. It is a serious problem, and the problem is compounded and expanded each time they break through. A large percentage of our Muslim faces face such discrimination.
It is this hostility or distrust of outsiders, and in particular, of outsiders. The Islamophobia we face is similar to the hatred of Jews, gays, and the like. It is caused by an extreme hatred of the weak and uneducated, and in some cases is fueled by a desire to maintain that position by forcing others to become weak. Muslims suffer less oppression, more