𐒋𐒖𐒆𐒔𐒖𐒕𐒈
VIP
‘We live in a wondrous time, in which the strong are weak because of their scruples, and the weak grow strong because of their audacity’ O V Bismarck.Postscript:
In discussing the fate of the Gulf States, al Qasimi argued, and I am paraphrasing, for this was first printed in Arabic: “My grand grand father had a camel, his son had a horse, his son’s son drove an old beater, I drive a Merc, my son drives an Austin Martin, his son will drive a Tesla, and son’s son most likely will perish in the sand dunes of Arabia”.
Men (with women of course) build nations, their sons and daughters enjoy the fruits of the father’s hard labour only for their grandchildren to squander, and in turn their grand grandchildren to lose it all.
See, this is quite befitting in our case, where your (our) grand grand fathers perished at the proverbial alter to rescue you (us) a life of subservience only for you to squander, play lackeys to their erstwhile arch nemesis, from whom they liberated the land, yet here you are advocating for the dissemblance of [that] which they sought to sew together for their future generations to enjoy a life of unity, independence, and self-sufficiency much better than theirs: in other words, a fair chance, in battles of wit and intellect, to joust with their contemporaries elsewhere.
We fell hard on our faces, struggled, lost almost all, but endeavour we must to cross unto other side.
Wa ya lah min 3aar.
In his efforts to unify Prussia, to later form Germania, the strongest army and economy in Europe, Bismark acquired warring, disparate tribes, if untrusting of each other, yet at peril from the enemies round them. He sought to unify them into what was to become the German Empire, and with this real politik, he managed to not only dominate European body politicking, but advanced the old concept of ‘taxation with representation’, an original German philosophy contrary to those of the Roman elites, and Napoleanic polities of Europe.
Spare a thought for the General, as he, at the time, was being criticised for being a warmonger fated to drag the German tribes into unending, if unwinnable wars. Those same fools, who fancied themselves as a genuine thorn in his heel, were rushing to his quarters for ministerial portfolios soon after his unification of the German States into a mighty force, only to cajole Austria Hungary into the fold, in that famous dual alliance, soon thereafter. So, you see, my dear Abaq, great men, bestowed with sound minds, set out, and go after substantial goals, and ideas whereas weaklings seek to nibble, gnaw, and corrode the works of great men, in their absence, for they can hardly differentiate the false mirage from the luminous light.
‘It is the destiny of the weak to be devoured by the strong’ Bismarck.
In that light, men and women of great minds shall seek to unify the tribes of ardu Somal for the greater good, and for the days to come; weaklings, void of fortitude and resilience, shall bore the mindless and the children with illbirth ideals of which time has lapsed.
In unitas, we are; of solus, we cease.
Recite, let us for one more time verses from that old famous poem, Maandeeq, out of the loins of a true son of ardu Somali:
Hashaan labada gaal ee is barkani gedh u dirireysay
Gacmaa lagu maquunshee xornimo nooma ay garane
Allaah noo gargaaree marku shicibku guulaystay
Geeraaradeedii hashaan anigu googooyey
Galoolkiyo maraagiyo hashaan kidiga geylaanshay
Gaajiyo haraad badan hashaan ugu garaacaayey
Goortuu sidkeedii go’ay eey galabii fool qaaday
Iyadoo candhada giijisey oo godol ku siidaysay
Garaad nimaan lahayn bay la tahay waad ka gaagixine
Annagoon gantaalada dhiciyo heysan qori gaaban
Hashaan gaada weynioww libaax uga gaboon waayey
Inaan goraya cowl uga tagaa waa wax soo gudhaye.
I shall continue driving the message home till you have wailed: ‘bes, bes, sankaan ka keenay’.
To be continued.