Zaytuna College

Episode Summary

Two of humanity's greatest literary masters—separated by continents and centuries—share a profound interest in how seemingly intractable conflicts can be resolved through reconciliation. What can we learn by comparing their approaches to forgiveness?Scholar Juan Cole examines Rumi's tale of a grocer who kills his parrot in rage, only to be devastated by remorse when he learns the bird had saved his life—and Shakespeare's The Tempest, where the wizard Prospero uses magic to undo his brother's treachery. Both authors grapple with whether true reconciliation requires inner transformation or can be imposed from without.In Rumi's story, Imam Ali demonstrates extraordinary ethics by forgiving an assassin who spat in his face, explaining that continuing the attack would mix divine justice with personal revenge. Shakespeare's Prospero, by contrast, doesn't so much forgive as rectify—using magic to compel his enemies to undo their crimes without necessarily achieving their contrition.Both authors acknowledge life's tragic dimensions yet hold out hope for peaceful resolution. Their contrasting visions reveal essential questions: Can we win others over, or only overpower them? What does genuine forgiveness require?Read the full essay: https://renovatio.zaytuna.edu/article/rumi-shakespeare-forgivenessAbout the Author: Juan Cole is Richard P. Mitchell Collegiate Professor of History at the University of Michigan, specializing in modern Middle Eastern and South Asian history.Subscribe for more essays on world literature and comparative religion#Rumi #Shakespeare #Forgiveness #Reconciliation #ComparativeLiterature #TheTempest #IslamicLiterature #WorldLiterature #Renovatio #ZaytunaCollege
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