“The stars had only one task: they taught me how to read.
They taught me I had a language in heaven
and another language on earth.”
Source: Unfortunately, It Was Paradise: Selected Poems
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Mahmoud Darwich9
Palestinian writer 1941–2008Related quotes
Richard Rodríguez (1944) American journalist and essayist
Hunger of Memory: The Education of Richard Rodriguez (1982)
Wendy Doniger (1940) American Indologist
On the aspect of her studying Sanskrit.
Q&A with Wendy Doniger, the Mircea Eliade Distinguished Service Professor and author of The Hindus
Ray Bradbury (1920–2012) American writer
The Paris Review interview (2010)
Context: Our education system has gone to hell. It’s my idea from now on to stop spending money educating children who are sixteen years old. We should put all that money down into kindergarten. Young children have to be taught how to read and write. If children went into the first grade knowing how to read and write, we’d be set for the future, wouldn’t we? We must not let them go into the fourth and fifth grades not knowing how to read. So we must put out books with educational pictures, or use comics to teach children how to read. When I was five years old, my aunt gave me a copy of a book of wonderful fairy tales called Once Upon a Time, and the first fairy tale in the book is “Beauty and the Beast.” That one story taught me how to read and write because I looked at the picture of that beautiful beast, but I so desperately wanted to read about him too.
Willie Nelson (1933) American country music singer-songwriter.
[Nelson, Willie; Bud Shrake; Edwin Shrake, 2000, Willie: An Autobiography, Cooper Square Press, 67]
“Gender is the poetry each of us makes out of the language we are taught.”
Leslie Feinberg (1949–2014) activist and author known for authoring Stone Butch Blues
Source: Trans Liberation: Beyond Pink or Blue
“They are learned by the constant use of the language and cannot be taught in any other fashion.”
Richard Hamming (1915–1998) American mathematician and information theorist
Methods of Mathematics Applied to Calculus, Probability, and Statistics (1985)
Context: Mathematics, being very different from the natural languages, has its corresponding patterns of thought. Learning these patterns is much more important than any particular result... They are learned by the constant use of the language and cannot be taught in any other fashion.