I was just wondering if the thickness of the veil doesn't contribute to more efforts, while we are experiencing, hence giving our choices, decisions more weight, hence raising our polarity whether negative or positive. I agree totally with YinYang too. I also agree with Jeremy indicating the immensely numerous positives which stay unknown, because the outside information is so eager to publish only negative events.
I just read today an article in a french daily, [ i am originally french] about women and children who managed to get freed from ISIS and are now near the Syrian and Turkish border in a small camp created by a small french ONG, EliseCare. The persons interviewed were originally Yazidis in the desert of Sinjar, and were captured by ISIS in 2014. One is a story of a young boy of 14, Nassan, who is turned into a young fighter. He pretends to abjure his own beliefs which he was instructed in that very far away region of Irak, venerating a Peacok-Angel, Taous Malek. So he becomes this young fighter and all he dreams is to find his mother, Galey, 34, and his two younger sisters and three smaller brothers all abducted at the same time. Having survived the brutal training for becoming a fighter, he is sent in 2016 to Palmyra where he will end by tracking his mother who is kept along with his sisters as sexual slaves, in a house there, and he will manage to raise a ransom to get her back and one of his sisters. He will also one day happen to meet one of his brothers in the same city. The thing is that when you read how he managed to do that , is, that at times, the different very brutal people who owned him, did at times take pity on him and helped him in some ways in his mission.
The article is of course incredibly difficult and moving to read, it also tells the story of three other families, but also amazing because you do see how conditions suddenly will change some people, in these events, who were acting with such brutality, but how suddenly by their only minimal positive action, this young person will manage to succeed in part in his mission. In part only since his younger sister is still not freed.
I just read today an article in a french daily, [ i am originally french] about women and children who managed to get freed from ISIS and are now near the Syrian and Turkish border in a small camp created by a small french ONG, EliseCare. The persons interviewed were originally Yazidis in the desert of Sinjar, and were captured by ISIS in 2014. One is a story of a young boy of 14, Nassan, who is turned into a young fighter. He pretends to abjure his own beliefs which he was instructed in that very far away region of Irak, venerating a Peacok-Angel, Taous Malek. So he becomes this young fighter and all he dreams is to find his mother, Galey, 34, and his two younger sisters and three smaller brothers all abducted at the same time. Having survived the brutal training for becoming a fighter, he is sent in 2016 to Palmyra where he will end by tracking his mother who is kept along with his sisters as sexual slaves, in a house there, and he will manage to raise a ransom to get her back and one of his sisters. He will also one day happen to meet one of his brothers in the same city. The thing is that when you read how he managed to do that , is, that at times, the different very brutal people who owned him, did at times take pity on him and helped him in some ways in his mission.
The article is of course incredibly difficult and moving to read, it also tells the story of three other families, but also amazing because you do see how conditions suddenly will change some people, in these events, who were acting with such brutality, but how suddenly by their only minimal positive action, this young person will manage to succeed in part in his mission. In part only since his younger sister is still not freed.