Fisherman And The Jinnee Analysis

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Love in its purest form is an unconditional selfless love like a mother’s love for her child, but what is love? Is love a feeling of deep affection of is it a burning desire for a companion? Love is wanting someone to be happy and putting their necessities and desires before one’s own needs. Throughout all the diverse cultures that have risen, fallen, and/or survived the test of time; love has been defined in such disparate ways which are shown in their cultures, literature, and history. Every culture interprets the word love differently. In Buddhism love is defined as wanting others to be happy. This type of love is very different than ordinary love. Ordinary love is to love someone who meets the needs and wants of another. It is to be attached to that person until he/she cease to continue meeting one’s needs; this is pseudo love. Emotions such as pleasure and power can never satiate one permanently. Thus, it is taught in Buddhism to be …show more content…

In “The Fisherman and the Jinnee,” King Yunan tells a tale about King Sindbad and the Falcon. King Sindbad had a faithful pet falcon. One day, when a gazelle outsmarted the King and fled away while hunting, the King chased the beast down and slew it. The King stopped to refill his falcon’s water bowl from a colossal tree with water trickling down the trunk. Unfortunately, there was a great serpent lurking in the shadows of the tree that was poisoning the very water the King was refilling for his falcon. The falcon spotted the serpent and knocked over the bowl of water three times. The King was unaware of the serpent and was angry at his pet bird, so he struck the bird with his sword. Ultimately, the King realized what he had done and was stricken with grief for killing the bird that had saved his life (Dawad 93). The definition of love, in this case, is a deep affection for someone or something; King Sindbad had loved his falcon

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