Showing posts with label Family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Family. Show all posts

Astro Cruise 6 - We are Together in this Journey

 


"We are Together in this Journey"

Astro Cruise 6

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Baby Girl on Her Way


Ben Heine's little girl is on her way, the birth will happen in a couple of weeks. She sticks her tongue out and hides her face with her foot... The parents are proud and so happy already.


I'm really happy to let you know that Theo, my son, was born the 12th of August 2012. He is big and tall and super cute. I'm a father, I can't believe it. Tagore said: "Every child born is a sign that God is not yet discouraged of man".

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I've just found some old photos from my childhood and I just couldn't resist sharing them. Sorry for the rather poor image quality, all these pics were taken in the eighties.















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A little girl painting her own little world (if you wish, you can view some details here). Made for "Art Official Concept", an art gallery based in Cape Verde (Western Africa). See the whole Pencil Vs Camera album.

The Future is Bright
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© 2009 - Ben Heine
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A picture I took during my safari in Kenya.
Happy Together
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Follow Your Dreams

By Peter S. Quinn

Follow your dreams that go by
Filling each moment on
Feelings of love low and high
Until each thought is gone
Closeness to them is everything
Of every hour everyday
They are the reason I still sing
Into departures that can't stay

Yesterdays are to remember
With every its old song to borrow
Like the leaves of reddish amber
Or dawn rising once more tomorrow
But our dreams never come true
They are only in the heart to glow
Mind-sets and thoughts to renew
Before they for evermore shall go

Follow your dreams for they leave
Everything is at all times falling
Hours will come of lost and grieve
And again to those times calling
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Follow me Son
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© 2009 - Ben Heine
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I'm Going...

A poem by Peter S. Quinn

I'm going in deepest of unknown space,
Searching with a kindle, not clear or bright;
I'll be flying dimensions, hours of grace,
Close to daybreak and the fullest of night.
Like a bird in dark with one pair of wings,
Flying across oceans, somewhere not known;
Or a singer who searches on, as he sings,
A seed from a fragile bloom not yet grown.
Ah dear friend, perhaps likewise, so are you:
Knowing not yet where your fate is going;
Into the distance, in haze and in blue,
Mountain root moss there seems all to be glowing.
Unclear quite now, is each of futures seeing,
But when crossed over, there dwells each being.
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Give Me Independence
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© 2009 - Ben Heine
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Give Me a
Time to Run


A poem by Peter S. Quinn

Give me a time to run
I'm so much in my freedom
Life is of sadness and fun
Contributing ways asylum
Gladness gives me laughter
Sadness only its deep pain
What is this existence after?
Where shall they both reign?

Tomorrow is always coming
Giving its time to share
Some of it is just benumbing
Without its street's fare
Life has its ups and down
With its beauty and ugliness
Each can become a hometown
With its many penurious

Give me a time to laugh
Everything becomes easier
Sometimes it isn't enough
When life gets much breezier
Give muddy bosom - sunset
For golden it will become
If futures in equals are meet
To blooms of the earth some
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Little me
with Odette

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© 2008 - Ben Heine
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This is a very old photo (poor quality, it hurts the eyes, sorry) showing my nurse Odette and me as a child when I was living in Ivory Coast, Africa, from 1983 to 1990. I realize just now how pretty and courageous she was. I miss her.
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These cute African kids used to be my close friends when I was living in Ivory Coast, Africa, from 1983 to 1990. Such a sweet memory. Childhood Nostalgia.

Other old shots from my childhood : [link] and [link]

The House of my Mother and Father
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Syria : Modernity and History
(Ben Heine © Cartoons)

Damascus, What Are You Doing
to Me?

By Nizar Qabbani (*)


My voice rings out, this time, from Damascus
It rings out from the house of my mother and father
In Sham. The geography of my body changes.
The cells of my blood become green.
My alphabet is green.
In Sham. A new mouth emerges for my mouth
A new voice emerges for my voice
And my fingers
Become a tribe


I return to Damascus
Riding on the backs of clouds
Riding the two most beautiful horses in the world
The horse of passion.
The horse of poetry.
I return after sixty years
To search for my umbilical cord,
For the Damascene barber who circumcised me,
For the midwife who tossed me in the basin under the bed
And received a gold lira from my father,
She left our house
On that day in March of 1923
Her hands stained with the blood of the poem…


I return to the womb in which I was formed . . .
To the first book I read in it . . .
To the first woman who taught me
The geography of love . . .
And the geography of women . . .


I return
After my limbs have been strewn across all the continents
And my cough has been scattered in all the hotels
After my mother’s sheets scented with laurel soap
I have found no other bed to sleep on . . .
And after the “bride” of oil and thyme
That she would roll up for me
No longer does any other "bride" in the world please me
And after the quince jam she would make with her own hands
I am no longer enthusiastic about breakfast in the morning
And after the blackberry drink that she would make
No other wine intoxicates me . . .


I enter the courtyard of the Umayyad Mosque
And greet everyone in it
Corner to . . . corner
Tile to . . . tile
Dove to . . . dove
I wander in the gardens of Kufi script
And pluck beautiful flowers of God’s words
And hear with my eye the voice of the mosaics
And the music of agate prayer beads
A state of revelation and rapture overtakes me,
So I climb the steps of the first minaret that encounters me
Calling:
“Come to the jasmine”
“Come to the jasmine”

--> Read the end of the poem
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(*)Qabbani was revered by generations of Arabs for his sensual and romantic verse. His work was featured not only in his two dozen volumes of poetry and in regular contributions to the Arabic-language newspaper Al Hayat, but in lyrics sung by Lebanese and Syrian vocalists who helped popularize his work.

--> Source : http://oldpoetry.com