![]() ![]() I see this proverb as extremely important and relevant today. Used as a strong argument for the cyclical nature of violence. Proverb that might’ve been most famous in the 60s but is still present in the 2000s and can be To songs and other forms of art that are being created to push for a world of nonviolence. It uses the phrase toĭiscuss the Paris terrorist attacks and shows how the phrase is still relevant- from protest signs This article shows how the proverb is used in a more recent context. “An Eye for an Eye Makes the Whole World Blind.” The Huffington Post, Has changed over time and famous people that have helped change it.ĭear, John. ForĮxample, instead of just “an eye for an eye makes everyone blind” there’s also “an eye for anĮye makes the world blind.” The publication gives a chronological timeline of how the proverb This publication also shows the different ways this proverb has been used. Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., Louis Fischer, and Henry Powell Spring have said variations of ![]() This annotation shows the many people who have coined this phrase. Quote Investigator, /7/eye-for-eye-blind/. He sees it as an important life lesson thatĮspecially needs to be taught to the younger generations. Learn how to deal with people on the playground. Why do they know or like this piece? where/who did they learn it from? What does it mean toĭA: I remember growing up hearing it in the context of the civil rights era.ĭA: I think it’s important to advocate for nonviolence with logic and I think that’s what this sayingĭA: I just mean that this quote simple enough to understand logically and that’s why it’sĬontext of the performance- where do you perform it? History?ĭelward Atkins has shared this proverb with his children as they were growing up and had to DA: There’s this saying that goes, “an eye for an eye makes everyone blind.”ĭA: It means, uh, basically that striking back won’t solve anything. ![]()
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