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DNA Knows No Borders
To observe a garden is to observe an ecosystem sustained by the balance of diversity. In nature, nothing remains static: species spread, compete, adapt, and coexist according to dynamics that precede any form of human control. When the gardener intervenes to rigidly separate species, removing what is considered foreign or unnecessary, an artificial order is imposed upon a natural process that instead tends spontaneously toward mixture, transformation, and renewal. Plants migr

Nora Amati
2 days ago4 min read


When the Sacred Turns a Profit
Hajj occupies a central place in Islamic theology. It is one of the five pillars of Islam and, for Muslims who possess the financial, physical, and practical means to undertake it, it represents a religious obligation to be fulfilled at least once in a lifetime. Historically, the pilgrimage to Mecca was conceived as an experience of sacrifice, equality, spiritual discipline, and material detachment: a journey intended to diminish the ego and reaffirm the relationship between

Nora Amati
3 days ago3 min read


The Ayat of Hydrangeas: The Language of Creation in Purple
In the Qur’an, Allah/God continually invites human beings to observe creation as a sign of His wisdom. Every flower, every change in nature, every shade of the earth contains ayat—visible signs of divine mercy and perfection. Purple hydrangeas, with their delicate and ever-changing colours, seem to reflect this very reality: nothing in creation is static; everything exists according to a precise measure established by God. The Colour That Changes Hydrangeas have the remarkabl

Nora Amati
4 days ago2 min read


When Symbols Become the Focus, Meaning Is Lost
Those who cling to symbols perceive only loss; those who seek God find understanding. Many ancient references emerge through stories and their historical significance. We should pay close attention to the way Allah (God) presents these narratives, because there is always a hidden wisdom that we do not immediately grasp from the apparent meaning alone. We must refine our ability to contemplate and recognize that the meaning of every narrative is often reconstructed, reshaped,

Nora Amati
May 224 min read


Khalifa Does Not Mean Caliphate: The Qur’an’s Forgotten Garden
Some words, more than others, end up imprisoned by history—and khalifa is one of them. In contemporary public discourse, particularly in Europe, the term almost automatically evokes the idea of the “caliphate”: religious power, imperial structures, political extremism. It is a word burdened with powerful, often traumatic imagery that has ultimately obscured its original meaning. And yet this immediate association tells us more about our contemporary imagination than it does a

Nora Amati
May 194 min read


The First Act Is Refusal: Creating Meaning in a False World
Perhaps your compass has led you toward another continent—a land that does not exist. Most people walk in the same direction to secure their place in the sun, but if you choose falsehood, you choose your own slow death, remaining in the waiting room of your own life. Walk your own path. Draw a new map, because it is not always a nine-to-five job that guarantees future comfort. If you feel something more, go. You are not losing your place in the world—you are designing it. You

Nora Amati
May 53 min read


The Taj Mahal and What Loss Teaches Us About Love
There is a moment, standing before the Taj Mahal, when one ceases to regard it as a monument and begins to perceive it as a question. It no longer concerns Shah Jahan or Mumtaz Mahal. It concerns you. It concerns what you have lost, or believe you have lost; it concerns what, in some way, you continue to love. Located in Agra and constructed between 1632 and 1653, the Taj Mahal is often described as a romantic symbol. Yet this reading is superficial, for when one truly moves

Nora Amati
May 43 min read
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