Zitat des Tages von Eduardo Galeano:
I am quite prehistoric, absolutely prehistoric.
The world is becoming an immense military base, and that base is becoming a mental hospital the size of the world. Inside the nuthouse, which ones are crazy?
The world is organised by the war economy and the war culture.
It's a difficult competition against silence, because silence is a perfect language, the only language which says with no words.
If nature were a bank, they would have already rescued it.
This work is a torture on the rump but a joy to the heart.
Each day has a story to - deserves to be told, because we are made of stories. I mean, scientists say that human beings are made of atoms, but a little bird told me that we are also made of stories.
When a book is alive, really alive, you feel it. You put it to your ear here, and you feel it breathe, sometimes laugh, sometimes cry, just like a person, a little person.
The division of labor among nations is that some specialize in winning and others in losing.
In 1492, the natives discovered they were Indians; they discovered they lived in America.
Disasters are called natural, as if nature were the executioner and not the victim.
So many stories, and to choose which ones to tell and how to tell them. The words, they will tap me on the shoulder and they will speak to me: 'Tell me! Tell me!' The stories choose me.
Less is always more. The best language is silence. We live in a time of a terrible inflation of words, and it is worse than the inflation of money.
I'm attracted to soccer's capacity for beauty. When well played, the game is a dance with a ball.
I am astonished each time I come to the U.S. by the ignorance of a high percentage of the population, which knows almost nothing about Latin America or about the world. It's quite blind and deaf to anything that may happen outside the frontiers of the U.S.
Most of wars or military coups or invasions are done in the name of democracy against democracy.
We Latins are known for jabbering on.
Indignation must always be the answer to indignity. Reality is not destiny.
I go about the world, hand outstretched, and in the stadiums I plead, 'A pretty move, for the love of God.' And when good football happens, I give thanks for the miracle, and I don't give a damn which team or country performs it.
I remember that - you know, I didn't receive a formal education. I was educated in the Montevideo cafe, in the cafes of Montevideo. There, I received my first lessons in the art of telling stories, storytelling.
What is the most popular scene in the Bible? Adam and Eve biting the apple. It's not there.
We have a memory cut in pieces. And I write trying to recover our real memory, the memory of humankind, what I call the human rainbow, which is much more colorful and beautiful than the other one, the other rainbow.
Even though professional soccer has become more about business and less about the game itself, I still believe football is a party for the legs that play it and for the eyes that watch it.
Reality is very, very contradictory, and so I try to write just perfecting what I see, what I read, what I feel, in a feel-thinking way. Not only giving ideas, or receiving ideas, or trying to explain something, but mainly feel-thinking, a feel-thinking language able to tie the heart and the mind, which have been divorced.
I think the purpose of the writer is to help us see. The writer is someone who can perhaps have the joy of helping others see.
History never really says goodbye. History says, 'See you later.'
The history of soccer is a sad voyage from beauty to duty. When the sport became an industry, the beauty that blossoms from the joy of play got torn out by its very roots.
Writing is a marvelous adventure and very labor-intensive: those words run away and try to escape. They are very difficult to capture.
There is a tradition that sees journalism as the dark side of literature, with book writing at its zenith. I don't agree. I think that all written work constitutes literature, even graffiti.
There are some writers who feel they are elected by God. I am not. I am elected by the devil - this is clear.
From 8 A.M. until noon, I am pessimistic. Then from 1 P.M. until 4, I feel optimistic.
The manager believes soccer is a science and the field a laboratory, but the genius of Einstein and the subtlety of Freud is not enough for the owners and the fans. They want a miracle worker like Our Lady of Lourdes, with the stamina of Gandhi.