Rapidshare: Rumi Amamoto
Introduction For centuries the verses of Jalāl ad‑Dīn Rūmī (1207‑1273) have traveled across borders, languages, and cultures, inspiring readers from mystics in the Middle East to modern seekers in the West. In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, the advent of the Internet introduced a new conduit for the transmission of his poetry: peer‑to‑peer (P2P) and file‑sharing platforms. Among these, RapidShare—once the most popular one‑click file‑hosting service—served as a pivotal node for the circulation of digitised manuscripts, translations, and scholarly commentary.
| Content Type | Example (circa 2008‑2013) | |--------------|---------------------------| | | High‑resolution JPEGs of 15th‑century Persian copies of the Masnavi uploaded by collectors. | | Amamoto’s Annotated PDFs | The complete Rumi‑Amamoto Archive (≈ 4 GB) shared by graduate students for coursework. | | Audiobooks | MP3 recordings of Rumi’s verses recited in Persian and Japanese, often bundled with Amamoto’s commentary. | Rumi Amamoto Rapidshare
| Feature | Explanation | |---------|-------------| | | Rumi employs everyday metaphors (wine, the reed, the garden) that transcend cultural specifics, allowing readers to map personal experience onto his verses. | | Translatability | The rhythmic, lyrical quality of his Persian verses lends itself to translation without losing emotional intensity. | | Ecumenical Vision | Rumi’s frequent references to Abrahamic prophets, Hindu deities, and Buddhist concepts invite cross‑religious dialogue. | Introduction For centuries the verses of Jalāl ad‑Dīn