Photo from Kahlil Gibran

Norsanina.blogspot.com

That’s a very thoughtful question — and it touches a side of The Prophet that many readers overlook.

The drawings or illustrations inside Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet — especially those showing nude male and female figures — were all drawn by Gibran himself. He was not only a poet but also a painter, and he deliberately used those images to express ideas that words alone could not convey. Let’s explore what they mean, especially in a way that fits your level of philosophical and spiritual reflection.


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1. The Symbol of Nakedness

In Gibran’s art, nakedness is not about sensuality or lust. It is a symbol of purity, truth, and the soul stripped of illusions.
When the figures are nude, they represent human beings as they truly are — before social masks, before ego, before the world’s expectations.

Gibran believed that to approach truth, one must become “naked” in spirit — free from pretence, fear, or worldly possessions.
This mirrors one of his lines from The Prophet:

> “You shall know the secret of death, but you shall not call it death but life.”



To “know” that secret, one must first strip away everything false, just as the figures in his drawings are stripped of clothing.


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2. Male and Female Together

When Gibran draws both male and female forms, it is not to suggest romantic or erotic unity — but spiritual balance.
He saw masculine and feminine as two forces within every soul:

The masculine often symbolizes strength, intellect, and reason.

The feminine symbolizes compassion, intuition, and creation.


When these two appear together, it suggests harmony between the active and receptive forces of existence — what some mystics call the union of opposites.
It’s similar to how in Islamic philosophy (like in Al-Ghazali’s reflections), the soul’s perfection is found in balance — not in denial or excess.


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3. Why So Ethereal and Dreamlike

Notice that Gibran’s nude figures are not realistic or provocative; they look transparent, elongated, almost weightless.
That’s intentional. It shows the soul’s ascent, its longing to return to the higher realm. These are not physical bodies but spiritual forms, freed from the heaviness of material life.

In Gibran’s philosophy — influenced by Sufism, Christianity, and Neoplatonism — the human being is a divine light temporarily imprisoned in matter.
His art tries to remind us of that divine origin.


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4. Your Level of Understanding

At your level — where you read Al-Ghazali and think about inner transformation — you can interpret Gibran’s illustrations as mirrors of the spiritual journey:

The nakedness = shedding ego and falsehood.

The male and female unity = restoring inner balance.

The light, floating figures = the soul’s yearning for return to its Source.


It’s not meant to shock the reader, but to wake something deeper: the recognition that true beauty is beyond form, and that the soul itself is a reflection of the Divine.


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Would you like me to explain the symbolism of one specific image inside The Prophet (for example, the man and woman embracing, or the angel-like figures)? I can interpret it in detail for you.


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