Emotionally, a person is tied to the land of his birth. It's only human.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
There are unwanted emotions and pain that goes along with any birth.
Mankind have their local attachments. They have a particular regard for the spot, in which they were born and nurtured.
There is a certain inescapable attachment. If you are born somewhere and circumstances don't take you away from it, then you grow up and remain within it.
You don't have to give birth to someone to have a family.
A person can only be born in one place. However, he may die several times elsewhere: in the exiles and prisons, and in a homeland transformed by the occupation and oppression into a nightmare.
To give birth is a fearsome thing; there is no hating the child one has borne even when injured by it.
Birth is violent, and out of that violence is our only chance of rebirth.
A person's basic humanity is not governed by how he or she came into this world, or whether somebody else happens to have the same DNA.
One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman.
I've never really understood attachment to a place for reasons of birth. That my mother happened to give birth to me in a certain place doesn't, to my mind, justify any thankfulness towards that place. It could have been anywhere.