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Reviews
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
The Dalai Lama's autobiography should leave no one in doubt of his
humility and genuine compassion. Written without the slightest hint of
pretense, the exiled leader of Tibet recounts his life, from the time he
was whisked away from his home in 1939 at the age of 4, to his treacherous
escape from Tibet in 1959, to his winning of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989.
The backdrop of the story is the 1950 Chinese invasion of Tibet. He calmly
relates details of imprisonment, torture, rape, famine, ecological disaster,
and genocide that under four decades of Chinese rule have left 1.25 million
Tibetans dead and the Tibetan natural and religious landscapes decimated.
Yet the Dalai Lama's story is strangely one of hope. This man who prays
for four hours a day harbors no ill will toward the Chinese and sees the
potential for good everywhere he casts his gaze. Someday, he hopes, all
of Tibet will be a zone of peace and the world's largest nature preserve.
Such optimism is not naive but rather a result of his daily studies in
Buddhist philosophy and his doctrine of Universal Responsibility. Inspiring
in every way, Freedom in Exile is both a historical document and
a fable of deepest trust in humanity. --Brian Bruya
Book Description
In this astonishingly frank autobiography, the Dalai Lama reveals the
remarkable inner strength that allowed him to master both the mysteries
of Tibetan Buddhism and the brutal realities of Chinese Communism. |