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Daja Wangchuk Meston

Auteur de Comes the Peace: My Journey to Forgiveness

2 oeuvres 41 utilisateurs 3 critiques

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Comprend les noms: Daja Meston, Daja Meston

Œuvres de Daja Wangchuk Meston

Helemaal alleen 6 exemplaires

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Daja wordt als kind van drie door zijn Amerikaanse hippie-ouders meegenomen naar Nepal en achtergelaten bij een Tibetaans gezin. Zij brengen hem vervolgens naar een boeddhistisch klooster, waar hij op zesjarige leeftijd wordt opgeleid tot monnik. Daar wordt Daja als enige blanke door de andere jongens gepest. Hij moet brood stelen om zijn honger te stillen en slaapt op een rieten mat die vergeven is van de vlooien. Daja begrijpt niets van de wereld om zich heen en verlangt elke dag naar zijn moeder. Haar korte bezoekjes worden echter steeds minder.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Lin456 | Oct 20, 2020 |
http://comesthepeace.com/

The book is an autobiography written by Daja Meston (co writer Clare Ansberry).
Daja's parents where hippies traveling around the world. He is born in Europe but at age 3 they travel to Nepal. His mom read a book on Buddhism and wants to explore the religion further. Soon after arriving she decides she wants to become a nun in the Buddhist tradition. During her first retreat Daja is placed with a family where he stays for a couple of years. When he is six he is brought to a Buddhist monastery where he is signed as Monk. As Daja is blond, having blue eyes and a 'white' skin he is noticed and other monks are not treating him right.
The book tells the story how Daja escapes from the Monk existence to find his real roots, only to find out that he does not know anything about the US where his parents are from. For the one part of his life he is the American Buddhist and the other part of his life the Buddhist American. The book is about the struggle this gives Daja in growing up and the influence the whole situation had on his life.

The book is very impressive and emotional. It is a journey of a person searching for a place to belong. Though I do not tend to read books like this in general ( it was included in a package) I could not stop reading this. The book is very well written and the story was well set. What impressed me the most was the conflict he had with the love for his mother and how well this was translated in words. Despite all the pain and suffering he had to go trough due to her decisions, there was no touch of hate in what is said about her.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Ciska_vander_Lans | 1 autre critique | Apr 28, 2011 |
Review From Library Thing:
http://comesthepeace.com/

The book is an autobiography written by Daja Meston (co writer Clare Ansberry).
Daja's parents where hippies traveling around the world. He is born in Europe but at age 3 they travel to Nepal. His mom read a book on Buddhism and wants to explore the religion further. Soon after arriving she decides she wants to become a nun in the Buddhist tradition. During her first retreat Daja is placed with a family where he stays for a couple of years. When he is six he is brought to a Buddhist monastery where he is signed as Monk. As Daja is blond, having blue eyes and a 'white' skin he is noticed and other monks are not treating him right.
The book tells the story of how Daja escapes from the Monk existence to find his real roots, only to find out that he does not know anything about the US where his parents are from. For the one part of his life, he is the American Buddhist and the other part of his life is the Buddhist American. The book is about the struggle this gives Daja in growing up and the influence the whole situation had on his life.

The book is very impressive and emotional. It is a journey of a person searching for a place to belong. Though I do not tend to read books like this in general ( it was included in a package) I could not stop reading this. The book is very well written and the story was well set. What impressed me the most was the conflict he had with his love for his mother and how well this was translated in words. Despite all the pain and suffering, he had to go through due to her decisions, there was no touch of hate in what is said about her.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
TallyChan5 | 1 autre critique | Feb 17, 2019 |

Statistiques

Œuvres
2
Membres
41
Popularité
#363,652
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
3
ISBN
5
Langues
1