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My spiritual journey : personal reflections, teachings, and talks  Cover Image Book Book

My spiritual journey : personal reflections, teachings, and talks

Summary: "Tenzin Gyatso, the fourteenth Dalai Lama, was born in 1935 to a peasant family in a remote part of Tibet. Although living in exile, he is the beloved traditional and religious leader of millions of Tibetans and has become a global icon of peace, compassion, spiritual living, and nonviolent struggle for justice. The Dalai Lama's My Spiritual Journey brings the world a message: one of suffering, success, and hope. This vivid and moving portrait of the Dalai Lama's life journey is personal in tone but universal in scope. Using previously unpublished materials, augmented by interviews, the Dalai Lama, with his trusted collaborator's help, presents a spiritual narrative of his life. Memories, stories, anecdotes, and ideas are gathered together to make an accessible and comprehensive whole. The book is organized into three parts. In the first part, he uses his childhood memories to show his human dimension and stresses the importance of relating to each other on the basis of common humanity rather than on differences in belief. In the second part, he considers himself as a Buddhist monk. He explains the source of his bodhisattva ideal and invites us to transform the world by transforming our own mind. His third aspect, that of a Dalai Lama, provides an opportunity to explain his wish to establish Tibet as a sanctuary of peace for the world, where humanity and nature can live in harmonious balance"-- Provided by publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 0061960225 :
  • ISBN: 9780061960222 (hc.) :
  • Physical Description: xvii, 284 p. : ill ; 24 cm.
    print
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: New York : HarperOne, c2010.

Content descriptions

General Note:
French ed. published: Paris : Presses de la Rennaisance, 2009.
Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Subject: Buddhism and social problems
Religious life -- Buddhism
Dalai lamas -- Biography
Bstan-ʼdzin-rgya-mtsho -- Dalai Lama XIV -- 1935-

Available copies

  • 9 of 10 copies available at Sitka.

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  • 0 current holds with 0 total copies.
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Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Castlegar Public Library 294.3923092 BST (Text) 35146001652304 Non-Fiction Volume hold Available -
Coquitlam College 294.392 LAM c.1 (Text) BCCO2789 Non-Fiction Shelves Volume hold Available -
Dawson Creek Municipal Public Library 921 DAL (Text) DCL125710 Adult Non-Fiction Volume hold Available -
Elkford Public Library B BST (Text) 35170000390559 Biography Volume hold Available -
Galiano Island Community Library NF 294.3 LAM (Text) 33127000118598 Non fiction Volume hold Available -
Houston Public Library 6610 DAL (Text) 35150001630062 Adult Non-fiction Not holdable Lost 2020-02-18
Salt Spring Island Public Library 294.3 DAL (Text) 33123009212987 Non-fiction Volume hold Available -
Squamish Public Library 294.3 BST (Text) 33110002731725 Adult Non Fiction Volume hold Available -
Terrace Public Library 294.3 Bst (Text) 35151000196667 Adult Non-fiction Volume hold Available -
Quesnel Branch 294.3923092 BST (Text) 33923004641662 Non-fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2010 October #1
    One of the world's greatest spiritual leaders reflects on his commitments as a human being, a Buddhist monk, and the fourteenth Dalai Lama. Stril-Rever, the Dalai Lama's longtime translator, has collected his autobiographical musings, dharma talks, and public speeches, and provided informative commentary, to create a book of clarion essays shaped by the Dalai Lama's wisdom, intellect, kindness, and humor, as well as his experiences of persecution, exile, and world travels. Readers both well versed in and new to the Dalai Lama's teachings will make invaluable discoveries as the Dalai Lama emphasizes our common humanity, our interdependence, and the need for us to "cultivate a greater sense of universal responsibility." The Dalai Lama calls for religious harmony and expresses his support for secular democracy and his hope for a peaceful resolution of the Chinese occupation of Tibet. Most forcefully, and poetically, the Dalai Lama voices his growing concern over global environmental degradation. We must act together to protect nature, the source of our survival, the Dalai Lama writes, assuring us that if the Buddha returned, "He would be an ecologist!" Copyright 2010 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2010 December
    Enduring gifts of faith and hope

    In our conspicuously consumer-oriented culture, we can sometimes lose sight of the deeper roots of the holiday season. The minute October ticks over into November, a dizzying array of tantalizing items are dangled before us, reminding us of a December 25th deadline. Here, we offer an antidote: a calming tonic in the form of four new books that reflect segments of America's rich diversity of spiritual traditions.

    A YEAR OF PRAYER

    Germaine Copeland is passionate about prayer. The author of Prayers That Avail Much, this dedicated counselor and prayer advocate has crafted a day-by-day devotional, 365 Days to a Prayer-Filled Life, that aims to move the human perception of prayer as an act of asking-waiting-receiving into a more powerful vision: a deeper and more intimate relationship with God. Beginning with a herald to the New Year, Day 1 invites us to begin anew and let go of the past through a small conversational essay, followed by a thoughtful prayer—a direct conversation with God—along with related Scripture references and a suggested Bible reading. Each day of the year presents a different topic—on a Tuesday, it could be a snippet about marriage, and Friday might prompt you to think about what really constitutes an abundant life. Gentle and steadfast, Copeland's kind presence and true devotion to a merciful Divine Father shine from each page of this guiding "prayer book."

    THE BASICS OF JUDAISM

    Tradition! Yes, that familiar refrain from Fiddler on the Roof kept running through my head as I hummed "If I Were a Rich Man" and chuckled (very hard to do simultaneously) while reading The Big Jewish Book for Jews: Everything You Need to Know to Be a Really Jewish Jew by humorists Ellis Weiner and Barbara Davilman. The authors of Yiddish with Dick and Jane are back with everything everyone—Jews and non-Jews alike—needs to know about how to be "really Jewish." All of their wisecracking humor aside, Weiner and Davilman have a clear concern: that Judaism is becoming endangered within today's modern American culture. "There is not one facet of American life in which Jews have not made significant contributions. . . . But this very success threatens to bring about the undoing of American Jewishness itself." Their solution is to reassert the sense of what "it really means to be Jewish" by "preserving practices and beliefs . . . lest they atrophy . . . or become entirely forgotten." Fifty-three "lessons" (what, you wanted more?) instruct us on the essentials: how to make chopped liver, how to use the Bible to tell if your wife is cheating on you, how to make pickles, how to worry and how to give back-handed compliments. There's a lot of information here (plus enlivening illustrations), maybe even a surfeit, but not enough to make you meshugeneh.

    BLESSED MOTHER

    Writer Judith Dupré (author of Skyscrapers, Bridges, Churches and Monuments), who has a longstanding interest in the beauty of and deeper meanings inherent in architecture, has carefully built a luminous book: Full of Grace: Encountering Mary in Faith, Art, and Life. If compared to an edifice, this would be a simple, intimate yet soaring light-filled space—an apt dwelling for a woman whom many call the Queen of Heaven.

    The wonder and mystery of Mary, the mother of Jesus, has long captivated our culture and collective imagination. To this day, hordes of pilgrims converge upon holy sites, places where Mary is said to have appeared, to receive her gentle but powerful wisdom, healing and grace. Dupré explores these locales and the overall fascination with the young girl from Nazareth in 59 exquisite essays (the number of beads on a rosary) that are by turns personal, historical and meditative while they focus on the epochs and experiences of Mary's life, from her immaculate conception through to her death. Along with Dupré's keen insight into her own faith and thorough research, the text is enhanced with meticulously chosen artwork, both classical and contemporary, and "marginalia," consisting of poems, prayers and historical notes.

    Dupré takes us along on a journey of faith toward understanding Mary's universal embodiment and allure, and how this tender, tragic and brave woman's life still resonates powerfully with women and men the world over. Says Dupré of this power: "Mary's experiences as a mother, her intense joy as well as her unfathomable grief, shed light on the unavoidable fate of all parents—to love but lack the ability to ever fully understand, or protect, their children."

    SPIRITUAL SELF-PORTRAIT

    Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama and the spiritual leader of Tibet who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989, often comments that he is "no one special." He says this to emphasize our common humanity and the "vital need for affection" that exists within us all. This simple statement, which gives a fathoms-deep glimpse into the heart and mind of the Dalai Lama, leads off a new memoir (collected by his translator and friend Sofia Stril-Rever), My Spiritual Journey.

    Organized into three parts, the book follows the Dalai Lama's life experiences "as a human being," "as a Buddhist monk" and "as the Dalai Lama." A compilation of his memories, personal reflections, dharma lectures and public presentations, the book is a series of short essays, which are accompanied by commentary from Stril-Rever. Here are peeks inside the Dalai Lama's experiences as a child, exploring the vast spread of rooms and spaces in the Potala Palace, along with remembrances of persecution and his flight into exile. He gives a loving portrait of his mother ("a compassionate woman") and declares his vow to, with his last breath, "practice compassion." The book is a treasure trove for both those who are well-versed in the Dalai Lama's teachings and those new to this "simple Buddhist monk." His reminiscences and perceptions about humanity's need to collectively care for one another and the Earth shine with humor, honesty and kindness—all the while exhorting us gently to "never lose hope!"

    Copyright 2010 BookPage Reviews.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2010 July #1
    Sign and symbol of Tibetan Buddhism, as well as the focus of much political ire directed against the Chinese government and its policies in the country of Tibet, the 14th Dalai Lama is also a genial and popular religious figure; it is not exaggeration to say that he is loved by millions in both Asia and the West. Stril-Rever has created a "spiritual autobiography" from many first-person passages in his previously unpublished writings. The result was published in French in 2009 and now comes to us in translation. As it is, the work provides neither a consistent argument nor the anchors of a conventional memoir. VERDICT Best read, perhaps, in conjunction with Freedom in Exile (the Dalai Lama's autobiography), this gathering of insights on a variety of topics should still please the Dalai Lama's English-speaking adherents. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.

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