三级aa视频在线观看-三级国产-三级国产精品一区二区-三级国产三级在线-三级国产在线

  Home>News Center>Life
         
 

Novel offers recipe for religious peace
(China Daily)
Updated: 2004-06-09 08:30

Sometimes a really good novel puts the reader in a dilemma: While you want to fly on to the end, you also wish to prolong the delicious suspense and savour every word, rolling it on your tongue as you would a fine wine.

"Land of Water and Milk," by young writer Fan Wen, published by the People's Literature Publishing House this January, is just such a work.

Although the author clearly tells you the ending in the second chapter, you cannot but remain helplessly caught up in the story through 10 fat chapters plus a lengthy "Last Supper."

A Lai once said: "Moving stories are always more likely to take place where different cultures converge."

Fan's story takes place in just such a setting.

What makes his book even more compelling is the fierce struggle between people holding different beliefs, and the slowly won realization that only through mutual respect can people coexist in harmony in such a harsh natural setting.

The author demonstrates a superb skill in weaving an incredibly complicated net of intertwining storylines.

Complex storyline

The novel begins in the early 1900s with two French missionaries standing in a valley, admiring the grand snow-capped mountains before them, which they thought would soon be bathed in God's glorious light.

They studied Tibetan Buddhism and even built a church within the territory of a Buddhist lamasery. But their arrogance in attempting to drive out all native religions infuriated the local people, who burned their church and killed one of the missionaries.

When the other missionary brought back a troop of Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) government soldiers, a major slaughter began. The missionary was so ashamed seeing a young girl and a flock of innocent sheep trembling in front of him, that he gave up what the cannons had conquered and led his followers to the eastern side of the Lancang River to build a new church.

At this point, the story moves to the end of the 20th century, when people discover some precious documents left in the church by the early missionaries.

Then the author carries his readers through a number of scenes, moving first back to the 1910s then jumping to the 1980s. The grand story ends in the 1950s, when the local people all get their share of land and the missionaries are forced to leave.

"I'm trying something new in the narration," explained Fan. "The book is like an elegy and I want to conclude it in the 1950s, when the region's history took a dramatic and decisive turn."

But what lays buried beneath this historical context is the unique sense of time of the Tibetan people.

Outsiders are often amazed to hear local people talking about prehistoric events as if they took place only yesterday. Then they might refer to recent happenings as if they had happened long ago.

With the people living in a grand valley where a landslide could sweep an entire mountain ridge and a village into the river overnight, it is no wonder that the modern sense of time doesn't matter much to them, as their main concern is making out a living with their own hands and sweat.

What's more, Tibetan Buddhism holds that all forms of life live in a cycle of reincarnation. What you are today is a result of what you were in a previous life.

Setting up a similar cyclic plot, Fan turns his novel into a timeless epic.

Interwoven themes

Long after you finish this book, it still lingers on in your mind and propells you to ponder the relations among its intertwining themes or storylines.

It appears that at least three pairs of adversaries serve as central plot lines for the story.

The first pair involves the Tibetan chieftain Yegong Dunzhug Jiacog and Cering Dawa, the leader of another Tibetan tribe.

The two families' centuries-old feud ends in the 1970s, when 14-year-old Yegong Duxi, grandson of Dunzhug Jiacog, sets out alone to kill Cering Dawa. Yet he is saved from the claws of a huge bear by a dying lama, who turns out to be his very enemy.

What's more, the once ruthless killer Cering Dawa voluntarily gives up his life, thereby putting an end to the endless family feud.

As for Yegong Duxi, he eventually falls in love with and marries a Naxi girl in the 1980s, which brings to its culmination another theme of the story: the love and wars between the Tibetan and Naxi people.

The first clash between them is sparked by the fatal love of Yegong Dunzhug Jiacog's elder son and a niece of He Wanxiang, the leader of the Naxi people.

Without hope of getting married, the two commit suicide after singing and dancing in a secret alpine pasture, following a long tradition of the Naxi people.

This incident drives the Naxi people from the cultivated western bank of the Lancang River to the east bank, where they have to start all over again from scratch and endure famine in the process.

But the diligent Naxi people are soon producing pure white salt and selling more than the Tibetan chieftain whose salt doesn't taste as good.

This triggers a second war which ends with the finding of the Soul Boy of the Fifth Raojong Living Buddha, the supreme spiritual leader of the Tibetan people in the valley. When he passes away, the wise Living Buddha chooses to be reborn in the family of He Agui, the Dongba shaman, or spiritual guide, of the Naxi people.

Religion looks after everything

If the second storyline already sounds complicated enough, the third and most significant one, into which the author pours the bulk of his energy, makes the greatest demands on the reader: the relationship between the foreign missionaries and the local people.

When the two French missionaries want to build the first Catholic church in Tibet, they resort to trickery: By claiming they only need a piece of land the size of a cow's skin, they gain the permission of the lamasery.

They wet a cow skin and cut it into one long, thin continuous strand. With this, they enclose a huge expanse of land. This becomes the main reason for a war against the church in the early 1900s.

But in the late 1980s, a young man named Andord believes he has been summoned by God.

Both his great-grandfather and father were killed during clashes between the local people and the church.

Local government officials send the young man to Beijing to study Catholic theology. Soon he returns to the valley to work as a Father.

When he visits the Sixth Raojong Living Buddha, the reincarnation of the Fifth Raojong Living Buddha, Andord does not engage in heated debate about the superiority of Catholicism over Tibetan Buddhism, as his two French predecessors had done nearly a century earlier.

"I have not come to debate," says Andord. "I hope we will never argue with or hate one another. We only want to preach our religion and won't harm yours."

A distant response to this message of peace and an explanation of the book's title, the Fifth Raojong Living Buddha remarks in another chapter: "Although butter won't melt with tea, we Tibetans have a special container to mix buttered tea... Religion looks after all things."

Aside from the clashes between religious leaders, the clash of Catholicism with local people's beliefs is also highlighted in the book.

Peter, the first Tibetan believer baptized by the French missionaries, is killed in the early 1900s.

His great-grand-son, 4-year-old Royce, is recognized as the Soul Boy of a Living Buddha in neighbouring Yunnan Province in the 1990s.

When the boy's deeply worried father seeks guidance from Andord, the young priest is silent. Alone in the chapel, he confers with God: "Oh mighty Lord, this is no longer the time to uphold your glories through debate and battle.

"In the holy cities of Jerusalem and Bethlehem, Islamists and Judaists are still fighting each other with stones, tear gas and even lethal weapons.

"But here in Tibet, we need a peaceful life. Oh, benevolent Lord, I shall give up. One of your lambs is to be cultured by them into a Living Buddha, a deity revered by people of another religion.

"I hope this shall also be your honour."

Enjoyable read

Fan is able to present his diversified characters in their own languages. You hear the Living Buddha talking with great wisdom and unique metaphors; the missionaries calmly preaching when their church was about to be burned.

Reading this book, one no longer feels like a transient tourist on the mysterious plateau, but feels, rather, like a worshipper of the many deities that thrive in this land of devoted Tibetan people.

The only thing lacking in the novel is a list of characters and their relationships, which would make it easier for the reader to follow the complex, interwoven storylines.

But even without it, the reader can still figure his or her way through with a little brain-work, which is part of the great fun in reading this book.

What's more, in an increasingly uniform global world, it is always delightful to experience the spiritual lives of different peoples through an eloquent author.

 
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

Agree to have one child? Get a nice cash reward

 

   
 

Nuke talks in `substantial period'

 

   
 

Ex-factory prices of gasoline, diesel raised

 

   
 

President Hu visits Poland

 

   
 

CAAC approves two private airlines

 

   
 

U.N. endorses Iraq sovereignty transfer

 

   
  Novel offers recipe for religious peace
   
  Help coming in for AIDS orphans
   
  Eminem exposing rear to be edited
   
  Bid to date Tom Cruise or kiss Sharon Stone?
   
  China prepares pageant for 'artificial beauties'
   
  Bund to gain a new face
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Over 70% of villages in Tibet have roads
   
Lifespan per capita in Tibet doubles in decades
   
Tibetan pride high on railway project
   
US$78m earmarked to boost education in Tibet
   
Full Text: Regional Ethnic Autonomy in Tibet
   
China safeguards Tibetan people's full right to autonomy
   
China invests heavily to aid Tibet development
  Feature  
  Beckham signs Gillette deal  
Advertisement
         
主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产成人精品一区二区免费视频 | 全免费a级毛片免费看不卡 全免费a级毛片免费看视频免 | 青青草国产精品久久久久 | 日韩精品一区二区三区在线观看l | 欧美日韩在线成人 | 中文字幕在线国产 | 日韩特级毛片 | 国产一区曰韩二区欧美三区 | 国产精品一区三区 | 欧美精品亚洲二区 | 亚洲精品国产成人 | 久久久久免费精品国产小说 | 北岛玲日韩精品一区二区三区 | 一级特黄aa大片一又好看 | 黄色免费观看视频网站 | 99久久精品免费看国产情侣 | 国产日韩一区在线精品欧美玲 | 欧美日韩国产综合视频在线看 | 一级黄色免费大片 | 国产国产成人久久精品杨幂 | 精品久久国产视频 | 特级xxxxx欧美孕妇孕交 | 免费一级黄色毛片 | 激情视频网站在线观看 | 欧美一级专区免费大片俄罗斯 | 午夜a爱| 国产高清免费在线观看 | 中国一级毛片在线观看 | 欧亚色视频 | 亚欧乱色视频大全 | 国产线视频精品免费观看视频 | 久爱www免费人成福利播放 | 国产97视频在线观看 | 伊人影院99| 黄视频在线观看网站 | 亚洲精品一区二区三区人妖 | 中文字幕不卡一区 二区三区 | 91视频精品| 成年人在线免费观看视频网站 | 日本精品视频一区二区三区 | 五月婷婷精品 |