by Martha Sherrill ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 1, 2000
A fascinating indepth examination of spirituality in America, and a close look at the fine line between religion and cult.
The unique story of an American woman whose life was launched on an ``extraordinary trajectory'' after she was identified as the reincarnation of a16th-century Tibetan saint.
In 1984, Catherine Borroughs was leading a spiritual group in Maryland when a visiting Buddhist leader recognized her to be a tulka—an enlightened creature who returns to earth to help ``sentient beings,'' or all living things. She had taught her students something incredibly close to Tibetan Buddhism without ever having learned it, as if remembered from a previous life. She takes the name Jetsunma, and Washington Post reporter Sherrill casts both a critical and a sympathetic eye on this powerful, inspiring, and rather bizarre woman. Jetsunma founds the largest Tibetan monastery in America, telling her students that ``the future of Dharma in the west'' depends on their example. The Tibetan practice, offering a quick path to enlightenment, has a particularly American appeal, explains Sherrill, and the nexus of eastern and western cultures that she documents is stunning. Faced with the task of performing the 100,000 prostrations required in a Buddhist purification rite, students dress as if for aerobics class and keep count on ``plastic clickercounters.'' Even after her recognition, Jetsunma wears red acrylic fingernails and works out at Bally's in thongs and tank tops to lure a student into her group. Jetsunma's constant fight with obesity, her fourth divorce, and her love affairs with students are all parts of this puzzling story. Immersed the world of Jetsunma and her students, Sherrill's journalism captures the humor of the culture clash as well as the subtle emotional and social influences of the Tibetan practice on members of the group.
A fascinating indepth examination of spirituality in America, and a close look at the fine line between religion and cult.Pub Date: April 1, 2000
ISBN: 0-679-45275-3
Page Count: 304
Publisher: Random House
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2000
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by Rushworth M. Kidder ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 24, 1995
Whatever happened to the discipline of ethics? At a time when moral questions tend to be argued with more heat than light, Kidder offers practical guidelines for a coherent and mindful approach to ethical dilemmas. In the early morning hours of April 26, 1986, two electrical engineers, working at the control panel of Reactor Number Four at Chernobyl, overrode six separate alarm systems to see how long the turbine would free-wheel when the power was removed. For Kidder (Shared Values for a Troubled World, not reviewed), the ensuing catastrophe is a parable of why ethics matters. Founder of the Institute for Global Ethics, he deals not so much with the problem of choosing between right and wrong as with the daily dilemmas of choosing between right and right. Should I always tell all the truth? Should I divulge professional information that may help others but will certainly ruin an individual's life? Kidder spotlights the contemporary concern for ethical standards in corporations while guiding us through the thought of Aristotle, Kant, Bentham, and others. He posits four models for dilemmas of right vs. right: the clashes between truth and loyalty, individual and community, short-term and long-term goods, justice and mercy. He goes on to propose three principles he believes will enable us to resolve moral dilemmas: consideration of the likely consequences of our decision, knowledge of the laws of conduct, and adherence to the Golden Rule that we should do as we would be done to. Finally, Kidder lays out a practical scheme for approaching problematic situations and looks at complex modern questions such as computer hacking and ways of combatting AIDS. He offers no answers, instead giving readers a program for energetic self-reflection. A brilliant and practical synthesis that squarely faces all the issues and can be grasped by the thoughtful nonspecialist.
Pub Date: Jan. 24, 1995
ISBN: 0-688-13442-4
Page Count: 224
Publisher: Morrow/HarperCollins
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 1994
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by Mary A. Bell ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 30, 2010
Faith-based poetry that aims to inspire.
The word “triumph” can signify both the act of obtaining a victory and the victory itself and the 37 poems and four prose pieces that comprise this book each aim to tap into the duality of the title’s meaning, offering the reader snapshots of success—or the ways in which to obtain it. In clear, unadorned language and simple imagery, the poems reassure the reader that life’s struggles and difficulties will not last forever: the thorn-covered path will eventually clear, as it does in “False Premise”, and the darkness will end with a new light, as in “The Raven Banished”. These hope-laden poems encourage the reader to escape the chaos and violence of the modern world by seeking emotional and spiritual sustenance. For Bell, this nourishment and the calm that accompanies it can only come from faith in God: “My will and mine alone had caused my pain; / Apart from God, I sought for peace in vain”. As a result what transpires is a collection filled with poems depicting domestic refuge (“The Dream”), springtime renewal (“Spring At Last”, “Fragrance”) and recapitulations of the New Testament stories of Jesus’ crucifixion and resurrection (“It Is Finished”, “Different”, “Judas” and “Rejoice”). Less successful are the four short prose pieces that close the collection, primarily due to their heavy-handed retelling of the biblical tales of Joseph, Pilate and the prodigal son. While this collection offers very little that is new or daring in terms of language and form—limiting itself to a comfort zone of free verse, rhyming couplets and haiku—it does tap into universal questions about our existence. Many may find the heavy Christian message in this volume limiting but readers of a similar mindset to Bell’s may discover that this book sparks spiritual contemplation and personal reflection. A collection with admirable intent.
Pub Date: April 30, 2010
ISBN: 978-1-4415-4232-8
Page Count: 56
Publisher: Xlibris
Review Posted Online: June 21, 2010
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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