Daily Archive for August 17th, 2007

Interview for Beliefnet

Last fall, when I did a live online chat with the best-selling Brazilian author of The Alchemist and about 14 other novels, I was astounded by his sheer internationality. Talking to me in New York from his hotel in Milan, questions from his fans poured in from Egypt, Sweden, Spain, Iran. They wanted to know where he gets his ideas, what are his rituals, how they can search for their own inner treasure.
 
Please visit beliefnet to continue to read the interview written by Valerie Reiss.

Our Lady’s juggler

By Paulo Coelho


 
According to a medieval legend, Our Lady, with the Baby Jesus in her arms, decided to come down to Earth to visit a monastery.
 
Feeling very proud, the monks formed a long line and each stood in turn before the Virgin, wanting to pay tribute to mother and son. One read out some beautiful poems, others showed the illuminations they had made for the Bible, a third recited the names of all the saints. And so it went on, with monk after monk displaying his talent and his devotion.
 
Bringing up the rear was the most humble monk in the monastery, who had never read the learned texts of the age. His parents had been simple folk who had worked in a local circus, and the only thing they had taught him was to do a few juggling tricks with balls.
 
When it came to his turn, the other monks wanted to bring the tributes to a close because the former juggler had nothing important to say and might spoil the monastery’s image.
 
However, deep in his heart, he too felt a great need to give something of himself to Jesus and to the Virgin.
 
Greatly embarrassed and feeling his brothers’ disapproving eyes on him, he took a few oranges out of his pocket and began juggling with them, since it was the only thing he knew how to do.
 
It was then that the Baby Jesus smiled and began to clap his hands, as he sat in Our Lady’s lap. And it was to this monk that the Virgin held out her arms and allowed him to hold the child for a moment.

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A Day in Summer - 15 August 2008


 

Please visit Paulo’s PhotoBlog
to view photos of A Day in Summer - 15 August 2008

Photos from a Spanish reader, thank you Isabel

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Elizabeth has read ‘The Prophet’ by Kahlil Gibran

After twelve years in the city of Orphalese, the prophet. Mustafa, is beginning his return journey home. As he makes his way to the ship, the townsfolk question him on the meaning of various issues central to daily life. On topics like love, marriage, friendship, giving and many others, Gibran offers his mediations through the prophet’s imparted advice and sayings.
 
Hailed by many to be Gibran’s best work, The Prophet was published in the 1920s and contains 26 poetic essays that will invite you to contemplate the inner self. It enables one to have a clearer sense of yourself and of those that surround us all.
 


  “Love gives naught but itself and takes naught but from itself, Love possesses not nor would it be possessed; For love is sufficient unto love.”
 
  “For what is your friend that you should seek him with hours to kill?
  Seek him always with hours to live.
  For it is his to fill your need, but not your emptiness.
  And in the sweetness of friendship let there be laughter, and sharing of pleasures.
  For in the dew of little things the heart finds its morning and is refreshed.”
 

While these lines may appear a tad trite to the cynical, they did strike a chord in me with their eloquence. These simple words carry great spiritual weight, provoking me to re-think my existing concepts of self, happiness and my relationships to the outside world.
 
Somewhat similar to Paulo Coelho’s The Alchemist, this book does have a spiritual slant to it. But, the religious aspect does not overpower the intended aim of the essays In fact, if you replace it with Christianity or Buddhism or even Catholicism, the effect will not be jarring at all and the flow and pacing of the book will still remain uninterrupted. In the end, the concept of “God” is irrelevant in this context.
 
The quest for meaning in life is indeed complex and this challenge has been taken on by many learned and wise philosphers, ever since Man has gained consciousness of the self-concept. Let Kahlil Gibran strip away the myriad of hidden layers of Life and be enlightened on matters that will illuminate new perceptions.
 
This article is contributed by Elizabeth Lee, Librarian, Children’s Services @ High Browse Online