While only a young man, Orgyen Trinley Dorje's life has been marked indelibly by devotion, intrigue, and transformation. The Politics of Reincarnation is his amazing story.
For Westerners, Tibet is a land of powerful spiritual teachings, staggering mountain vistas, and geopolitical intrigue. The country's resistance to Chinese occupation, and also the growing presence of Tibetan Buddhism in the West, are not just part of our daily news but of the Western consciousness as well. In January 2000, interest hit a peak as fourteen-year-old Orgyen Trinley Dorje was thrust upon the world stage. Recognized as the Seventeenth Karmapa-arguably the second most powerful figure in the Tibetan Buddhist religious hierarchy-he made a dramatic escape from his Chinese Communist overseers to the land of the Buddha's birth, India, so that he could study with the masters of his religious lineage, follow his conscience, and be a leader to his people.
Through wide-ranging research and interviews with key figures, including the Karmapa himself, award-winning journalist Lea Terhune unlocks the riveting tale of the Karmapa's disputed incarnation, and traces the roots of the Kagyu tradition and the history of the previous Karmapas in order to illuminate the tale of the young man born to play a key role in the future of Tibet.
I really like this book. It reads like a fifth graders history text book but it's filled with so much information about the whole Karmapa lineage. I relived the moment I read about Karmapa's flight from a Reader's Digest back in the year 2000. Also, the book cleared the confusion I always had about having two Karmapas', although the author reads off as being slightly biased in that regard.
A wonderful addition to my never ending quest to strengthen my faith in Buddhism.