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The Gate to Paradise
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12927 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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5 / 1987 |
4,819 Words |
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Peter Kreeft Peter Kreeft is professor of philosophy at Boston College.
Among his books are Making Sense Out of Suffering (Servant
Publications). |
There can be only a few books - perhaps a few dozen - that have such power that they make you a different person in some way for the rest of your life. The dimming of your memory of the details of such a book with the passing of the years will not erase the permanent new slant it has given you.
How could I ever have predicted that The City of Joy would be such a book for me? It was the least likely kind of book for me to buy. I dislike long books, for one thing. I also dislike "slice-of-life" documentaries, especially ones about the gritty, ugly problems of life like poverty. While I am at my confessions, let me also confess that I have always disliked India. My stomach cannot digest Indian food, my mind cannot digest Indian philosophy, and my emotions cannot digest Indian fatalism. I also hate crowds, heat, and dirt. India is probably the last country in the world I would want to live in.
And yet I could not help falling in fascination (I will not quite say "falling in love") with India because of this book, and especially with that quintessentially Indian city, Calcutta. Underlying the many real heroes and heroines that live and die in its pages, the most massive presence in this book is Calcutta herself, that doddering dowager, that incorrigible hoyden, that earth mother breeding life infected with death and suffering infected with joy. She is both the great villain and the great heroine of this book. She is life itself.
What drew me to the book? At first the title, then the faces on the photo just inside the cover - the mingled joy and sorrow, the innocence, the intensity of the eyes. You do not see such passion, such eyes in this
... (1997 of 27056 Characters)
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