In the Presence of My Enemies
   Author: Carnahan, Sumner
   ISBN: 1574160451  

IN THE PRESENCE OF MY ENEMIES
Memoirs of a Tibetan Nobleman

1574160451
By Sumner Carnahan & Lama Kunga Rinpoche
Introduction by His Holiness the Dalai Lama
32 photos, 256 pages, 6 x 9, CLPPRESENCEPB (paper) $14.95

The Tibetan catastrophe--the brutal ongoing campaign to stamp out every trace of Tibetan identity, culture, and civilization--continues unchecked after more than 35 years.

His Holiness the Fourteenth Dalai Lama of Tibet writes: "This is an important book. The story must be told." In 1991, at their first meeting in thirty years, the Dalai Lama urged his former finance minster to complete his story about Tibet as it was and about what happened there after his own escape in 1959. "Do not exaggerate," he said. "Just speak the truth."

Simply and without bitterness, Shuguba tells his story: he speaks of the Chinese invasion and Tibetan military resistance against overwhelming odds; the bombings, executions, and massacres; the deaths of his wife and daughter; and his own "trial" and nineteen-year imprisonment. The last surviving high official from the 14th Dalai Lama's original government in Tibet, Tsipon Shuguba reveals information that was concealed from the outside world for over three decades. His recollections of his earlier life offer intimate views of a unique traditional society that is now all but extinct. After his release in 1980, Shuguba spent his last years in the United States, where he died in 1991 at the age of eighty-seven.

This moving personal account is based on Shuguba's autobiography supplemented by many hours of interviews conducted by writer Sumner Carnahan and translated by Lama Kunga Rinpoche, a Tibetan high lama who is one of Shuguba's sons. The book includes rare photos of Shuguba's family and associates as well as views of monasteries and other Tibetan cultural treasures that have since been destroyed.

About the Authors: Carnahan is the author of two collections of stories, The Time Is Now and Thirteen, as well as fiction, essays and profiles published in magazines and anthologies including the City Lights Review. In 1987 the National Endowment for the Arts designated The Guests Go in to Supper, which Carnahan originated and edited, as one of the "best independent press books" of the year. She received an M.F.A. from Mills College and has studied classical Tibetan. Originally from Corpus Christi, Texas, Sumner Carnahan has lived in New Mexico since 1989.

Lama Kunga Rinpoche is the former Vice-Abbot of Ngor Monastery in Tibet. Born in Lhasa, Tibet, in 1935 and recognized as a tulku (a reincarnated high lama), he was brought to the United States in 1962. He is the founder and resident lama at Ewam Choden Tibetan Buddhist Meditation Center near San Francisco. Rinpoche has recorded songs of Milarepa on the Lovely Music label for composer Eliane Radique and is co-translator of two volumes of sacred stories and songs: Drinking the Mountain Stream and Miraculous Journey.

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