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Kuan Yin
Myths and Prophecies of the Chinese Goddess of Compassion
Rating :
rating
Author(s) :
Martin Palmer
 
Jay Ramsay
Pages :
226
Pub Date :
1995
Edition(s) at Erowid :
1995(pb)
Publisher :
Thorsons
ISBN :
1855384175
BACK COVER #
Kuan Yin is the most important and best loved deity of the Chinese world. She is the living expression of compassion, whose gentle face and elegant figure form a centre of devotion in most Chinese homes and workplaces. Yet she is barely known in the West and few studies have been made of her. The authors of this book have travelled all over China in search of her true story and origins within Buddhism, Taoism and the female shamans of China. Now, in her universal mystery and power of divine feminine, she transcends all doctrines, creeds and traditions.

The beautiful poetry of the 100 Prophecies of Kuan Yin is her translated into English for the first time. These poems are used as a method of divination, to gain insight into the depths of the soul. With the myths, they form the heart of this new look at one of the most powerful but least known goddesses.

BLURBS #
"Kuan Yin vividly documents the continual reassertion of the human need to rearticulate the feminine in the divine. It tells a compelling story that reads like a detective mystery, sheds new light on both Chinese and Western religions, and shows that the contemporary rassertion of the Goddess in the hearts and minds of women and men is actually a recurrent cross-cultural theme."
-- Riane Eisler, author of The Chalice and the Blade

"We learn something about Kuan Yin's great significance, her enchanting statues and temples, but also about the literature she inspired, especially a collection of 100 poems full of wisdom and great beauty which have been translated in this book with much sensitivity and insight, almost for the first time."
-- Ursula King, Professor of Theology and Religious Studies, University of Bristol

ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S) / EDITOR(S) #
Martin Palmer, the Director of the International Consultancy on Religion, Education and Culture (ICOREC), is an expert on interfaith work, author of many books and translator of numerous ancient Chinese texts, including the I Ching and Tao Te Ching.

Jay Ramsay is an acclaimed poet, teacher and therapist. His main work is The Great Return and he is particularly interested in the role of the artist-healer.

Man-Ho Kwok trained for 20 years with Taoist and Buddhist masters in Hong Kong, and is now the foremost practioner of traditional Chinese religion in Britain. He is a renowned Chinese scholar and translator.