Geheimnisvolles Tibet
Der Bruder des Dalai Lama erzählt von einer versunkenen Welt
- 334 pages
- 12 hours of reading






Der Bruder des Dalai Lama erzählt von einer versunkenen Welt
Colin Turnbull lived among the Pygmies as their friend for three years. He writes about their hunting parties, their nomadic camps, their quarrels and love affairs, their music and their ceremonies. His is a magnificent account of an earthly paradise and of a legendary and utterly delightful people.
This edition has been revised and updated to bring the story of Singapore's history up to the 1988 elections. It describes the period after 1975, a time of consolidation and steady progress, during which the Republic was one of the most stable and prosperous countries in Asia.
In this brilliant book, the author, Colin Turnbull, former Curator of African Ehtnology at the American Museum of Natural History believes there is a power unity tht binds all African cultures, one that may link them to black Americans.
This Remarkable Account Of Tibet Where History, Religion And Everyday Life Are Interwomen As Nowhere Else Is The Joint Work Of The Elder Brother Of The Present Dalai Lama And A Distinguished European Anthropologist.
A Celebration of Man & Nature for the 75th Anniversary of Natural History Magazine
Selected from Natural History and Edited by Alan Ternes.
This classic work describes the author's experiences while living with the BaMbuti Pygmies, not as a clinical observer, but as their friend learning their customs and sharing their daily life. Turnbull conveys the lives and feelings of the BaMbuti whose existence centers on their intense love for their forest world, which, in return for their affection and trust, provides their every need. We witness their hunting parties and nomadic camps; their love affairs and ancient ceremonies -- the molimo, in which they praise the forest as provider, protector, and deity; the elima, in which the young girls come of age; and the nkumbi circumcision rites, in which the villagers of the surrounding non-Pygmy tribes attempt to impose their culture on the Pygmies, whose forest home they dare not enter.