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My Journey to
Lhasa
by Alexandra
David-Neel
ISBN
080705903X
Publisher: Beacon Press
In any time, Alexandra David-Neel
would have been considered an extraordinary woman, but in the Victorian era,
she was truly exceptional. Born in 1868, David-Neel eschewed the dances,
dinners, and formal marriages common to women of her era and social standing
in order to indulge her fierce independence and insatiable intellectual
curiosity. Her interest in comparative religions dated back to early
childhood; even as a student in a Catholic convent school, she kept statues
of both Christ and the Buddha in her room. She made her first trip to Asia
in 1891, then supported herself as a light-opera singer and journalist
before marrying a seemingly conventional man, Philip Neel. Fortunately for
both Alexandra David-Neel and for posterity, Philip was less stodgy than his
position as a well-off engineer might imply; though he did not accompany
her, he supported his wife's explorations and even acted as her literary
agent when she began to write about the places she visited. Alexandra and
Philip remained the closest of friends until his death in 1941.
David-Neel spent years
traveling in India and China, but perhaps her most daring adventure was the
trip to Tibet's forbidden city of Lhasa. She was 55 years old at the time,
fluent in Tibetan and well versed in both Sanskrit and Buddhism. Disguised
as a man, she spent four treacherous months on the road before finally
becoming the first European woman ever to enter Lhasa. My Journey to
Lhasa is David-Neel's own account of her astounding journey, one fraught
with hardship and danger. It is both a chronicle of a bygone time and a
testimonial to a remarkable human.
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