dali48 and menaced private teaching since 1989, and writing diary & books & photographing in Erkrath, 8/1983 till 5/2010
Each day is our whole life - from sunrise to sunset etc… (dali48)
see dali48 and "Zen finds religion in the daily activities." (I-tuan)
Let go of something you like, and realize how fleeting it is by living without it... (Ayya Khema)
Buddha realized that all living beings suffer because they desire and cling ... - Peace is an inner attitude to life that consists of letting go and renunciation (see e.g. nuns & monks etc. - d.48) ... (Buddha)
„Das Leben im Daseinskreislauf ist leidvoll: Geburt ist Leiden, Altern ist Leiden, Krankheit ist Leiden, Tod ist Leiden; Kummer, Lamentieren, Schmerz und Verzweiflung sind Leiden." (Buddha)
see dali48 and Climate Change since Copenhagen 2009 etc. - "Uncontrolled capitalism is producing evil - as bees are producing honey" etc.
see dali48 and reading & writing about peace etc. - see e.g. Zen and Buddhism & Peace & Dalai Lama, Thich Nhat Hanh, Ayya Khema etc, and St Nicholas, St Hildegard, St Francis, St Martin etc. (dali48)
see dali48 and eating less meat, and more fruits & veggies since the 80s etc.
Homeopathy of S. Hahnemann (ca. 200 years old) should be updated, - i.e. for me more Mother tincture & less shaking, and why is there no homeopathic vaccination? - see "similibus" principle etc. (dali48)
see dali48 and "I hope that Biontech (formerly in Mainz, now in London) & #mRNA #vaccines etc. - will develop a vaccination against cancer etc."
17.11.2019 - Solzhenitsyn and ideology and heart and exile and ... https://dali48.blogspot.com/.../25092017-solzhenitsyn3... see dali48 on Twitter,Google,Blogspot,FB,Pinterest,StumbleUpon,amazon.com/author/dali48
22.09.2008 - Interpretation of dali48
Rejecting the ideology of his youth, Solzhenitsyn came to believe that the struggle between good and evil cannot be resolved among parties, classes or doctrines, but is waged within the individual human heart! - During the Cold War years, this Tolstoyan view and search for Christian morality was considered radical in the ideological atmosphere of the Soviet Union in the 1960s and 1970s. - As with Boris Pasternak, the Soviet government denounced Solzhenitsyn's Nobel Prize as a politically hostile act. - "If Solzhenitsyn continues to reside in the country after receiving the Nobel Prize, it will strengthen his position, and allow him to propaganda his views more actively," wrote the KGB chief Yuri Andropov in a secret - memorandum. In 1974 the author was exiled from the Soviet Union. - He lived first in Switzerland and moved then in 1976 to the United States, where he continued to write series called The Red Wheel, an epic history of the events, that led to the Russian Revolution. - After collapse of the Soviet Union, Solzhenitsyn returned from Vermont to his native land in 1994. The new regime, led by Mikhail S. Gorbachev, had offered to restore his citizenship already in 1990, and next year his treason charges... - were formally dropped. - Solzhenitsyn settled in Moscow, where he continued to criticize western materialism and Russian bureaucracy and secularization. - "For me faith is the foundation and support of one's life," Solzhenitsyn said in a Spiegel interview (July 23, 2007). - Solzhenitsyn (1918 - 2008) died from a heart condition on August 3, 2008! (from Pegasos Author's Calendar)
When Solzhenitsyn was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1970, he was already an outcast in his native country, the Soviet Union. - After the novel "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" and a few short stories he had not been permitted to publish anything. He had been expelled from the Writer's Union, and the harassment from the CP and the KGB, the Comission for State Security, had made him isolated and exposed him to condemnation from the official media. - The Laureate answered that the conditions were "an insult to the Nobel Prize itself" and wondered if the Prize was "something to be ashamed of, something to be concealed from the people"... (by S. Fredrikson, 2006)
Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn (11 December 1918 – 3 August 2008) was a Russian novelist, historian, and short story writer. He was an outspoken critic of ...
Occupation: Novelist; Essayist
Born: Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn; 11 De...
Died: 3 August 2008 (aged 89); Moscow, Russia
Children: Yermolai Solzhenitsyn (born 1970); I...
see dali48 and reading & writing about the Nobel Prize in Literature (Literaturnobelpreisträger 1901 - 2024 etc.)
Prudhomme (1901) | Mommsen (1902) | Bjørnson (1903) | F. Mistral/Echegaray (1904) | Sienkiewicz (1905) | Carducci (1906) | Kipling (1907) | Eucken (1908) | Lagerlöf (1909) | Heyse (1910) | Maeterlinck (1911) | Hauptmann (1912) | Tagore (1913) | nicht verliehen (1914) | Rolland (1915) | Heidenstam (1916) | Gjellerup/Pontoppidan (1917) | nicht verliehen (1918) | Spitteler (1919) | Hamsun (1920) | France (1921) | Benavente (1922) | Yeats (1923) | Reymont (1924) | Shaw (1925) | Deledda (1926) | Bergson (1927) | Undset (1928) | Mann (1929) | Lewis (1930) | Karlfeldt (1931) | Galsworthy (1932) | Bunin (1933) | Pirandello (1934) | nicht verliehen (1935) | O’Neill (1936) | Martin du Gard (1937) | Buck (1938) | Sillanpää (1939) | nicht verliehen (1940–1943) | Jensen (1944) | G. Mistral (1945) | Hesse (1946) | Gide (1947) | Eliot (1948) | Faulkner (1949) | Russell (1950) | Lagerkvist (1951) | Mauriac (1952) | Churchill (1953) | Hemingway (1954) | Laxness (1955) | Jiménez (1956) | Camus (1957) | Pasternak (1958) | Quasimodo (1959) | Perse (1960) | Andrić (1961) | Steinbeck (1962) | Seferis (1963) | Sartre (1964) | Scholochow (1965) | Agnon/Sachs (1966) | Asturias (1967) | Kawabata (1968) | Beckett (1969) | Solschenizyn (1970) | Neruda (1971) | Böll (1972) | White (1973) | Johnson/Martinson (1974) | Montale (1975) | Bellow (1976) | Aleixandre (1977) | Singer (1978) | Elytis (1979) | Miłosz (1980) | Canetti (1981) | García Márquez (1982) | Golding (1983) | Seifert (1984) | Simon (1985) | Soyinka (1986) | Brodsky (1987) | Mahfuz (1988) | Cela (1989) | Paz (1990) | Gordimer (1991) | Walcott (1992) | Morrison (1993) | Ōe (1994) | Heaney (1995) | Szymborska (1996) | Fo (1997) | Saramago (1998) | Grass (1999) | Gao (2000) | Naipaul (2001) | Kertész (2002) | Coetzee (2003) | Jelinek (2004) | Pinter (2005) | Pamuk (2006) | Lessing (2007) | Le Clézio (2008) | Müller (2009) | Vargas Llosa (2010) | Tranströmer (2011) | Mo (2012) | Munro (2013) | Modiano (2014) | Alexijewitsch (2015) | Dylan (2016) | Ishiguro (2017) | Tokarczuk (2018) | Handke (2019) | Glück (2020) | Gurnah (2021) | Ernaux (2022) | Fosse (2023) | Han (2024)
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