Mittwoch, 9. Oktober 2024

09.10.2024 - 14th Dalai Lama and peaceful dwelling etc. / dali48 and meditating & cycling & photographing etc.

dali48 and menaced private tuition since 1989, and writing diary & books and photographing in Erkrath, 8/1983 till 5/2010
Each day is our whole life - from sunrise to sunset etc… (dali48) 
Let go of something you like, and realize how fleeting it is by living without it... (Ayya Khema / dali48) 
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 / dali48) 
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)
Bilder
Amazon.de: dali48: books, biography, latest update
ediary4 by dali48

siehe „Eine Gesellschaft ohne Gott, ist wie eine gut organisierte Räuberbande“, hat Papst Benedikt den Bundestagsabgeordneten ins Stammbuch geschrieben. (dali48)
27.12.2000 - Interpretation of dali48
This peaceful dwelling - which destroys suffering - is acquired by those who love it not to adhere to the world... (14th Dalai Lama)

The 14th Dalai Lama (religious name: Tenzin Gyatso, shortened from Jetsun Jamphel Ngawang Lobsang Yeshe Tenzin Gyatso; born Lhamo Thondup; 6 July 1935) is the current Dalai LamaDalai Lamas are important monks of the Gelug school, the newest school of Tibetan Buddhism, which was formally headed by the Ganden Tripas.
Mother‎: ‎Diki Tsering
Religion‎: ‎Gelug school of ‎Tibetan Buddhism
Father‎: ‎Choekyong Tsering
Reign‎: ‎22 February 1940 – present

see dali48 and Meditation etc. - Lake Morper, 1983 - 2010...

https://plus.google.com/.../posts/FvPJ2ZU9Zpm
Wolfgang G. Greiner – 5 Sep 2012 – 
see dali48 and Meditation etc. - Lake Morper, 1983 - 2010... Mit der Wasser-Meditation die Kraft des Lebens spüren...


 Photos of Diary3 by Dali48 on Twitter - Goldfish
www.goodreads.com/.../13682066-diary-3by-dali48-on-twitte...
Goldfish & Oak root at Lake Morper in Erkrath/Germany 1983-2010. Uploaded at: Dec 14, 2011 06:14am Views: 35 flag. Uploaded by: Wolfgang G. Goldfish & Oak ...

"Write your life - Or they'll wait till you're dead to write the lie"...  (@spectraspeaks)



09.10.2024 - Jaroslav Seifert and Nobel Prize 1984 and The Plague Column and Human Rights etc.


dali48 and menaced private tuition since 1989, and writing diary & books and photographing in Erkrath, 8/1983 till 5/2010

Each day is our whole life - from sunrise to sunset etc… (dali48) 
Let go of something you like, and realize how fleeting it is by living without it... (Ayya Khema / dali48) 
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 / dali48) 
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)

Bilder
Amazon.de: dali48: books, biography, latest update
ediary4 by dali48

05.03.2008 - Interpretation von dali48 
Jaroslav Seifert (1901-1986) Poet and journalist who was the first Czech to win the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1984. Seifert was the last great representative of Czech avant-garde... - Seifert was born in Ziskov, a working-class suburb of Prague, into a poor family. His father was manager of a small general store. To help him, Seifert spent his afternoons delivering goods to customers throughout Prague... - In 1929 he was expelled from the Communist Party and the "Devetsil collective" (an avant-garde literary movement in the 1920s)... - In 1938 appeared Seifert's prophetic (Put Out the Lights), after the betrayal of Czechoslovakia at Munich. The title work, about the Nazi threat hanging over Prague, is one of his most famous poems... - He identified himself fully with the people's grief, and interpreted the commonly shared feelings of betrayal and hope for survival... - In 1966 he was named Poet of the Nation... - "What's all this talk about grey hair / and wisdom? / When the bush of life burns down / experience is worthless / Indeed it always has been"... (from The Plague Column)

In 1968 Seifert condemned the Soviet invasion of his country - which aimed to stop all liberal tendencies... - During the 1970s, his works circulated in underground editions. In 1977 he signed among 500 others the Charter on Human Rights... - In this memoir Seifert recreated the spirit of the Czech avant-garde between the 2 World Wars and during the Nazi occupation. - Too old and ill to travel to Stockholm for the prize, the poet welcomed the news from his hospital bed... - Seifert died in Prague in 1986. As a People's Artist, Seifert was entitled to a state funeral. - It became a national event... (Pegasus Author's Calendar)

Interpretation of dali48
Jaroslav Seifert (1901 – 1986) was a Nobel Prize winning Czech writer, poet and journalist... - Born in Žižkov, a suburb of Prague in what was then part of Austria-Hungary, his first collection of poems was published in 1921... - During the 1920s he was considered a leading representative of the Czechoslovakian artistic avant-garde. He was one of the founders of the journal Devětsil... - In March 1929, he and six other important communist writers left the Communist Party for signing a manifesto protesting against Bolshevik tendencies in the new leadership of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia... - He subsequently worked as a journalist in the social-democratic and trade union press during the 1930s and 1940s... - In 1949 Seifert left journalism and began to devote himself exclusively to literature... - His poetry was awarded important state prizes in 1936, 1955, and 1968, and in 1967 he was designated National Artist... - He was the official Chairman of the Czechoslovak Writer's Union for several years (1968–70)... - In 1977 he was one of the signatories of Charter 77 in opposition to the repressive regime of the time... - Seifert was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1984. Due to bad health, he was not present at the award ceremony, - and so his daughter received the Nobel Prize in his name... - Even though it was a matter of great importance - there was only a brief remark of the award in the state-controlled media... - He died in 1986, aged 84, and was buried at the municipal cemetery in Kralupy nad Vltavou (where his maternal grandparents originated from)... - His burial was marked by a high presence of secret police - who tried to suppress any hint of dissent on the part of mourners... (Wikipedia)

Jaroslav Seifert was a Nobel Prize–winning Czechoslovak writer, poet and journalist. In 1984 Jaroslav Seifert won the Nobel Prize in Literature "for his poetry ...
Died‎: ‎10 January 1986 (aged 84); ‎Prague‎, Cz...
Born‎: ‎23 September 1901; ‎Žižkov‎, Austria-Hun...



09.10.2024 - Wisława Szymborska & Nobelpreis 1996 & alltägliche Begebenheiten & ironische Lyrik etc.

dali48 and menaced private tuition since 1989, and writing diary & books and photographing in Erkrath, 8/1983 till 5/2010

Each day is our whole life - from sunrise to sunset etc… (dali48) 
Let go of something you like, and realize how fleeting it is by living without it... (Ayya Khema / dali48) 
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 / dali48) 
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)

Bilder
Amazon.de: dali48: books, biography, latest update
ediary4 by dali48
diary 3 : by dali48 on twitter (Paperback)

Maria Wisława Anna Szymborska war eine polnische Lyrikerin. Sie zählt zu den bedeutendsten Lyrikern ihrer Generation in Polen, wo ihre Gedichte zur Nationalliteratur gerechnet werden. Wikipedia

Häufig betrachtet sie alltägliche Begebenheiten aus ungewöhnlichen Perspektiven, die zu allgemeinen philosophischen Fragestellungen führen.

Zeitlebens trennte Wisława Szymborska strikt zwischen ihrem literarischen Werk und dem persönlichen Leben, das sie weitgehend privat hielt. Details ihrer Biografie wurden in der Öffentlichkeit kaum bekannt.[1]

1948 brach sie ihr Studium ohne Abschluss ab und heiratete den polnischen Literaten Adam Włodek (1922–1986). Er war Chefredakteur der Wochenendbeilage der Tageszeitung Dziennik Polski, in der Szymborskas erstes Gedicht erschien. Auch nach der Scheidung im Jahr 1954 blieben sie einander freundschaftlich verbunden.[9]

Im Dezember 1981 beendete Szymborska ihre Redaktionstätigkeit in der Życie Literackie. Mit diesem Schritt protestierte sie gegen die Ausrufung des Kriegsrechts in Polen.

1990 starb Kornel Filipowicz, der langjährige Lebensgefährte Szymborskas, mit dem sie seit 1967 liiert war. Die Beziehung der beiden Literaten, die niemals zusammengelebt hatten, beschrieb Szymborska als „zwei Pferde, die nebeneinander galoppieren“.[15] Nach seinem Tod zog sich Szymborska eine Zeit lang zurück und verarbeitete ihre Trauer in einigen Gedichten, darunter auch das populäre Katze in der leeren Wohnung.[16]

Ihre Verehrung galt den Schriftstellern Thomas MannJonathan SwiftMontaigneSamuel Pepys und Charles Dickens, dem Maler Jan Vermeer, dem Regisseur Federico Fellini und der Sängerin Ella Fitzgerald.

Am 1. Februar 2012 starb Szymborska, die an Lungenkrebs erkrankt war.

Auch Humor und Ironie dienen dieser Funktion einer Verschleierung der Tiefe und Ernsthaftigkeit ihrer Lyrik.[36] Jerzy Kwiatkowski charakterisiert Szymborskas Poesie: „Sie tut so, als gelte ihr Schreiben ganz alltäglichen Dingen […] Sie tut so, als wäre es kinderleicht, Gedichte zu schreiben. Schließlich versteckt sie den tragischen, den bitteren Sinn ihrer Poesie. Sie tut so, als berühre sie das alles nicht so tief.“[37]

Marcel Reich-Ranicki zieht das Fazit, dass Szymborskas „sehr durchdachte, ironische Lyrik etwas in Richtung der philosophischen Lyrik tendiert. Entscheidend ist jedoch die sprachliche Kraft ihrer Lyrik“.[40]

see dali48 and reading & writing about the Nobel Prize in Literature (siehe Literaturnobelpreisträger 1957 - 2023 etc.)
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)