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Nine Lives: In Search of the Sacred in Modern India (Vintage Departures)

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From the author of The Last Mughal, an enlightening book that explores with remarkable compassion and expansive insight nine varieties of religious devotion in India today.

In portraits of people we might otherwise never know William Dalrymple distills his twenty-five years of travel in India to explore the challenges faced by practitioners of traditional forms of faith in contemporary India. For two months a year, a man in Kerala divides his time between jobs as a prison warden and a well-builder and his calling as an incarnate deity. A temple prostitute watches her two daughters die from AIDS after entering a trade she regards as a sacred calling. A Jain nun recalls the pain of watching her closest friend ritually starve herself to death.

Together, these tales reveal the resilience of individuals in the face of the relentless onslaught of modernity, the enduring legacy of tradition, and the hope and honor that can be found even in the most unlikely places.

Editorial Reviews

Review

"A singular achievement. . . . A deeply respectful and sympathetic portrait of those modest souls seldom mentioned in the headlines." —Pico Iyer, Time

"Not only a masterful text, but also an extaordinarily important work." —
San Francisco Chronicle

"Fascinating and sometimes painfully moving. . . . This is the India we seldom see, peopled by obscure people whose lives are made vivid by their eloquent troubles and reckless piety." —
The New York Times Book Review

"[This is] the age for writers like Mr. Dalrymple, who fall in with the rhythms and languages of foreign lands. Nine Lives shows us lives hidden almost entirely from Western readers. . . opening up the world in a compelling way." —Wall Street Journal

“Informed, compassionate, and careful to place the emphasis where it belongs: on the extraordinary people whose stories [Dalrymple] conveys.” —
Harper’s
 
“Strikingly colorful. . . . [Dalrymple’s] point—which he makes elegantly by quoting many voices—is that, as India hurtles toward modernity, it may be losing some of its soul.” —
The Washington Post
 
“Luminous. . . . Consists of nine riveting and thickly reported tales of individual devotion, which together summon up a whole world and sometimes end with devastating twists. . . . Nine Lives will only enhance [Dalrymple’s] reputation.” –
The New Republic
 
“Fulfills the premise that a master artist can make something very difficult look easy. . . . You don’t have to know a thing about India to enjoy this book, but when you’re done you will know and appreciate much more about its people and their various lives—of the body, of the spirit and of the heart.” —
The Seattle Times
 
“Fascinating. . . . These might seem like exotic characters, but Dalrymple allows them to tell their own stories, and they emerge as deeply sympathetic and human.” —
Newsday
 
“Triumphant. . . . Not only illuminates India’s relationship with religion but casts the genre itself in a new light. . . . A wise and rewarding book fizzing with Dalrymple’s signature erudition and lightness of touch. . . . The travel book of the year.” —
The Guardian (London)
 
“An absolutely beautiful book, clean and honest and edifying and moving. . . . It’s a delight.” —Elizabeth Gilbert, author of
Eat, Pray, Love
 
“A wonderful pageant of believers whose stories are as much about spirituality as about society.”—
Christian Science Monitor
 
“Moving. . . His nine articulate individuals are from highly distinctive and unusual milieus, and they embody the tensions and ideals of the great Indian systems of belief in personal, often painful ways. Taken together, they easily subvert conventional notions about Indian religiosity and provide an excellent antidote to much of what one reads in English about Hinduism, Buddhism, and Islam.” —
New York Review of Books
 
“Not since Kipling has anyone evoked village India so movingly. . . . The book gives an answer to Christopher Hitchens, Richard Dawkins and those who would condemn all religions for the sake of the fanatical fringe.” —Wendy Doniger,
Times Literary Supplement
 
“Straightforward reporting, clear writing and empathetic listening.” —
The Plain Dealer
 
“An absorbing book. . . . Dalrymple is a lively, knowledgeable and sympathetic guide to this world of faith.” —
The Daily Telegraph
 
“Exquisite. . . . William Dalrymple dazzles us with stories of how a deeper reality strokes the fire of life in the recesses of our souls. . . . By peering into the secret passages of their psyches, we learn more about our own self, our fantasies, our shadows, our longings, our hidden potential.” —Deepak Chopra

About the Author

William Dalrymple is the author of six previous acclaimed works of history and travel, including City of Djinns, which won the Young British Writer of the Year Prize and the Thomas Cook Travel Book Award; the best-selling From the Holy Mountain; White Mughals, which won Britain’s most prestigious history prize, the Wolfson; and The Last Mughal, which won the Duff Cooper Prize for History and Biography. He divides his time between New Delhi and London, and is a contributor to The New York Review of Books, The New Yorker, and The Guardian.

Review:

4.7 out of 5

94.00% of customers are satisfied

5.0 out of 5 stars Nine Beliefs

D.Z. · April 11, 2013

(function() { P.when('cr-A', 'ready').execute(function(A) { if(typeof A.toggleExpanderAriaLabel === 'function') { A.toggleExpanderAriaLabel('review_text_read_more', 'Read more of this review', 'Read less of this review'); } }); })(); .review-text-read-more-expander:focus-visible { outline: 2px solid #2162a1; outline-offset: 2px; border-radius: 5px; } For those that have walked the city bazaars and country lanes of India, finding skeletal ascetics dressed in only wrapped cloth and festival dancers wildly possessed, this book will open your understanding. Dalrymple charms with luscious scenes--"Two hills of blackly gleaming granite, smooth as glass, rise from a thickly wooded landscape of banana plantations and jagged palmyra palms"--and personal testimony of each life--". . . we were sent off to a cave for four months to practice praying in solitude. We were supposed to master the art of being a hermit, of being alone." But mainly, his nine subjects unravel spiritual mysteries.What is fascinating is not the western view of these sacred souls, but rather, their continuing local esteem and profound influence on Indian society.In A NUN'S TALE, Mataji, the pampered daughter of a wealthy merchant, at fourteen, joins a Jain community. Monks and nuns of Jainism, one of the world's most ancient religions, pluck out their hair by the roots, cannot handle money, and cannot beg for food but may use an arm gesture to show hunger. They are known for their respect for all life, which is why they wear a cloth shield before their mouth to avoid inhaling bugs, and are forbidden to walk after rains when invisible life may inhabit puddles. After her initiation, Mataji walks from village to village, never staying long anywhere, because, as a nun, she must eliminate all worldly attachments.Yearly, Hari Das works nine months, manually building deep wells during the week and serving as a jail warden on weekends. But for three winter months he is seized by a god, enters a trance, and THE DANCER OF KANNUR quivers and shakes into frenzied twirling and leaping before thousands of devotees, who believe he has the power to end epidemics, give jobs, and help women conceive healthy children.Though Dalrymple illuminates the reader with vivid myths, histories, and settings, his personal interviews are sometimes depressing. For centuries, low caste, poor parents dedicated their infant daughters to the temple of the goddess Yellamma. Formerly, THE DAUGHTERS OF YELLAMMA held honored positions as courtesans, but today they are simply sex workers. Rani Bai's father dedicated her to the temple at 6 and sold her to a shepherd when 14. Eventually, with her striking beauty, she prospered at a Bombay brothel, then, toting her two children, moved back to her village, plying her trade. She is now dying of AIDS. Like other temple initiates, she attends the month-long Yellama festival in Saundatti, where devotees bring her gifts and Brahmins touch her feet and pray to her, whom they revere as the incarnation of the goddess.Having lived in Muslim countries for many years, I was particularly curious about Sufism in THE RED FAIRY. Muslim Pakistani Lal Peri, a dark-skinned woman dressed in red, body dust-smeared, dances with a giant club held high in the shrine of a Sufi saint. Sufi rituals involve music, poetry, dance, and female participation, much to the dismay of orthodox Muslim Wahhabis, who consider Sufism perverted, and feverishly fund their own madrasas across Pakistan.Dalrymple's Hemingwayesque writing--reporting observations without opinions--makes this an honest, thorough study, a remarkable work.

4.0 out of 5 stars Wow

m. · March 30, 2021

Reading al the weird religious beliefs in India. Felt really sad for most of them. Self abnegation and abuse from society. If you are Indian and want to understand the religious pathology in India, read this book.

5.0 out of 5 stars A glimpse back to a time when all religions were local

J. · September 9, 2011

The religions most of us are familiar with have been largely standardized and homogenized, but obviously this wasn't always so. Like languages before the advent of writing, earlier versions of even the same religion had local accents, traditions and emphases that varied substantially from place to place. That early world of indigenous religions still exists in parts of India, and in Nine Lives author William Dalrymple sensitively chronicles the poignant, eye-opening personal stories of nine religious devotees whose practices are outside--sometimes far outside--of the mainstream.The regional outlook of some of his subjects is summed up by one of the last hereditary singers of an ancient, locally-based epic poem that is so long it takes five eight-hour nights, dusk to dawn, to perform. He explained to Dalrymple that of course they were careful to propitiate the "national" gods like Shiva and Vishnu, who control the cosmos, but for their daily needs it made more sense to pray to the local god-kings and heroes who understand their farming life in a way the great gods could not. It's like going to your county council representative rather than the president of the country to have a new stop sign put in your neighborhood.Dalrymple must have a gift for getting people to open up, and he writes beautifully and with great respect for his subjects. Those subjects include a Dalit or untouchable who becomes a god sought out by Brahmins for several months each year, a Jain nun who is chaperoned by a naked monk part of the time Dalrymple speaks with her, a devotee of the fearsome goddess Tara who lives by the funeral pyres of a cremation ground, a blind wandering Baul who sings songs of worldly liberation, and a Tibetan Buddhist monk who is atoning for being forced to fight for his religious beliefs.

5.0 out of 5 stars An insightful look into alien worlds

K.K. · September 15, 2014

Nine Lives provides a wonderful down-to-Earth understanding of where India's diverse religious traditions are in the 21st century. Through in-depth interviews with facinating people Dalrymple gives readers a real look behind the curtain at what their lives, their beliefs and their faith mean.From Jain nun whose friend ritually starved herself, to a Tibetan Monk who took up arms to fight the Chinese, to a family of idol makers, to outcasts living in a cremation ground this book take us inside an alien world and offers significant insights.In the process we also see how the 21st century is forcing change on ancient traditions. We hear an artisan's concerns that his sons will not follow him, we hear how a dancer makes a living during the off-season as a laborer and prison guard and how mass media is homoganizing India's diverse religious traditions.Nine Lives offers a facinating and nuanced look into these worlds and is never a dull read.I had one problem however with the Kindle edition. Throughout the book Dalrymple uses hindi terms but always explains them in context. There's a glossery in the back but I found my Kindle did not allow me to read it, assuming that the last page of text was the end of the book. The only way I could see the glossery was to use the table of contents to go to the end notes and page back, it was very frustrating. But other than that it was an excellent read and I sincerely recommend it.

3.0 out of 5 stars Religion for Atheists

D.B. · November 2, 2013

Quite a different book from Dalrymple and hard to get into but perseverance is rewarded, the more so as he adds a bit about himself and his own perceptions on the mystical worlds he describes. I get the sense of religion without the supernatural or religion for atheists from many of the stories.

Beautiful book to discover different religions in india

D. · August 10, 2017

(function() { P.when('cr-A', 'ready').execute(function(A) { if(typeof A.toggleExpanderAriaLabel === 'function') { A.toggleExpanderAriaLabel('review_text_read_more', 'Read more of this review', 'Read less of this review'); } }); })(); .review-text-read-more-expander:focus-visible { outline: 2px solid #2162a1; outline-offset: 2px; border-radius: 5px; } An absolutely wonderful book with deep study on people and beliefs of India. Nine lives with nine different biographies of nine people about their belief and the religious path they followed.Dalrymple tries to find answer to many of his questions: What does it actually mean to be a holy man or a Jain nun, a mystic or a tantric seeking salvation on the roads of modern India? Why does one individual embrace armed resistance as a sacred calling, while another devoutly practises ahimsa, or non-violence? Why does one think he can create a god, while another thinks that god can inhabit him? How is each specific religious path surviving the changes India is currently undergoing?At Sarvanabelagola, Karnataka, he meets a Jain nun, Prasannamati Mataji who has taken up Sallekhana as her path to achieve moksha or spiritual liberation. Sallekhana: the ritual fast to death, which the jain consider as triumph over death, an expression of hope.In Kannur in northern Kerala, writer meets a untouchable dalit named Hari Das. For nine months a year he works as a manual labourer digging wells for the rich and on weekends he work in Tellicherry Central Jail, as a prison warder, trying to avoid getting knifed from the war between the convicts and imprisoned gangsters of the two rival political parties, the RSS and the Communist Party of India. But from December to February he become a Theyyam artist in Kerala. Though he comes from an untouchable dalit caste, he is transformed into an omnipotent deity and as such is worshipped as a god. His complete body is painted to represent lord Vishnu, he wears an enormous intricate costume, he dances and sings the songs to invoke the deity to the wild drumming of the music and gestures facial expression to tell the story. The Brahmins who consider him untouchable comes and touches his feet seeking his blessings.In Belgaum, Karnataka, a lady RaniBai narrates her story about how she was dedicated as a young girl by her parents as a devadasi. They worship the goddess Yellamma. Devadasi means a woman entering for life the service of the god or goddess. Some experts trace the institution to the ninth century. Others maintain it is far old as 2500BC which to present date has converted to commercial sex workers.In Pabusar, Jaipur, he spends time with Mohan Bhopa, an illiterate goatherd from Rajasthan, who keeps alive a four thousand line sacred epic that he knows by heart. Living as a wandering bard and storyteller, he remembers the slokas of one of the great oral epics of Rajasthan, prasing the hero God Pabuji. Mohan Bhopa and his wife Batasi, though both completely illiterate, were two of the last hereditary singers of a great Rajasthani medieval, the 600 year old poem, The Epic of Pabuji.Writer meets Lal Pari at a sufi shrine at Sehwan, a rural Sindh province. Lal pari, a girl from Bihar, who had to leave her home after Hindu Muslim riots. She was a refugee in a camp near Lahore. She used to work in the cotton factory and spent her free time visiting shrines in Multan and talking to the fakirs. After her brother’s death she leaves Multan to join the Lal Shahbaz Qalander. Here she does the Dhammal, the devotional dance to the saint, which takes place each evening at sunset and gives water to the thirsty pilgrims and sweeps the floor of his tomb chamber. According to Sufi Islam, all religions are one. They are merely differently manifestation of the same divine reality. What is important is not the empty ritual of the mosque or temple, but to understand that divinity can be best reached through the gateway of the human heart.Tashi Passang, a Buddhist monk in Tibet until the Chinese invaded in 1959. When his monastery came under pressure from the Chinese, he decided to take up arms to defend Buddhism. Now living in exile in Dharamsala, in Indian Himalayas he prints prayers flags in an attempt to atone for the violence he committed.The writer visits Srikanda Stpathy, the twenty-third in a long hereditary line stretching back to the great bronze casters of the Chola empire. His workshop is at a short distance away in the great temple town of Swamimalai. He and his two elder brothers make idols of gods and goddesses in exactly the manner laid down by the ancient Hindu religious texts, the Shilpa Shastras, and specifically designed for temple worship.The writer takes us to the east of India where he meets Manisha Ma Bhairavi, who has made the cremation ground at Tarapith in Bengal her home. Here the Tantric rituals and animal sacrifices are performed in the temple. Here the goddess Tara is said to live and at midnight, Tara can be glimpsed in the shadows, drinking the blood of the goats slaughtered day after day in an afford to win her favour. Manisha was born to a family with seven sisters and one brother with a loving father. She was married off at the age of 16. Her husband and mother-in-law did not like her and was beaten by them regularly. This is when she started getting fits and she realised that she was in possession of goddess. She left her home and headed toward Tarapith. Here she devoted her full time in bhakti sadhana and started learning tantra vidhya. In the night of amavashya, when the goddess is most powerful, a homa fire is lit, the skull is kept at the base with incense sticks. The rudraksha rosary is hung and the thali of offerings is placed for the goddess and goats are led in for the sacrifice of blood.

Great way to get a book that is hard to find.

A.C. · February 23, 2025

My book club book arrived on time and in very good condition. I am enjoying reading it.

Amazing travel book by Dalrymple

R. · March 7, 2017

The chapters arrangement and characteristic writing style of William Dalrymple keeps the reader intrigued and takes one into the world of storyteller which is also the life of diverse people from the Indian subcontinent. Fascinating book which tells a lot about the unheard and unwritten diversity of India.

Cultural Enlightenment

f. · February 26, 2025

Having visited India once and heading back there, I wanted to read something that would help me to understand what is a very different culture to my own.I really appreciated the insights into the diverse religious influences that exist in India - with their common and peculiar threads, each of which form part of the weft and weave of a colourful and more multi-dimensional way of living than I had appreciated.. Well written. Engaging. Informative and insightful.

An amazing and moving insight into other cultures.

H.T. · May 15, 2024

This book brings something of the richness of a completely different spirituality into the experience of Western readers. It’s full of interesting characters whom Dalrymple has met and who have trusted him with their stories. There are lots of questions one would want to ask of the writer; I kept wondering how he managed the different languages that his subjects must have used to share their lives. We have to take much of this on face value - little in my own experience could help me react critically. But here’s the great beauty of this wonderful text: one finishes the book humbled and in awe of these good people and, moreover, proud to be a human being instead of ashamed.

Nine Lives: In Search of the Sacred in Modern India (Vintage Departures)

4.4

BHD9364

Type: Paperback

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