‘Taken away’: A lama’s journey through loss and discovery

This is the book on the life and times of no ordinary man but that of Lama Doboom Tulku …and the  best part is the fact  that he’s written it himself together with the well -known New Delhi-based academic Sudhamahi Regunathan. And it’s written in such an uncomplicated and simple way …nudging one to read it all at one go. A book review by Humra Quraishi
BOOK-REVIEW Title – TAKEN AWAY –  THE  ORDINARY  LIFE  OF  A  LAMA Authors –  Doboom  Tulku with  Sudhamahi  Regunathan Publisher –  Bloomsbury  Pages – 350 Price – Rs 599 Book  Review  By  Humra Quraishi If you are wondering like I am why this title ‘Taken Away’ to the  memoirs of a Lama, then in the very  opening  page to this book, Lama Doboom Tulku explains it all in such a simple and uncomplicated way –  “I did not  plan my  life. That is why I decided to title my memoirs Taken Away. At a very young age, I was identified as a reincarnation and taken away from my home where I was born. And the rest of my life unfolded similarly. My monastery, my horse, my  country  –  to  name just  a  few – were all taken away over  time…Do I not  miss my country, I am  asked? Of course, I do. That was a sad separation. But life continued to be full of variety and showed me new things along the way.  I think, if I had not left when I did, I would now be a nomad perhaps, tending to animals …” Well, this is the book on the life and times of no ordinary man but that of Lama Doboom Tulku …and the  best part is the fact  that he’s written it himself together with the well -known New Delhi-based academic Sudhamahi Regunathan. And it’s written in such an uncomplicated and simple way …nudging one to read it all at one go …absorb all the destined turns in the life of Lama Doboom Tulku. A huge range of turns! To quote from this book – “Venerable Doboom Lobsang Tenzin Tulku was born in 1942 in Kham in eastern Tibet. At the age of two or three, he was recognized as the reincarnation of the second Doboom Tulku. In 1953, Doboom Tulku entered Drepung Monastry in Lhasa, where he studied Buddhist philosophy until the Chinese invasion of Tibet in 1959 forced him into exile in India at the age of seventeen…”