All the Colors of the Rising Sun
- The author on facebook: "...an intimate, honest and uncompromising testimony of the 15 years I spent in Osho’s commune, from 1976 to 1990..."
- Back-cover:
- The spiritual commune of Osho—previously named Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh—created storms of media frenzy in the 1970s and 1980s. Since the release of “Wild Wild Country” on Netflix in 2018, Osho and his legacy are once again in the spotlight of controversy.
- The author, Anasuya, lived in this spiritual cauldron from 1976 to 1990. Here she delights with her own vivid dance of experiences in “All the Colors of the Rising Sun”.
- We are taken on a direct and uncompromising journey, exploring a bubbling, titanic and passionate adventure between India and the State of Oregon, in the USA. Along the way, as reader, we discover the challenges and beauty of the teaching, coming to know the unending love and deep gratitude arising from years passed in the presence both of her spiritual master—and of those others, all determined seekers of truth, who gathered around Osho.
- author
- Anasuya. Translated from the French by Ken Peat.
- language
- English
- notes
- Translated from the French by Ken Peat. Original title Toutes les couleurs du soleil levant.
- see also
- Excerpt on Osho News
- Review on Osho News by Sandhano, includes a bit of bio-info.
editions
All the Colors of the Rising Sun
p.030: Mobos Hotel. p.032: Chuang Tzu Auditorium. p.054: No.8 Koregaon Park, rooms and dormitory for sannyasins. p.062: Laxmi Villas. p.070: After a cremation on the banks of the river Mulla-Mutha, 8 September 1978. p.076: Boutique sewing workshop, with Jalada and Sita Ma at work. p.080: With my friend Gunateet. p.100. p.110. p.114: Drive-by. p.118: Tent villages for the summer festival. p.130: Gachchhamis. p.138. p.144: A-frames. p.154: Rajneesh Mandir hall. p.160: Jesus Saves, Moses Invests, Bhagwan spends. p.162: In my Peace Force uniform.. p.166: Construction of the Hotel. p.204: (Me in) Scottsdale, Arizona . p.214: Back at the Ashram. p.228: On the balcony of my room at popular Heights. p.240: Modelling a sample of my collection in crushed velvet. p.242: The gates of Lao Tzu, Osho's residence. |