Bigfork Eagle (MT)
Thursday, December 20, 2007
Three Cups of Tea
By Alex Strickland
It's rare for me to recommend books to people I don't know very well. While I might see the barely contained brilliance in "The Boys of Summer," an unassuming stranger who thinks that baseball is something you watch in purgatory might rather steer clear.
I'm breaking that trend, though, and recommending "Three Cups of Tea" to anyone who will listen. That includes you, dear reader.
The book is no literary masterpiece, though it is well-written. It's the non-fiction account of one man and, as the jacket says, his "mission to promote peace one school at a time."
The man,
He kept his word and was launched on a mission that saw him kidnapped by Muslim extremists, harassed by stubborn provincial officials and, ultimately, change the destinies of children in a part of the world increasingly lumped into one scary category by Westerners.
Mortenson makes no excuse for extremism and the terrorist
actions it breeds, but he does examine it and make clear that he believes the
answers are in books, not bombs. He was in
The book has been a massive success and has become a fixture on the New York Times bestseller list as well as set the word-of-mouth chain afire.
Mortenson's work is proof that anyone can make a change -- a big one. In these uncertain times he presents a view of tolerance and understanding, realizing that terrorists -- like racists and other zealots -- are not born, they're made. If a child's only chance for a roof and a meal is a radical madrassa school where they learn hatred for the West and a fanatical brand of Islam, then it's not hard to imagine what they will become.
Mortenson's message has found favor around the country and the world and I can think of no better one for Christmas time. Though I believe the word is thrown around so much today it has been cheapened to the point of being meaningless, Mortenson is an American hero. After reading his book, he is certainly mine.
© 2007. Bigfork Eagle News (MT). All Rights Reserved. Used With Permission