Luzesica : A Reach for Peace - Dennis Sage

Luzesica

A Reach for Peace

By: Dennis Sage

eBook | 16 July 2024

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As a child, the young Luzesica must endure a negative relationship with her mother, a Gypsy Queen named Ramona. What would have been crippling remarks to the youngster however, brings about a wide range of support from other family members. Both hardship and support balances as strength and growth for all. She develops a real hunger for learning of deep truths. Among this chieftain family of artists, seers and healers, rises an image that defies one that is synonymous with criminals and con artists. For world populations of misjudged and mistreated peoples. this is a cry for justice. While still a young adult, as her good fortune would have it, a wealthy Marquis offers to mentor her desire to learn. The family agrees. Here, the paranormal normalizes and the enigmatic blends with the pragmatic. This odd arrangement will change not only the student but the teacher as well. An untold number of lives are also thrown into the mix. She is able to establish a career as a dancer with debuts in Paris and Hollywood. Extensive world travels and worthy mentors provides a pulsing classroom for her. Life and death dramas unfold. She discovers how harmony can conquer discord and how genuine happiness can be derived fro even the worst of difficulties. Hers is a human being's dance of living much more fully by absorbing awakened views. Luz finds it hard to find the rationale behind any acts of war. Her clairvoyance allows her to see what could have avoided them and the untold horrors and suffering they enact. Be that as it may,two world wars seem to be burned into her destiny. She loses two brothers in the first and the second seeks the genocide of her race. Gypsies were among the so called 'undesirables' of the Nazi regime. At an esoteric school in India, she gets clarification of a terrible vision about nuclear weapons that a third world war could bring about. This novel would address our biased thinking which is deeply seated in each of us. It pleads self reform for the goal of peace and what lies beyond it. It's ending points to the arts for viable, working solutions.

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