The Journey of Lady Buddha

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Tue, 07/21/2020 - 11:00am to 11:30am
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Lady Buddha
Lady Buddha
An excerpt of a personal documentary by Dmae Roberts

 

Dmae presents a half-hour version of The Journey of Lady Buddha. The full-length docu-play originally produced in 1999 is a an hour-long personal and historical exploration of cultural conflicts in spirituality and the search for the Asian goddess of compassion and mercy, Kuan Yin, by Asian American radio producer Dmae Roberts, creator of the Peabody-award-winning “Mei Mei: A Daughter’s Song.”  Performances by actresses Elaine Low, Giang Pham, Yuquin Wang and Ping Khaw with music composed by Stephen Hoyt.

To hear the full-length documentary visit the store at MediaRites.org.  This docu-play was adapted from Dmae's original stage play Lady Buddha. 

In America very little is known about the mythology and the worship of Kuan Yin. Roberts’ mother was sold to work as a bonded servant in Taiwan and suffered abuse and starvation during World War Two. Throughout her life, Kuan Yin has offered her spiritual solace and strength to survive. Roberts called this figure Lady Buddha and in adulthood has tried to find out more about the stories that her mother could not communicate to her.

In this search, Roberts met Professor Chung-Fang Yu through a chance discovery and set up a correspondence via email. This piece is about discovering a puzzle piece to one’s culture and personal history, and about finding compassion for a religion one cannot embrace but can respect.

This was part of the LEGACIES: FAITH, HOPE AND PEACE series which won the 1999 HEART OF AMERICA award given by the American Legion Auxillary for Best in Radio. The HEART OF AMERICA honors work that celebrates the contributions of American women and families. MediaRites was asked to present the award-winning series to the national convention in September 1999.

LISTENER COMMENT:

“It is exceptionally rare to hear a radio program of the quality, depth, and power of The Journey of Lady Buddha. After listening for a few minutes, I stopped what I was doing and simply sat and listened until the end of the program. What a rare jewel.”
Steve Roseman, San Francisco, California

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