Rice & Sugar
serene. In Rice & Sugar, Tenzin Zopa returns to his home in the Tsum Valley to recount in rare detail the brutal reality of his past and his fraught relationship with
his father. At six, he was thrust into grueling child labor, working as a porter and hauling heavy loads for weeks through steep mountain paths. His home offered no
refuge. His father ridiculed him without mercy, and only showed love to Zopa’s younger brother. Hunger was a constant companion. For three years, his only sustenance was the milk he sucked directly from the family cow. The one thing that gave him hope—his dream of becoming a monk—was crushed under his
father’s strict prohibition. By the age of eight, despair had driven him to the brink of suicide. Then came a lifeline: a Master Buddhist teacher, living in a nearby cave offered Zopa unconditional love and mentorship. Under his Master’s guidance, Zopa broke free from his family’s grip and the bleak future it promised. Now, on his journey back home, he recounts his emotional story and attempts to understand, and make peace with, the pain inflicted upon him by his father.
