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34 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars MYSTICISM REVEALED BY A MODERN YOGI
Paramahansa Yogananda has opened up the heart of OMARR KHAYYAM in this uniquely presented commentary of Fitzgerald's 1st English translation.

With the same remarkable insight displayed throughout His other writings, Yogananda has again given inspiration with clarity and wisdom. His informative introduction re Omarr's life is an especially interesting feature of...

Published on April 15, 1999

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17 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Universal Truth
as interpreted by Yogananda. Here Yogananda does a commentary
on "the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam." Also an interpretation. Yogananda made
the fatal error of believing that there was only one religion or truth. And that he,
himself, could discern it in all religions. He did that with the Bible. He does
this here with a Sufi poem. But this...
Published on August 25, 2002 by Bill Butler


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34 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars MYSTICISM REVEALED BY A MODERN YOGI, April 15, 1999
By A Customer
Paramahansa Yogananda has opened up the heart of OMARR KHAYYAM in this uniquely presented commentary of Fitzgerald's 1st English translation.

With the same remarkable insight displayed throughout His other writings, Yogananda has again given inspiration with clarity and wisdom. His informative introduction re Omarr's life is an especially interesting feature of this work, not to mention His whole approach to commentary. It becomes clear on the first few pages that this work gives more than intellectual elucidation. These are the words and vibes of the living experiences from the authors great spiritual adventure carried to a successful completion.

It leaves the reader filled with awe and wonder - what else did this man write?

also recommended: Autobiography of a Yogi(orange cover), Man's Eternal Quest, and Songs of the Soul, by the same author from Self-Realization Publishers.

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23 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Eternal spiritual truths resurface after a millenium, June 10, 2003
This review is from: Wine of the Mystic : The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam : A Spiritual Interpretation (Paperback)
"It takes one to know one," is here shown to apply to mystics. In this award-winning volume, Twentieth Century Indo-American sage Paramahansa Yogananda applies his irrepressible spiritual pursuit to Omar Khayyam's Twelfth Century masterpiece. Like most cultures through the ages, Kayyam's Persia was much friendlier to his mainstream career (in mathematics and astronomy) than to his spiritual revelations. The wondrous poetic beauties which sparkle through his Rubaiyat express his personal, non-canonical insights into Enlightenment (aka: the Kingdom of Heaven, Nirvana, Samadhi) are in metaphors - symbolisms whose spiritual implications register only for those "who have eyes to see" - who have themselves had a glimpse of higher spiritual realms.

The publisher of Wine of the Mystic has included an eye-opening foreword to this volume that puts these complexities into perspective, including 1) the fact that Edward FitzGerald (translator for the most famous English-language editions) only grudging acknowledged the mystical significance of the work, 2) FitzGerald's poetic techniques that faithfully capture the *spirit* of stanzas even when they are not linear translations, 3) the tradition among Sufi mystical poets of using wine as a symbol for Divine Intoxication.

Why should a poem that is merely (on the surface) a hymn to the joys of drunkenness survive for a millenium and continue to fascinate cultures around the world in languages so unlike its author's? In his introductory words, Yogananda summarizes the miracle of FitzGerald's (apparently materialist) translation by called him "divinely inspired to catch exactly in gloriously musical English words the soul of Omar's writings." To those who have received a hint of the Divine Intoxication, a deep intuitive chord may be struck by Yogananda's explanation: "Profound spiritual treatises by some mysterious divine law do not disappear from the earth even after centuries of misunderstanding, as in the case of the Rubaiyat."

As to the book itself (Wine of the Mystic)? The awards it has won, the beauty of its color illustrations, tastefully selected type faces, and rich reproduction make this volume irresistable immediately upon opening its pages. Readers are then embraced by Yogananda's sensitive and unprecedented bouquet of insights as they are welcomed to a never before dreamed of wine-tasting.

There is *no* edition to compare. This volume will reward your reading and re-reading for years. A gorgeous gift item.

CONTENTS:
Introduction of author's (Yogananda) insights.
Foreword of publisher's (Self-Realization Fellowship) history and spiritual perspectives on the Rubaiyat's.
Presentation of each Rubaiyat quatrain, along with FitzGerald's translation, Yogananda's glossary of spiritual symbolism, Spiritual Commentary, and Practical Implications for the reader's spiritual work.
Addendum reprinting all of the verses (FitzGerald translation) without interruption.

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28 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars EVERY QUATRAIN IS NOW A DEEP & ENLIGHTENING SPIRITUAL LESSON, April 6, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Wine of the Mystic : The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam : A Spiritual Interpretation (Paperback)
This wonderful book is not just A TRANSLATION of the Rubaiyat, it is a collection of deep spiritual discourses which are meant as an exhortation to the soul (what we essentially are) to transcend beyond this ephemeral world of temporary illusion and to ever constantly search for the real truth which lies within every one of us.
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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Visually stunning and an esoteric piece of work!, June 12, 2005
The spiritual interpretation of "The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam" by Paramahansa Yogananda reveals to the reader the depth of Yogananda's spiritual understanding and attainment. Yogananda interprets the poems in a very esoteric manner which leaves all sincere readers on the spiritual path breathless with admiration and veneration for Omar Khayyam.

Yogananda's commentaries on these poems will bring every scholar on mystical Islam to shame. His depth of understanding on Sufism is a welcome diversion of Yogananda's main spiritual books. Yogananda's main goal was to show the unity of Hinduism and Christianity to the West. But this book clearly shows to the world that Yogananda DID NOT neglect the second most popular religion of this primitive earth - that is Islam.

The illustrations are amazingly beautiful with a touch of Islamic art. But it is the interpretations of the poems that this book shines out. There are three levels of interpretations of each poem. The word for word translation; the practical application of the poem and last but certainly not the least, the deeper spiritual meaning and application of the poems.

Lastly I would love to recommend this piece of timeless art to all the Muslims in this sordid world. The reason is because this book shows the reader the deeper aspect of Islam - which is Sufism. Muslim mystics like Rumi and Khayyam are dangerous to orthodox Muslims because these mystics have already realized Allah and are beyond the mundane rituals of basic Islam. Their state of spiritual attainment is similar to that of Yogananda, Jesus, Buddha, Ramakrishna, Sai Baba, and so on.

Thus no one is in a better position than Yogananda (except for those souls who have God realization), to interpret these poems the way Khayyam had intended it to be understood. I would also like to recommend other books about Sufism which would compliment this book beautifully.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A INSPIRING AND ORIGINAL MASTERPIECE, April 8, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Wine of the Mystic : The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam : A Spiritual Interpretation (Paperback)
WINE OF THE MYSTIC - is a contemporary commentary of Khayyams timeless encrypted spiritual revelations about the inner life of the spirit. An enlightening commentary on Fitzgeralds' 1st English transation. Yogananda's perceptive intuitiion,insight,and interpretation, plus a unique methodology of clarifying and teaching these great truths- with the glossary, spiritual interpretation and then the practical application, makes this work a most useful religious guidebook. For those who have long appreciated Omar's pithy wisdom, let this edition take you into its' full blown inspiration. This artistic, beautiful and deeply moving publication, brings overdue honor and praise to one of the Arabic worlds' greatest mystics.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful, fascinating, learned!, August 1, 1995
By A Customer
The Publisher's Marketing Ass. gave this beautiful book The Benjamin Franklin Award in June 1995 for overall excellence for best book designed and produced in 1994 in the category of Religio
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17 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Universal Truth, August 25, 2002
as interpreted by Yogananda. Here Yogananda does a commentary
on "the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam." Also an interpretation. Yogananda made
the fatal error of believing that there was only one religion or truth. And that he,
himself, could discern it in all religions. He did that with the Bible. He does
this here with a Sufi poem. But this is a fine book. Very beautiful. But Yogananda's
Self-Realization Fellowship was and is Hinduism straight up the middle. Not
Original Christianity and Original Yoga as he claimed. So this book is an Islamic
poem as interpreted by a Hindu. And I think that you had better realize that
before you buy this book. And it is a beautiful book. Yogananda was always a
great writer. Most of his books are real "choppy" because they are taken from talks.
But when he wrote, it was excellent. He was quite a writer. And it comes out
in this book. But if you want the "real stuff," buy Yogananda's "God Talks to

Arjuna." Thank you.

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13 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars MISTRANSLATIONS COMMENTED BY MANY STOCK PHRASES, July 12, 2004
In the Fitzgerald text that HH Yogananda comments, the Persian poem is not truly TRANSLATED: that is well explained in the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Yogananda dispensed with real translations to base his commentary on. That was unwise, for translators of the poem see how great the differences are between Fitzgerald's work and a translation of Omar's poem. With such an infirm basis to work on top of, the "interpretations of Omar" by Yogananda become formidable hocus-pocus - they are, rather, what he reads into Fitzgerald's book - which differs from the work of Khayyam considerably.

(1) In this process Yogananda uses mistranslations as deep symbols to interpret; hence ERRONEUS guru dealings.

(2) He repeats himself up to gruesomely by STOCK PHRASES - very boring to some.

(3) MESS: To complicate things further, there are today TWO VERSIONS that lay claims on bringing Yogananda's (non-savoury) interpretations. These independent versions often differ. It means you may not be sure you get the true wordings of Yogananda - after the essentials of Khayyam have been done away with by Fitzgerald.

CONCLUSION SO FAR: In this work there is too much inept or senile-looking handling to deal with.

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Wine of the Mystic : The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam : A Spiritual Interpretation
Wine of the Mystic : The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam : A Spiritual Interpretation by Paramahansa Yogananda (Paperback - May 15, 1996)
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