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Friedrich Lustig

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read out Tennisons' address in impeccable French at the same place. They did not receive the funds for their trip to Siam. At the end of the same year, the Tennisons and Lustig went to Riga, where Lustig was ordained as a novice monk in the local Buddhist temple of Imanta on 27 November 1930. On 12 December 1933, Lustig was fully ordained in Thailand.
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arrived in Estonia in November 1930, Tennisons and Lustig also tried to contact them. In the newspapers of the time, there are photos of the royal couple leaving Tallinn Town Hall, opposite the 'barefoot Tõnisson' and the young Lustig, dressed in the latest fashion. It is said that it was Lustig who
216:. This led to the publication of the first translation collections, Burmese Classical Poems (1967, some say 1966), A Glimpse of Contemporary Burmese Poetry (1968), Burmese Poems through the Ages (1969), and the collection of his own poems, Fluttering Leaves: a collection of 60 poems (1970). 175:
and his young disciple initially lived for a while in Kloostri Street in Tartu. According to contemporary recollections, his mother made many trips from Narva to Tartu to convince her son to return to secular life, but young Friedrich Voldemar Lustig was determined to remain to live as a
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Her parents married only after the birth of her son. A year and a half later, Friedrich Voldemar had a younger brother, Bruno Paul, who later became a doctor. In 1939 his mother Emilie and his brother Bruno moved to Germany, his father having died in 1935.
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The year 1930 turned out to be a breakthrough, when Karl Tõnisson arrived to preach in Narva. Lustig, who had just graduated from high school, hesitantly joined the latter and, despite his parents' prohibitions, left his hometown permanently.
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Friedrich Voldemar Lustig was born on 26 April 1912 in Narva. His father, Friedrich Adam Lustig, was a jeweller and school teacher in the same town, his mother, Emilie, was of Latvian nationality and from
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for his services to the cultivation of Buddhist poetry. In the meantime, almost no issue of the Burmese cultural magazine The Guardian Magazine was published without a poem or article by Lustig.
333: 220: 188: 212:) when the author was only 14 years old. He started writing poetry again in the mid-1960s. Around the same time, he started translating Burmese poetry into 118:, he (i.e. Lustig) follows him everywhere and has been a faithful support and advocate in all the difficulties of recent years". Together they migrated to 133:
Lustig served Tennisons faithfully until the latter's death in 1962. During Tennisons' lifetime, he called himself "the student and secretary of the
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that Lustig began to publish more poetry. His first known poem, written in Russian, appeared in early 1927 in the newspaper Novy Narvski Listok (
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wrote about him quite aptly that "as a serious Buddhist and an even more serious disciple of
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Die ersten „praktizierenden“ Buddhisten in Estland // Mitteilungen aus baltischem Leben
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At the 1968 California Poetry Festival, Lustig was awarded the
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Talts, Mait. Karlis A. M. Tennisons und Friedrich V. Lustig:
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Estonian Archives in Australia Friedrich Lustig Ashin Ananda
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Lustig (Ashin Ananda), The Most Rev. Friedrich V. (1970).
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Lustig (Ashin Ananda), The Most Rev. Friedrich V. (1970).
289: 270: 347: 110:In 1952, the newspaper Stockholms-Tidningen 80:Learn how and when to remove this message 246:Folklore: Electronic Journal of Folklore 43:This article includes a list of general 14: 348: 239: 29: 24: 130:, which remained their last home. 49:it lacks sufficient corresponding 25: 397: 306: 240:Talts, Mait (September 4, 2008). 34: 283: 264: 233: 13: 1: 318:The Refugee Who Fled to Burma 226: 153: 195: 148: 7: 296:National Library of Estonia 277:National Library of Estonia 10: 402: 200:It was after the death of 258:10.7592/fejf2008.38.talts 221:Lilac Laureate for Poetry 209: 122:in 1931, living first in 93:Friedrich Voldemar Lustig 189:Princess Kobkoen of Siam 126:and then, from 1949, in 64:more precise citations. 342:(2023) Nr. 1, S. 6-15. 328:Buddhismus im Baltikum 27:Estonian Buddhist monk 210:Новый Нарвский листок 185:Prince Aditya Jumbhor 376:Converts to Buddhism 18:Friedrich V. Lustig 386:Estonian Buddhists 371:European Buddhists 381:People from Narva 178:Buddhist monastic 99:; 26 April 1912, 90: 89: 82: 16:(Redirected from 393: 332:Aasma, Aro-Ats. 300: 299: 287: 281: 280: 268: 262: 261: 237: 211: 103:- 4 April 1989, 85: 78: 74: 71: 65: 60:this article by 51:inline citations 38: 37: 30: 21: 401: 400: 396: 395: 394: 392: 391: 390: 346: 345: 309: 304: 303: 288: 284: 269: 265: 238: 234: 229: 198: 156: 151: 95:(monastic name 86: 75: 69: 66: 56:Please help to 55: 39: 35: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 399: 389: 388: 383: 378: 373: 368: 366:Buddhist monks 363: 358: 344: 343: 336: 330: 325: 320: 315: 308: 307:External links 305: 302: 301: 282: 263: 231: 230: 228: 225: 197: 194: 155: 152: 150: 147: 137:Archbishop of 120:Southeast Asia 88: 87: 70:September 2023 42: 40: 33: 26: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 398: 387: 384: 382: 379: 377: 374: 372: 369: 367: 364: 362: 359: 357: 354: 353: 351: 341: 337: 335: 331: 329: 326: 324: 321: 319: 316: 314: 311: 310: 297: 293: 286: 278: 274: 267: 259: 255: 251: 247: 243: 236: 232: 224: 222: 217: 215: 207: 203: 193: 190: 186: 181: 179: 174: 168: 164: 162: 146: 144: 143:Karl Tõnisson 140: 136: 131: 129: 125: 121: 117: 113: 108: 106: 102: 98: 94: 84: 81: 73: 63: 59: 53: 52: 46: 41: 32: 31: 19: 313:Ashin Ananda 295: 285: 276: 266: 249: 245: 235: 218: 199: 182: 169: 165: 157: 132: 109: 97:Ashin Ananda 96: 92: 91: 76: 67: 48: 361:1989 deaths 356:1912 births 62:introducing 350:Categories 252:: 67–112. 227:References 154:Early life 45:references 202:Tennisons 196:Creations 149:Biography 116:Tennisons 173:Vahindra 135:Buddhist 124:Thailand 214:English 206:Russian 161:Jelgava 112:Estonia 58:improve 279:: 117. 139:Latvia 105:Yangon 47:, but 183:When 128:Burma 101:Narva 187:and 254:doi 352:: 294:. 275:. 250:38 248:. 244:. 208:: 180:. 163:. 298:. 260:. 256:: 83:) 77:( 72:) 68:( 54:. 20:)

Index

Friedrich V. Lustig
references
inline citations
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introducing
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Narva
Yangon
Estonia
Tennisons
Southeast Asia
Thailand
Burma
Buddhist
Latvia
Karl Tõnisson
Jelgava
Vahindra
Buddhist monastic
Prince Aditya Jumbhor
Princess Kobkoen of Siam
Tennisons
Russian
English
Lilac Laureate for Poetry
""The First Buddhist Priest on the Baltic Coast": Karlis Tennison and the Introduction of Buddhism in Estonia"
doi
10.7592/fejf2008.38.talts
"Fluttering Leaves: a collection of 60 poems of the Most Rev. Friedrich V. Lustig (Ashin Ananda)"
"Fluttering Leaves: a collection of 60 poems of the Most Rev. Friedrich V. Lustig (Ashin Ananda)"

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