3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fascinating Tales from a Man Who Loves the Island, 15 April 2009
By Professor - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: But for the Grace: Profiles in Peace from a Nation at War (Paperback)
Jim Mitchell writes it as he sees it, and he sees the Island of Sri Lanka with the trained eye of an even-handed reporter, and the warm heart of someone who loves the Island and its people, despite some of the horrific things he has witnessed there.
Mitchell has traveled to war-torn and tsunami-ravaged Sri Lanka several times in the last few years, and the book takes you careening around the island with him as your sometimes-zany tour guide. While you travel with him, he is calmly describing the most unexpected scenes: thousands of people waiting to see a doctor; kids swimming in the warm waters of the Indian Ocean for the first time after the tsunami; young men killed in cold blood on the beach; doctors refusing to lie about injuries; an infant near death being saved by her grandmother's old school solution of force-feeding; girls trained to be rebel militia killers who are rescued and become kind caregivers to younger children. But these are just the backdrop for the central story: Grace Care Orphanage and Mercy Elders' Home in Trincomalee. Somehow, at Grace, orphaned girls, American and Sri Lankan adults, and elderly of many otherwise-warring ethnicities--most of them unlikely prospects for a happy life--are living together and creating a happy, and sometimes uproariously funny, community. This is a place that has meant recovery, respect, and redemption for so many people from so many communities in so many ways that at the end of the book one is left pondering the mysteries of the place called Grace.
Mitchell's book brought some memories and some news to me about Sri Lanka, where I did research on child soldiers that led to my book about why kids are recruited to rebel militia, Creating Young Martyrs. Most important, it brought me reminders of the amazingly consistent generosity and caring of the people of the Island.
Read it for inspiration, information, or just to get to know Mitchell--definitely someone who can write a travelogue that can make you laugh, cry, and think.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Both moving and saddening, 7 July 2009
By Midwest Book Review - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: But for the Grace: Profiles in Peace from a Nation at War (Paperback)
There is something horribly wrong when a young child is drafted to fight a battle. "But for the Grace: Profiles in Peace from a Nation at War" takes a look at the sad story of Sri Lanka, a nation torn apart by civil war for the past few decades. The Grace Care Center was a place established during one of the many lulls of combat during this constant conflict. Here is the story of a people undeterred by the endless violence and enlistment of child soldiers. "But for the Grace" is both moving and saddening, and is highly recommended.