Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Da Vinci Code

It has been quite a while since I last read an English novel. As far as I can remember, probably since my younger days with Enid Blyton... Moonface, Famous Five, Hardy Boys and the like.

Towards the end of our Laos trip, I have a whole day of airport transit and time in-flight. So while in ChiangMai, Ah Jun and I went to the Gecko Second-hand Bookstore to grab some books. With Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code gaining so much sensation these days, I decided to read this book for myself and see what the hype is all about.

My loupo told me nowadays SPM English is quite difficult, and students are given assignment to write a synopsis of famous English novels... Robinson Crusoe, Animal Farm, Jungle Book etc. Here's my very brief synopsis of the Code, for those who have yet to read the book.

The theme surrounds two forces which have been in conflict since the days of Christ. On one side, the Church, particularly the Roman Catholic church. On the other, a secret society which goes by the name Priory of Sion, which holds an age-old secret that is so powerful that it could rewrite Christian history and bring the whole Christian church to collapse; the secret is summed up in two words: Holy Grail.

Our hero, Robert Langdon a Harvard professor of symbology, and his heroine FBI agent Sophie Neveu entered the story when the Grand Master of the Priory of Sion, who happened to be Sophie's grandfather, the last person who knew where the Holy Grail lies, was brutally murdered in a renowned art museum in Paris. Before he died, he managed to pass them the secret in a string of codes and riddles, beginning from hidden meanings in Leornado Da Vinci's famous paintings. Unfortunately, an overzealous French FBI agent boss named Fache assumed those guys killed the old man, and went after their heads. And so it began a series of cat and mouse chase, with more riddles along the way as our hero and heroine race against time to discover the truth of the Holy Grail. The plot thickens with assumptions that Christianity was a man-made religion, where Jesus was said to be nothing more than a famous leader, whose divinity was decided upon by a political council; and the Christian faith assembled from various pagan beliefs in that era. It tells of how the Church selected only Gospel books and letters that exaggerated Jesus' divinity, compiled them into the Bible that we have today; while eliminating other records of Jesus' very normal human life. The purpose: to gain political power by establishing a Church which dominates every aspect of this new 'faith'. From then on the world was lead astray into becoming a male-dominated world, and the sacred feminity lost it's original dignity. The truth, or the Holy Grail secret, claims that Jesus actually married Mary Magdelene, and they had children, and their bloodline continued till this day and age. Outrageos? Dan Brown doesn't think so. He splattered across his book lots of evidence from ancient till today that supports the Holy Grail secret, including hidden symbols in Leornado Da Vinci's famous paintings... just that we didn't notice them.

Enough for now, lest I spoil your fun of reading the Code.

What makes the book so popular, I believe, is that the story evolves around something close to the heart of the Western society: the Christian faith. Here we have a book which shouts that this faith is just a man-made propoganda, and Jesus nothing more than a famous leader and family man. Adding to that, the author's revelation of various evidences which made it seems that secret may be true after all.

A passage from the book that I particularly like... " ... history is always written by the winners. When two cultures clash, the loser is obliterated, and the winner writes the history books - books which glorify their own cause and disparage the conquered foe. As Napoleon once said,'What is history, but a fable agreed upon?'. By it's very nature, history is always a one-sided account." Sounds very true, looking at the Buku Sejarah that our students read nowadays.

Thank you for reading my English revision assignment. Sorry for the lousy English.

7 comments:

HK Jun said...

You have finished reading the book?

Anonymous said...

ya ya

Perisai dan Pedang said...

Well written, Mike! I like your quote on the sejarah thing... I think you should be writing a book yourself...Who knows?

Anonymous said...

u must be jokin.

Anonymous said...

hmm....i bought the book but can't get into the thick of things. with the movie just premiering, i can't decide the book before the movie or vice versa...and yes, controversy it has created and i find it fascinating!

Anonymous said...

ummmmm so when can we borrow the book? hehehehehe

I think with your laopo's coaching you did a great writeup! Hahahaha! She would give you a distinction for sure!

Did you read Marina Mahathir's Musings about this controversy?

Anonymous said...

can la. but on waiting list. hehe.

of course I read it. Nice.