By Jean-Christophe Buisson
Dear subscribers,
There is an adage with obscure origins that "the Promised Land is always on the other side of the desert". Even. How many adventurers, travelers, writers and soldiers inhabited by a mystical quest have found their happiness or God (it is sometimes the same thing) in the folds of the Saharan sands, under unforgettable starry skies? This breed of individuals has become rare in the twenty-first century, but it exists. Charles Wright is an example, and what an example! This nephew of the late Denis Tillinac once decided that the contemporary materialistic world caused him more disappointment and torment than pleasures and satisfactions, and decided to take a spiritual path. At 30, after dabbling in publishing, journalism and politics, he found the gospel to be the best guide to a successful life. After several months of "training" in the Lérins Islands, he crossed the Massif Central on foot with a...
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