This book, as others have said, is probably the best introduction to Santo Daime in English -- if you understand that "introduction" means being introduced to an inner, intuitive sense of what Santo Daime is about. It is not a history of Santo Daime -- you can search in vain for any information about *when* anything happened and there is a lot of history that the book does not touch. But for what this book IS, it is brilliant and unequaled. In other words, the book gives an intuitive sense of what Santo Daime is better than probably any other, but it leaves a lot of history unclear.
The book is a personal story, the encounter between Alex Polari and Padrinho Sebastiao. Padrinho Sebastiao was a disciple of the founder of Santo Daime, Mestre Irineu, and eventually founded his own branch of Santo Daime, called CEFLURIS, and eventually founded the Daime community of Mapia in the Brazilian Amazon. (If you know about the Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers, two of them are madrinhas, or godmothers, from Mapia.) Most Santo Daime churches outside of Brazil are affliated with CEFLURIS and Mapia.
Alex Polari, the author of this book, is himself today a leader of CEFLURIS. This book is his own autobiographical account of how he, a former guerrilla who had been imprisoned and tortured for years, searching for meaning and direction after being released from prison, met Padrinho Sebastiao and became his disciple. You don't need to have a special interest in Santo Daime to enjoy this book -- this book should appeal to *anyone* who is interested in the literature of spiritual journeys -- it can go on the shelf next to books about people's spiritual journeys in India and Tibet, for example, or their accounts of shamanic apprenticeships. This book partakes of both, as Santo Daime partakes of both. But it is a personal story, the story of the author's inner transformation as he spent years with an illiterate rubber tapper whom the author considers to have been a medium, a prophet and a saint.
Although it is a personal story and not a book about Santo Daime as a whole, this book helps to convey the spiritual sophistication of Santo Daime, Santo Daime synthesizes elements of Catholicism, Amazonian indigenous religion, Afro-Brazilian religion, and Kardecist spiritism, but unabashedly has Christ at the center. People outside of Santo Daime sometimes wonder about whether the Christian / Catholic component of Santo Daime is something naive, just a holdover from the Catholic culture of Brazil, or whether it is something more sophisticated and deeper. This book helps to answer that question.
The preface to this book, by Jonathan Goldman, leader of the Santo Daime church in Ashland, Oregon, is considered required reading for prospective guests at Daime works. It is linked at
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Whether you are interested in Santo Daime or not, if you are interested in spirituality and the literature of spiritual journeys and apprenticeships, you will find this a very rich and profound story.