The Dalai Lama
News: on China, hatred, and optimism
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A conversation with Robert Thurman
When the Dalai Lama Accepted the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize for his work on global human rights -- particularly for his ceaseless efforts to free his country from Chinese rule -- he referred to himself as "a simple monk from Tibet." But His Holiness is also the spiritual and political leader of 6 million Tibetans, who believe him to be the 14th earthly incarnation of the heavenly deity of compassion and mercy. Like his 13 predecessors, he works for the regeneration and continuation of the Tibetan Vajrayana branch of Buddhist tradition.
Born in 1935, Tenzin Gyatso was recognized at the age of 2 as the reincarnation of the Dalai Lama, and by age 19 he was negotiating with China's Mao Tse-tung over the future of Tibet, which China invaded in 1950 and has occupied ever since. After years of failed peace talks and a violent suppression of Tibet's resistance movement in which tens of thousands of Tibetans died, the Dalai Lama fled in 1959 to Dharamsala, India, where he continues to be the spiritual leader of Tibet's people and heads Tibet's government-in-exile.
Robert A. F. Thurman was ordained a Buddhist monk in 1964 by the Dalai Lama. He is currently the Jey Tsong Khapa Professor of Indo-Tibetan Buddhist Studies at Columbia University. A respected scholar and translator of Tibetan and Sanskrit, Thurman is also the author of Essential Tibetan Buddhism (HarperSanFrancisco, 1996) and the forthcoming Inner Revolution: The Politics of Enlightenment (Riverhead Books, 1998). As the co-founder and president of Tibet House New York, Thurman has worked closely with the Dalai Lama on making Buddhism accessible to Americans and on educating the West about Tibet's political struggles against China. Today, Buddhism is flourishing in America: The religion has an estimated 1.5 million followers. Meanwhile, Tibet has captured the attention of Hollywood through Richard Gere and other celebrity Buddhists who have helped raise money for and awareness about Tibet's plight. This fall a pair of films about Tibet's spiritual and political history -- Kundun, directed by Martin Scorsese, and Seven Years in Tibet, starring Brad Pitt -- hit the screens.
The following conversation took place at His Holiness the Dalai Lama's home in Dharamsala in August.
Robert Thurman: Is there something about America that makes so many people seek out and practice Buddhism?
His Holiness the Dalai Lama: I don't know. Why are you so interested? [Laughs] No, seriously, I feel that Americans are interested because they are open-minded. They have an education system that teaches them to find out for themselves why things are the way they are. Open-minded people tend to be interested in Buddhism because Buddha urged people to investigate things -- he didn't just command them to believe.
Also, your education tends to develop the brain while it neglects the heart, so you have a longing for teachings that develop and strengthen the good heart. Christianity also has wonderful teachings for this, but you don't know them well enough, so you take interest in Buddhism! [Laughs] Perhaps our teachings seem less religious and more technical, like psychology, so they are easier for secular people to use. {publish-page-break}
Thurman: Some people say that you have to follow the religions of your own culture. Is it really a good idea to adopt a religion or spiritual practice foreign to one's culture?
Dalai Lama: I always say that people should not rush to change religions. There is real value in finding the spiritual resources you need in your home religion. Even secular humanism has great spiritual resources; it is almost like a religion to me. All religions try to benefit people, with the same basic message of the need for love and compassion, for justice and honesty, for contentment. So merely changing formal religious affiliations will often not help much. On the other hand, in pluralistic, democratic societies, there is the freedom to adopt the religion of your choice. This is good. This lets curious people like you run around on the loose! [Laughs]
Thurman: Your Holiness has said that in the future, when Tibet is free, you would cease to be the head of the government of Tibet. Is this because you would like to introduce the democratic principle of the separation of church and state to your nation?
Dalai Lama: I firmly believe democratic institutions are necessary and very important, and if I remained at the head of government, it could be an obstacle to democratic practice. Also, if I were to remain, then I would have to join one of the parties. If the Dalai Lama joins one party, then that makes it hard for the system to work.
Up to now my involvement in the Tibetan freedom struggle has been part of my spiritual practice, because the issues of the survival of the Buddha Teaching and the freedom of Tibet are very much related. In this particular struggle, there is no problem with many monks and nuns, including myself, joining. But when it comes to democratic political parties, I prefer that monks and nuns not join them -- in order to ensure proper democratic practice. The Dalai Lama should not be partisan either, should remain above.
Finally, personally, I really do not want to carry some kind of party function. I do not want to carry any public position.
Thurman: But how about serving like the king of Sweden or the queen of England -- as a constitutional Dalai Lama? As a ritual head, serving a unifying role? Would you consider this, if the people requested it?
Dalai Lama: [Laughs heartily] I don't think so. I don't want to be a prisoner in a palace, living in such a constricted way -- too tight! Of course, if there were really serious consequences if I did not accept, then of course I would do whatever was necessary. But in general I really prefer some freedom. Maybe, just maybe, I would like to become a real spiritual teacher, a working lama!
Thurman: You've said you have a "comparatively better heart now" due to your exile. What has exile done for you?
Dalai Lama: When we meet real tragedy in life, we can react in two ways -- either by losing hope and falling into self-destructive habits, or by using the challenge to find our inner strength. Thanks to the teachings of Buddha, I have been able to take this second way. I have found a much greater appreciation of Buddhism because I couldn't take it for granted here in exile. We have made a great effort to maintain all levels of Buddhist education; it has helped us have a kind of renaissance, really.
Thurman: In the current conflict in Sri Lanka between the Buddhist majority and the separatist Hindu Tamil Tigers -- a conflict that has claimed thousands of lives since it began 14 years ago -- many have found ways to justify the continuing involvement of Buddhists, including Buddhist clergy, in the violence. Essentially, the argument is that the kind of pacifism you advocate doesn't work in the real world, and that to let the enemy destroy Buddhist monuments and temples and kill Buddhists without fighting back is simply intolerable.
The loss of your own nation to China has been used as an example of the futility of nonviolence and tolerance. When is something worth fighting for?
Dalai Lama: This is hard to explain. In our own case, we don't consider the loss of a monastery or a monument the end of our entire way of life. If one monastery is destroyed, sometimes it happens. Therefore, we don't need to respond with desperate violence. Although under particular circumstances, the violence method -- any method -- can be justified, nevertheless once you commit violence, then counterviolence will be returned. Also, if you resort to violent methods because the other side has destroyed your monastery, for example, you then have lost not only your monastery, but also your special Buddhist practices of detachment, love, and compassion.
However, if the situation was such that there was only one learned lama or genuine practitioner alive, a person whose death would cause the whole of Tibet to lose all hope of keeping its Buddhist way of life, then it is conceivable that in order to protect that one person it might be justified for one or 10 enemies to be eliminated -- if there was no other way. I could justify violence only in this extreme case, to save the last living knowledge of Buddhism itself.
For Tibetans, the real strength of our struggle is truth -- not size, money, or expertise. China is much bigger, richer, more powerful militarily, and has much better skill in diplomacy. They outdo us in every field. But they have no justice. We have placed our whole faith in truth and in justice. We have nothing else, in principle and in practice.
We have always been a nation different from the Chinese. Long ago we fought wars with them. Since we became Buddhist, we have lived in peace with them. We did not invade them. We did not want them to invade us. We have never declared war on China. We have only asked them to leave us in peace, to let us have our natural freedom. We have always maintained that our policy is nonviolence, no matter what they do. I only escaped from Tibet because I feared my people would resort to desperate violence if the Chinese took me as their prisoner.
Thurman: How does one counteract violence without hatred or anger?
Dalai Lama: The antidote to hatred in the heart, the source of violence, is tolerance. Tolerance is an important virtue of bodhisattvas [enlightened heroes and heroines] -- it enables you to refrain from reacting angrily to the harm inflicted on you by others. You could call this practice "inner disarmament," in that a well-developed tolerance makes you free from the compulsion to counterattack. For the same reason, we also call tolerance the "best armor," since it protects you from being conquered by hatred itself.
It may seem unrealistic to think we can ever become free from hatred, but Buddhists have systematic methods for gradually developing a tolerance powerful enough to give such freedom. Without mutual tolerance emerging as the foundation, terrible situations like those of Tibet and Sri Lanka, Bosnia and Rwanda, can never be effectively improved.
Thurman: You use the term "cultural genocide" to describe what China is doing in Tibet but have suggested that Tibet could live with self-rule within China. How do you define self-rule, and what are its advantages over independence?
Dalai Lama: Today, due to the massive Chinese population transfer, the nation of Tibet truly faces the threat of extinction, along with its unique cultural heritage of Buddhist spirituality. Time is very short. My responsibility is to save Tibet, to protect its ancient cultural heritage. To do that I must have dialogue with the Chinese government, and dialogue requires compromise. Therefore, I'm speaking for genuine self-rule, not for independence.
Self-rule means that China must stop its intensive effort to colonize Tibet with Chinese settlers and must allow Tibetans to hold responsible positions in the government of Tibet. China can keep her troops on the external frontiers of Tibet, and Tibetans will pledge to accept the appropriate form of union with China.
Because my main concern is the Tibetan Buddhist culture, not just political independence, I cannot seek self-rule for central Tibet and exclude the 4 million Tibetans in our two eastern provinces of Amdo and Kham. [Once part of an independent Tibet, Amdo is now known to the Chinese as Qinghai; Kham has been divided into the Chinese provinces of Gansu, Sichuan, and Yunnan. -- Eds.]
I have been clear in my position for quite a while, but the Chinese have not responded. Therefore, we are now in the process of holding a referendum on our policy among all the Tibetan community in exile and even inside Tibet, to check whether the majority thinks we are on the right track. I am a firm believer in the importance of democracy, not only as the ultimate goal, but also as an essential part of the process.
Thurman: To your mind, once self-rule is achieved, who should be in charge of the economic development of Tibet -- the Chinese or Tibetans?
Dalai Lama: Tibetans must take full authority and responsibility for developing industry, looking from all different perspectives, taking care of the environment, conserving resources for long-term economic health, and safeguarding the interests of Tibetan workers, nomads, and farmers. The Chinese have shown interest only in quick profits, regardless of the effect on the environment, and with no consideration of whether a particular industry benefits the local Tibetans or not.
Thurman: What is the environmental condition of Tibet today, 47 years after the Chinese invasion?
Dalai Lama: The Chinese have clear-cut over 75 percent of our forests, thereby endangering the headwater regions of their own major rivers. They have overharvested the rich resources of medicinal herbs and caused desertification of our steppes through overgrazing. They have extracted various minerals in environmentally destructive ways. Finally, in their frenzied effort to introduce hundreds of thousands of new settlers into south central Tibet, they are threatening to destroy the ecosystem of that rich barley-growing region by draining its major lake to produce hydroelectric power.
Thurman: What do you think it will take for China to change its policy toward Tibet?
Dalai Lama: It will take two things: first, a Chinese leadership that looks forward instead of backward, that looks toward integration with the world and cares about both world opinion and the will of [China's] own democracy movement; second, a group of world leaders that listens to the concerns of their own people with regard to Tibet, and speaks firmly to the Chinese about the urgent need of working out a solution based on truth and justice. We do not have these two things today, and so the process of bringing peace to Tibet is stalled.
But we must not lose our trust in the power of truth. Everything is always changing in the world. Look at South Africa, the former Soviet Union, and the Middle East. They still have many problems, setbacks as well as breakthroughs, but basically changes have happened that were considered unthinkable a decade ago.
Thurman: You speak about how the Buddha always emphasized the rational pursuit of truth. "He instructed his disciples to critically judge his words before accepting them. He always advocated reason over blind faith." Coming from a late 20th-century belief that there is no Truth, only contingent truths, how are we to imagine what the Buddha meant by "truth" in contemporary terms?
Dalai Lama: Buddha was speaking about reality. Reality may be one, in its deepest essence, but Buddha also stated that all propositions about reality are only contingent. Reality is devoid of any intrinsic identity that can be captured by any one single proposition -- that is what Buddha meant by "voidness." Therefore, Buddhism strongly discourages blind faith and fanaticism.
Of course, there are different truths on different levels. Things are true relative to other things; "long" and "short" relate to each other, "high" and "low," and so on. But is there any absolute truth? Something self-sufficient, independently true in itself? I don't think so.
In Buddhism we have the concept of "interpretable truths," teachings that are reasonable and logical for certain people in certain situations. Buddha himself taught different teachings to different people under different circumstances. For some people, there are beliefs based on a Creator. For others, no Creator. The only "definitive truth" for Buddhism is the absolute negation of any one truth as the Definitive Truth.
Thurman: Isn't that because it is dangerous for one religion to consider it has the only truth?
Dalai Lama: Yes. I always say there should be pluralism -- the concept of many religions, many truths. But we must also be careful not to become nihilistic.
Thurman: How do you feel about the state of the world as we approach the 21st century?
Dalai Lama: I am basically optimistic. And I see four reasons for this optimism. First, at the beginning of this century, people never questioned the effectiveness of war, never thought there could be real peace. Now, people are tired of war and see it as ineffective in solving anything.
Second, not so long ago people believed in ideologies, systems, and institutions to save all societies. Today, they have given up such hopes and have returned to relying on the individual, on individual freedom, individual initiative, individual creativity.
Third, people once considered that religions were obsolete and that material science would solve all human problems. Now, they have become disillusioned with materialism and machinery and have realized that spiritual sciences are also indispensable for human welfare.
Finally, in the early part of this century people used up resources and dumped waste as if there were no end to anything, whereas today even the smallest children have genuine concern for the quality of the air and the water and the forests and animals.
In these four respects there is a new consciousness in the world, a new sensitivity to reality. Based on that, I am confident that the next century will be better than this one.
Thurman: Do you see Tibet as part of that new century?
Dalai Lama: Of course, of course. We are working as hard as we can; we are preparing ourselves as carefully as we can; we fully intend to make our contribution to the world in the coming century.

Does this make sense to anyone else? I don't understand how the only truth can be that there is no definitive truth.
I may wish you to be happy life, have a long long life,good health, without disease, and whatever you do i may wish you suceed...
from theravada monk
I may wish you to be happy life, have a long long life,good health, without disease, and whatever you do i may wish you suceed...
from theravada monk
I may wish you to be happy life, have a long long life,good health, without disease, and whatever you do i may wish you suceed...
from theravada monk
http://awareness.fieldsoftechnology.com/
hfvgyu
NGS FO
R U
regards: b2t2 afghan.
DuringMarch 14’s riot, media in the Western countries seldom mentioned thesuffering of the victims in the riot, but only focuses on the appeal of“freedom” of the rioters. Even after all kinds of evidences clearlydemonstrated the ferocity of the rioters (see www.peaceintibet.com),western media is only concerned with the arrests of the rioters andcriminals. Why the “sympathetic” and “objective” Western media seems tobe blind to the blood of Chinese victims?
A metaphor used by Dalaican shed light on the mind of the western media. In a meeting withjournalists after the riot, he said, ““Last few days I had a sort offeeling, a tiger, of a young deer in a tiger’s hand,” The wolf-likebrutality of the rioters was easily turned into the deer-liketenderness and helplessness. This is Dalai’s long-time strategy: tocontrast his small group with China’s gigantic size and use hisreligious role as a pretext hiding his political intention. Such amethod is actually quite common in the daily life, some peopledeliberately demonstrate their physical weakness to win the sympathy ofthe bystanders, but secretly attack the back of the stronger. Thestronger are trapped into a predicament. His self-defense is evencondemned as the misuse of violence. Only the victims attacked know thepain and are angry with the tricks. That’s the reason why Chineseperceive the Tibet-question so differently from the Westerners.
(http://www.ftchinese.com/sc/story_english.jsp?id=001018078)
China’ssituation is even worse. The dragon has always been conceived in theWesterns’ sub-consciousness as a huge menace. The government typechosen by Chinese people happens to be disliked by the Westerncountries as well. Its vast size, large population and powerful stateprovide Dalai Lama with the best chance to display his weakness as acontrast. The decades long negative reports and perceptions about Chinain the Western countries easily enable Dalai to close the eye of themedia on the bloody truth. The biased view of the Western countrieseven cost the lives of more civilians. As a British journalists report,worried about the criticism, Chinese police did not take harsh measuresagainst the rioters on the first day.(http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/as ... dex.html#cnnSTCText)
Weordinary Chinese people are not accusing Dalai of terrorism here. Weknow that we have not yet seen 100% evidence of his direct incitationof the riot. However, we are furious with his manipulation of thepublic opinion and the Western media’s indifference to the blood of ourbrothers and sisters.
We demand Dalai Lama to face the victimskilled, injured and plundered by his followers and sincerely apologizeto them. We demand Western Media to report the brutality widely andobjectively to the public in their countries for the sake of TRUTH;
We demand International Community to condemn the responsible for the Tibetan violence, in order
to maintain the “moral authority” (Nancy Pelosi);
We support our government’s necessary measures to restore orders and protect people’s life and property in the affected regions, support the juridical process against the criminals;
We welcome unbiased investigation of the violence;and We wish all Han, Muslim and Tibetan Chinese reconcile the historic conflicts, continue the economic development and construct a harmonious Tibet!
Please circulate wide!
more unknown stories of Dalai Lama can be find www.peaceintibet.com
(вызывать) China(Peking)
Posted by:justin taylorJune 8, 2007 8:05:41 PMRespond ^
This man really amazes me! Everything he said is very logical and true.
Posted by:AmelJune 15, 2007 11:27:22 AMRespond ^
very good conversation.
Posted by:srinthJune 19, 2007 3:08:15 AMRespond ^
This is a very educational and uplifting article. Thanks for sharing
"China invaded in 1950 and has occupied ever since" --- Shame on you! You know nothing about the truth of Tibet. Tibet had been the part of China a few hundred years ago.
I appreciate and admire the Dalai Lama’s call for compassion in a world that desperately needs more of it. However, I can’t help but think that his Holiness has become quite the poster child for passivity as well. His reaction to the recent events surrounding the Olympic torch relay is a clear example of such. The Chinese government has accused the Dalai Lama of organizing and encouraging the protests. Is this true? Has he joined in on any these marches or protests? Has he taken advantage of this historic opportunity to educate more people about the plight of the Tibetan people? The unfortunate answer is “No!”
Instead, he has most often chosen to not even speak of Tibet, as demonstrated in his lectures here in Seattle this past weekend. When later asked about the Olympic protests, he has expressed sadness, over the protesters’ “violent” attempts to disrupt the relay. Of course, he has denied the Chinese government’s accusations of encouraging the protests. He has in fact stated support for the Olympics being held in China. The exiled Tibetan leader has even claimed that he does not wish for his country’s independence from the oppressive Chinese regime.
The reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. knew a bit about compassion as well. But he also knew about civil disobedience and participated in his share of marches to protest the treatment of his people. While his words are often quoted, it’s his actions that spoke loudest and helped to create so much change.
Perhaps the Dalai Lama’s approach will also one day bring about change in the way the Chinese government (dis)regards human rights. But until then, the Dalai Lama can continue his sheltered existence of writing books and giving speeches while more Tibetans are persecuted, jailed, and killed. Where’s the compassion in that?
Why do I say it doesn't matter? Because, trying to convince me won't convince the people of Tibet. You can reason with me, tie me up on a board and do some waterboarding or whatever form of torture, it would never convince them.
You say the Dalai Lama is advocating this form of violence, aren't you? Let us assume, for argument's sake, that the Dalai clique is supporting this. But, why do the people of Tibet agree with them? Do you know why? The Dalai Lama is offering a BETTER DEAL than the PRC!
You can say whatever you want, but that's the ultimate conclusion. Thus, if China wants this pile of violence and dissent to go down, without having to resort to extreme methods, they had better offer a much more favorable deal to the Tibetans. China must learn to put its pride aside and compromise. There is no other permanent solution.
Here's a quote. "Peace is to be won with food and water, not guns and tanks."
I agree with tolerance - but this article was one sided. Tibet has been a chinese protectorate since the 1500s. Claimed independence only in 1911 when China was weak on the brink of civil war and years before the japanese invasion and WW2.
60 percent or more of the population of Tibet were serfs.
China sent troops after the Tibetan ruling class refused to abolish serfdom and redistribute the lands.
Being at the time of teh cold war there might be a strong anti communist bias against communism.
China is not innocent - yet it is good that helped abolish serfdom and build infrastructures.
Hawaii was independent until the 1890s.
and it has been colonized by the white people from the USA.
why isn't anybody protesting?
the local culture being suffocated by the modern day corporations?
to attack the Chinese in order to reimpose dictatorial rule over Tibet where he once ruled with an iron fist and medieval
brutality. The Salon expose shows a Dalai Lama who takes large cash payments from convicted terrorists. The German
magazines show the Dalai Lama has close ties to genocidal Nazis and convicted mass murderers and has even made
Nazis and Nazi mass murderers top advisers in his government in exile! The establishment media has been slow to pick
up on this new revelations about the Dalai Lama, in the same way they were slow to pick up on all the lies, misleading
statements and doctored evidence that George Bush used to trick the American public into a war of conquest and
greed against Iraq. Similar exposes about Kurt Waldheim, president of Austria and his cover up of his war record in
Hitler's army took time to disseminate to the world press.But now, here, for the first time, we have a picture presentation,
based upon German magazine investigations, showing the close ties between the Dalai Lama and top advisers in the
Dalai Lama's government in exile, who are convicted terrorists and Nazi War Criminals and what atrocities these Dalai
Lama advisors and close friends of the Dalai Lama are responsible for.
Please search in google the article "The Dalai Lama Has Lost His Holiness", written by me. It will enlighten westerners' minds and make them see the face and true mouth of the Dalai Lama. He is Da Lie.
If you look at history, you will find that half of US was plundered from Mexico in 1848. It was only one and a half centuries ago. What did you do with the Indians in America? You put them on small reservations to die out. THerefore you are not facing large-scale of separation. What did Chinese do with ethnic groups? Let them multiply like sands in the desert, like stars in the sky.
http://englishview.blog.sohu.com
He wants even Qinghai, Gansu, Yunan, etc. to be independent with Tibet. It is larger than Tibet itself. There has never been such a historical concept of socalled "Larger Tibet". Da Lie created it himself and wants to insert his own influence upon all Chinese people, including Tibetans.
Da Lie cannot represent the Tibetans. I have seen many Tibetans in many provinces of China. They are very happy with the present situation, denouncing Da Lie as a liar. If you dont believe me, you can go to China to investigate.
Da Lie is only a unity of spirituality and politics. This practice has been banned in the world since medieval times. But westerners want to restore it in China. What ridicule! What shame!What loss of humanity!
If De Lie can change his mind and really think for the people of Tibet (not his people), he can come back to China. Then probably he will regain the incarnated spirit of a buddha. Otherwise, he will die an ordinary person, in India. It will be a pity for him, for he was originally a living buddha, with a buddhistic spirit in him. Now the spirit has left him and stays in China. The spirit is waiting for his return or his death. If he returns, the spirit will be restored in him. If he dies, the spirit will be incarnated into another boy. He has a choice.
He is against reforms because he wants to be the head both spiritually and politically, just like himself now in India. But this can never be achieved in Tibet of China. The Tibetans dont wanna be skinned anymore. They dont want their eyes to be popped out. They dont want their instestines to be used for birthday amusement. They dont want to work for Da Lie free of charge.
So Da Lie can live by his lies.
Please read the following linked article before you say anything.
http://englishview.blog.sohu.com/84024377.html
http://englishview.blog.sohu.com/83948534.html
http://englishview.blog.sohu.com/84149158.html
His Holiness, he burns so very bright
and shines his love on every sentient being
illuminating all of our days and nights
-one thousand arms, one thousand eyes, all-seeing.
Kundun is yet untainted by the words
of small men in whom wisdom has not dawned.
Ghosts, they cower! This very earth and world
sing His praise in melody and song.
He lives and breathes for both you and me
His Holiness - the wish fulfilling jewel
Chenrezig, in the flesh for all to see
the breath of bodhicitta, calm and cool.
The words of madmen or of saints
in the Buddha's presence...both grow faint!
His Holines Tenzin Gyatso The Fourteenth Dalai Lama of Tibet
Honoring and Invoking the Great Compassion
of the Three Jewels; the Buddha, the Teachings,
and the Spiritual Community
O Buddhas, Bodhisattvas, and disciples
of the past, present, and future:
Having remarkable qualities
Immeasurably vast as the ocean,
Who regard all helpless sentient beings
as your only child;
Please consider the truth of my anguished pleas.
Buddha's full teachings dispel the pain of worldly
existence and self-oriented peace;
May they flourish, spreading prosperity and happiness through-
out this spacious world.
O holders of the Dharma: scholars
and realized practitioners;
May your ten fold virtuous practice prevail.
Humble sentient beings, tormented
by sufferings without cease,
Completely suppressed by seemingly endless
and terribly intense, negative deeds,
May all their fears from unbearable war, famine,
and disease be pacified,
To freely breathe an ocean of happiness and well-being.
And particularly the pious people
of the Land of Snows who, through various means,
Are mercilessly destroyed by barbaric hordes
on the side of darkness,
Kindly let the power of your compassion arise,
To quickly stem the flow of blood and tears.
Those unrelentingly cruel ones, objects of compassion,
Maddened by delusion's evils,
wantonly destroy themselves and others;
May they achieve the eye of wisdom,
knowing what must be done and undone,
And abide in the glory of friendship and love.
May this heartfelt wish of total freedom for all Tibet,
Which has been awaited for a long time,
be spontaneously fulfilled;
Please grant soon the good fortune to enjoy
The happy celebration of spiritual with temporal rule.
O protector Chenrezig, compassionately care for
Those who have undergone myriad hardships,
Completely sacrificing their most cherished lives,
bodies, and wealth,
For the sake of the teachings, practitioners,
people, and nation.
Thus, the protector Chenrezig made vast prayers
Before the Buddhas and Bodhisativas
To fully embrace the Land of Snows;
May the good results of these prayers now quickly appear.
By the profound interdependence of emptiness
and relative forms,
Together with the force of great compassion
in the Three Jewels and their Words of Truth,
And through the power
of the infallible law of actions and their fruits,
May this truthful prayer be unhindered
and quickly fulfilled.
This prayer, Words of Truth, was composed by His Holiness Tenzin Gyatso, the Fourteenth Dalai Lama of Tibet, on 29 September 1960 at his temporary headquarters in the Swarg Ashram at Dharamsala, Kangra District, Himachal State, India. This prayer for restoring peace, the Buddhist teachings, and the culture and self-determina-tion of the Tibetan people in their homeland was written after repeated requests by Tibetan government officials along with the unanimous consensus of the monastic and lay communities
Learn how to be a loving, kind, compassionate person, and how to have happy life that will bring healthy you.
Given that Jesus purports to be the one and only way and that there is no other way to eternal life than through him, how does the Dalai Lama respond to that claim by Jesus? What does his response do to the claims of Jesus? Thank you for considering these questions. Your faithfully Andy Keats andy@keepsafe.co.uk
1989 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Religious and political leader of the Tibetan people.
Excerpt from the Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech
"I pray for all of us, oppressor and friend, that together we succeed in building a better world through human understanding and love, and that in doing so we may reduce the pain and suffering of all sentient beings."
but 2007 Dalai Lama Address: Congressional Gold Medal - Part 3
http://youtube.com/watch?v=imv7Fa5ZqhY
On October 17, 2007 His Holiness the Dalai Lama received the United States' highest civilian honour - the Congressional Gold Medal. Part 3 of his remarks.
Tags: Dalai, Lama, Tibet, Congressional, Gold, Medal
so what do you think abt that? then you give me answern me later ok
see then
errf
oooooh maddy
n leaves comments on there