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Tenzin Gyatso, 14th Dalai Lama

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Tenzin Gyatso () (b. July 6 1935) is the fourteenth and current Dalai Lama, and as such, is often referred to in Western media as simply The Dalai Lama, without any qualifiers. The fifth of sixteen children of a farming family in the Tibetan province of Amdo, he was proclaimed the tulku (rebirth) of the thirteenth Dalai Lama at the age of five"Year by Year 1940" -- History Channel International. On November 17 1950, at the age of fifteen, he was enthroned as Tibet's Head of State and most important political ruler, while Tibet faced occupation by the forces of the People's Republic of China.

After the collapse of the Tibetan resistance movement in 1959, Tenzin Gyatso fled to India, where he was active in establishing the Central Tibetan Administration (the Tibetan government in exile) and preserving Tibetan culture and education among the thousands of refugees who accompanied him.

A charismatic figure and noted public speaker, Tenzin Gyatso is the first Dalai Lama to travel to the West, where he has helped to spread Buddhism and to publicise the cause of Free Tibet. In 1989, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.


Early life

Tenzin Gyatso as a boy.
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Tenzin Gyatso as a boy.

Gyatso was born to a Mongour[[Citing sources citation needed]] farming family as Lhamo Thondup (; also spelled "Dhondrub") on 6 July 1935 in far northeastern Amdo province in the village of Taktser, a small and poor settlement that stood on a hill overlooking a broad valley. His parents, Choekyong and Diki Tsering, were moderately wealthy farmers among about twenty other families, some ethnic Han Chinese, making a precarious living off the land raising barley, buckwheat, and potatoes. He was the fifth surviving child of nine children, the eldest child being his sister Tsering Dolma, who was sixteen years older than he.. His eldest brother, Thupten Jigme Norbu, has been recognised as the rebirth of the high lama, Takser Rinpoche. His other elder brothers are Gyalo Thondup and Lobsang Samten. When the Dalai Lama was about two years old, a search party was sent out to find the new incarnation of the Dalai Lama. Among other omens, the head on the embalmed body of thirteenth Dalai Lama (originally facing south) had mysteriously turned to face the northeast, indicating the direction in which the next Dalai Lama would be found. Shortly afterwards, the Regent Reting Rinpoche had a vision indicating Amdo (as the place to search) and a one-story house with distinctive guttering and tiling.. After extensive searching, they found that Thondup's house resembled that in Reting's vision. They thus presented Thondup with various relics and toys — some had belonged to the previous Dalai Lama while others hadn't. Thondup correctly identified all items owned by the previous Dalai Lama, stating "It's mine! It's mine!"[link]

Thondup was recognised as the rebirth of the Dalai Lama and renamed Jetsun Jamphel Ngawang Lobsang Yeshe Tenzin Gyatso ("Holy Lord, Gentle Glory, Compassionate, Defender of the Faith, Ocean of Wisdom"). Tibetan Buddhists normally refer to him as Yeshe Norbu ("Wish-Fulfilling Gem") or just Kundun ("the Presence"). In the West he is often called "His Holiness the Dalai Lama", which is the style that the Dalai Lama himself uses on his website. Tenzin Gyatso began his monastic education at the age of six. At age twenty-five, he sat for his final examination in Lhasa's Jokhang Temple during the annual Monlam (prayer) Festival in 1959. He passed with honours and was awarded the Lharampa degree, the highest-level geshe degree (roughly equivalent to a doctorate in Buddhist philosophy).

Life as Dalai Lama

Styles of
The Dalai Lama
50px
Reference style His Holiness
Spoken style Your Holiness
Alternative style Sir
As well as being the most influential spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism, the Dalai Lama traditionally claims to be Tibet's Head of State and most important political ruler. At the age of fifteen, faced with possible conflict with the Chinese, Tenzin Gyatso was on November 17 1950, enthroned as the temporal leader of Tibet; however, he was only able to govern for a brief time. In October of that year, a People's Republic of China army entered the territory controlled by the Tibetan administration, easily breaking through the Tibetan defenders.

The People's Liberation Army stopped short of the old border between Tibet and Xikang and demanded negotiations. The Dalai Lama sent a delegation to Beijing, and, although he has rejected the subsequent Seventeen Point Agreement for the Peaceful Liberation of Tibet, he did try to work with the Chinese government until 1959. During that year, there was a major uprising among the Tibetan population. In the tense political environment that ensued, the Dalai Lama and his entourage began to suspect that China was planning to kill him. Consequently, he fled to Dharamsala, India, on March 17 of that year, entering India on March 31 during the Tibetan uprising.

Tenzin Gyatso is the first Dalai Lama to travel to the West, where he has helped to spread Tibetan Buddhism.

Exile in India

The Dalai Lama met with the Prime Minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru, to urge India to pressure China into giving Tibet an autonomous government when relations with China were not proving successful. Nehru did not want to increase tensions between China and India, so he encouraged the Dalai Lama to work on the Seventeen Point Agreement Tibet had with China. Eventually in 1959, the Dalai Lama fled Tibet and set up the government of Tibet in Exile in Dharamsala, India, which is often referred to as "Little Lhasa".

After the founding of the exiled government, he rehabilitated the Tibetan refugees who followed him into exile in agricultural settlements. He created a Tibetan educational system in order to teach the Tibetan children their language, history, religion, and culture. The Tibetan Institute of Performing Arts was established in 1959, and the Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies became the primary university for Tibetans in India. He supported the refounding of 200 monasteries and nunneries in order to preserve Tibetan Buddhist teachings and the Tibetan way of life.

The Dalai Lama appealed to the United Nations on the question of Tibet, which resulted in three resolutions adopted by the General Assembly in 1959, 1961, and 1965. These resolutions required China to respect the human rights of Tibetans and their desire for self-determination.

In 1963, he promulgated a supposed democratic constitution which is based upon the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. A Tibetan parliament-in-exile is elected by the Tibetan refugees scattered all over the world, and the Tibetan Government in Exile is likewise elected by the Tibetan parliament.

At the Congressional Human Rights Caucus in 1987 in Washington, D.C., he proposed a Five-Point Peace Plan regarding the future status of Tibet. The plan called for Tibet to become a "zone of peace" and for the end of movement by ethnic Chinese into Tibet. It also called for respect for fundamental human rights and democratic freedoms and the end of China's use of Tibet for nuclear weapons production, testing, and disposal. Finally, it urged "earnest negotiations" on the future of Tibet.

He proposed a similar plan at Strasbourg, France, on 15 June 1988. He expanded on the Five-Point Peace Plan and proposed the creation of a self-governing democratic Tibet, "in association with the People's Republic of China". This plan was rejected by the Tibetan Government-in-Exile in 1991.

In October 1991, he expressed his wish to return to Tibet to try to form a mutual assessment on the situation with the Chinese local government. At this time he feared that a violent uprising would take place and wished to avoid it.

On July 5 2005, the Dalai Lama called on the G8 leaders meeting the next day to ease the plight of the millions starving throughout the world, during a meeting with the rock singer Annie Lennox. He said the meeting had "positive potential". [link]

The Dalai Lama celebrated his seventieth birthday on July 6, 2005. About 10,000 Tibetan refugees, monks and foreign tourists gathered outside his home. Patriarch Alexius II of the Russian Orthodox Church said, "I confess that the Russian Orthodox Church highly appreciates the good relations it has with the followers of Buddhism and hopes for their further development" [link]. President Chen Shui-bian of Taiwan attended an evening celebrating the Dalai Lama's birthday that was entitled "Traveling with Love and Wisdom for 70 Years" at the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall in Taipei. The President invited him to return to Taiwan for a third trip in 2005. His previous trips were in 2001, and 1997. [link]

The Dalai Lama wishes to return to Tibet only if the People's Republic of China sets no preconditions for the return, which they have refused to do [link]. On July 5 2005, China refused his request to return to Tibet on his birthday, despite worries that if he dies in exile it may spark an uprising against the local government in Tibet and neighboring areas. [link]

Foreign relations

Conversations with President George W. Bush in the White House on May 23 2001
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Conversations with President George W. Bush in the White House on May 23 2001

Since 1967, the Dalai Lama has initiated a series of tours in forty-six nations. He met with Pope Paul VI at the Vatican in 1973. Later on, he met with Pope John Paul II in 1980 and also later in 1982, 1986, 1988, 1990 and 2003. He has also met the Archbishop of Canterbury, the late Dr. Robert Runcie, and with other leaders of the Anglican Church in London. Finally, he has met Jewish and senior Catholic officials. He currently has ongoing relations with the Russian Orthodox Church. Lithuanian President Vytautas Landsbergis invited him to address the Lithuanian Parliament. He was the first foreign leader to do so. He currently has ongoing relations with India and has had relations in the past with the United Nations and the United States. In an unusual event, the Dalai Lama was refused a visit to South Korea in 2001.[link] Chinese envoys and the Dalai Lama's have had four talks since September 2002 over the Tibet Question, which has been met by international support. [link]

Social and political stances

The present Dalai Lama is held in almost universal high regard among Tibetan Buddhists. It should be noted, however, that his views regarding controversial social issues and other matters are not necessarily shared by all Tibetan Buddhist lamas, and do not represent a binding dogma on all Tibetan Buddhist practitioners.

Tibetan independence movement

Having little choice but to work with the 1951 Seventeen Point Agreement for the Peaceful Liberation of Tibet with China, the Dalai Lama is believed to have supported the creation of the Tibetan resistance movement. His brothers moved to Kalimpong in India and, with the help of the Indian and American governments, organised propaganda against China and the smuggling of weapons into Tibet. Armed struggles broke out in Amdo and Kham in 1956 and later spread to Central Tibet. However, the movement was a failure and forced to retreat to Nepal and/or go underground. Following normalisation of relations between the United States and China, American support was cut off in the early 1970s. The Dalai Lama then began to change his policy towards a peaceful solution in which he would be reinstated in a democratic autonomous Tibet.

Contrary to the belief that Tibetan non-violence has not garnered the Tibetans much attention (as opposed to more violent insurrections), it attracts far greater advocacy, money and popularity than many other similar causes.[link] The Dalai Lama is one of the most beloved figures in the West. Despite China's blockage of UN refugee funds, a web of private charities has ensured that Tibetans-in-exile receive (per capita) one of the highest allotments of aid money, raising their standard of living far higher than the native Indians around them.[link]

Global political stances

The Dalai Lama is opposed to usage and stockpiling of weapons of mass destruction and supports demilitarization. In 1998, he pledged his support to the People's Republic of China's proposal to ban all weapons of mass destruction. [link] The Dalai Lama in general as a religious leader opposes wars. However he accepts that certain wars were for the benefit of civilization & democracy: WWII, the Korean War and perhaps Afghanistan.[link] He does however espouse that non-violence in the long-term is more effective. He blames the world's powers for wars and believes that they are simply an old habit. [link]

Though the Dalai Lama asked the White House to "think seriously whether a violent action is the right thing to do" prior to the invasion of Iraq, [link] he has since expressed a longer term view on whether the Iraq war is justified, refusing to condemn it. [link] He has reiterated this position a number of times [link] [link] since the original New York Times [link] report.

Global social stances

The Dalai Lama endorsed the founding of the Dalai Lama Foundation in order to promote peace and ethics worldwide. The Dalai Lama is not believed to be directly involved with this foundation. [link] He has also stated his belief that modern scientific findings take precedence over ancient religions. [link]

He is reported to have said regarding homosexuality, "If the two people have taken no vows [of chastity], and neither is harmed, why should it not be acceptable?" He has repeatedly affirmed his belief that gays and lesbians should be fully accepted by society, although he has also stated that for Buddhists homosexual behaviour is considered sexual misconduct, meaning that homosexual sex is acceptable for society in general but not in Buddhism or for Buddhists. [link] As he explains in his book Beyond Dogma: "homosexuality, whether it is between men or between women, is not improper in itself. What is improper is the use of organs already defined as inappropriate for sexual contact." Therefore, it may be surmised that in his view, homosexual acts are inappropriate, just as masturbation and oral and anal sex by heterosexuals is inappropriate. He has also acknowledged that while he is not willing to disavow the scripture in question, its basis is unknown to him, and he has expressed a "willingness to consider the possibility that some of the teachings may be specific to a particular cultural and historic context."

The Dalai Lama is generally opposed to abortion [link], although he has taken a nuanced position, as he explained to the New York Times:

Of course, abortion, from a Buddhist viewpoint, is an act of killing and is negative, generally speaking. But it depends on the circumstances. If the unborn child will be retarded or if the birth will create serious problems for the parent, these are cases where there can be an exception. I think abortion should be approved or disapproved according to each circumstance.[link]
— The Dalai Lama, New York Times, 28 November 1993

Criticism

In October 1998, The Dalai Lama's administration acknowledged that it received $1.7 million a year in the 1960's from the US government through the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)[link], and also trained a resistance movement in Colorado (USA). [link] When asked by CIA officer John Kenneth Knaus in 1995 whether the organization did a good or bad thing in providing its support, the Dalai Lama replied that though it helped the morale of those resisting the Chinese, "thousands of lives were lost in the resistance" and further, that "the U.S. Government had involved itself in his country's affairs not to help Tibet but only as a Cold War tactic to challenge the Chinese."[link]

There has also been criticism that feudal Tibet was not as benevolent as the Dalai Lama had portrayed. [link] Critics have suggested that in addition to serfdom there were conditions that effectively constituted slavery. [link] [link] In response, the Dalai Lama has since condemned some of ancient Tibet's feudal practices and has added that he was going to institute reforms before the Chinese invaded.

British journalist Christopher Hitchens wrote a [scathing criticism] of the Dalai Lama in 1998, which questioned his alleged support for India's nuclear weapons testing, the "selling of indulgences" to Hollywood celebrities like Richard Gere, and his statements condoning prostitution. He accepted a large donation from Shoko Asahara, leader of the Aum Shinrikyo cult in Japan, who was responsible for the release of sarin nerve gas on a Tokyo subway, though this occurred long before Asahara instigated the attack.

The Dalai Lama is sometimes criticized for modifying his message to be as palatable as possible to his audience, sometimes changing viewpoints according to the situation. He is also sometimes reproached for taking one side of an issue at one time and changing it later on, usually in response to criticism. This tendency has led opposing sides of an issue to believe that the Dalai Lama supports their cause, e.g. homosexuality[link], abortion, the current Iraq war, Kashmiri independence, nuclear weapons, etc. This should be seen in context with Buddhist teachings, where a teaching may benefit one person, while not the other.

International influence

Tenzin Gyatso in 1994
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Tenzin Gyatso in 1994

The Dalai Lama speaks English as a second language and has been successful in gaining Western sympathy for Tibetan self-determination, including vocal support from numerous Hollywood celebrities, most notably the actor Richard Gere, as well as lawmakers from several major countries.

Tenzin Gyatso has on occasion been denounced by the Chinese government as a supporter of Tibetan independence. Over time, he has developed a public position stating that he is not in favour of Tibetan independence[link] and would not object to a status in which Tibet has internal while the PRC manages some aspects of Tibet's defense and foreign affairs. In his 'Middle Way Approach', he laid down that the Chinese government can take care of foreign affairs and defense[link], and that Tibet should be managed by an elected body.

There have been intermittent and quiet negotiations between the Tibetan government in exile and the government of the People's Republic of China. These days, the Dalai Lama wishes to discuss the issue of the status of Tibet within China, while the Chinese government has insisted that negotiations be limited to the conditions of the Dalai Lama's return to Tibet.

On April 18 2005, TIME Magazine placed Tenzin Gyatso on its list of the world's 100 most influential people.

On June 22 2006, the Parliament of Canada voted unanimously to make Tenzin Gyatso an honorary citizen of Canada. It is the third time in history that the Government of Canada has bestowed this honour.

Writings of the Dalai Lama

Quotations

Awards given to the Dalai Lama

The Dalai Lama has received numerous awards over his spiritual and political career. On June 22, 2006 he became one of only three people ever to be recognized with an Honorary Citizenship by the House of Commons of Canada. On May 28, 2005, he received the Christmas Humphreys Award from the Buddhist Society in the United Kingdom. Perhaps his most notable award was the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo on December 10, 1989 (see below). Some other notable awards he has received:

A complete [list]

Nobel Peace Prize

The Dalai Lama receiving the Nobel Peace Prize
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The Dalai Lama receiving the Nobel Peace Prize

In 1989 Tenzin Gyatso was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize[link], the chairman of the Nobel committee saying that this was "in part a tribute to the memory of Mahatma Gandhi." He was officially awarded it because the committee wished to recognise his efforts in the struggle of the liberation of Tibet and the efforts for a peaceful resolution instead of using violence. [link]. He criticised China in his acceptance speech for the use of force against the student protesters during the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. He stated however that their effort was not in vain. His speech focused on the importance of the continued use of non-violence and his desire to maintain a dialogue with China to try to resolve the situation. [link]

Films about the Dalai Lama

Among the films that have been recently made about the 14th Dalai Lama are Kundun and Seven Years in Tibet.

Other recent films include:

See also

Citations

Full citations of utilised sources are listed under "References".

References

Literary

Internet

External links

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