~~ THIS ENLIGHTENED SOUL~~
~~TRYING TO BREAK FREE~~
Recent Entries 
standunitedicon

President Barack Obama has not solved the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He has not convinced Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to play nice with other nations. He has not brokered peace between China and Tibet.

But neither had the 14th Dalai Lama when he received the prize in 1989. Instead, the chairman of the prize committee at that time, said the Dalai Lama’s award was "in part a tribute to the memory of Mahatma Gandhi," who regrettably never received the prize.

Could Obama’s award be a tribute to the long line of legendary peacemakers before him, such as 1964 winner Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. whose dream was realized when Obama was elected? Is it a call for Americans to realize the rest of the mission of world peace?

 

Read more... )

standunitedicon

The dalai lama met with Dutch members of parliament on June 5.   Photo Roel Rozenburg

The dalai lama met with Dutch members of parliament on June 5.  Photo Roel Rozenburg

Dutch parliamentarians not welcome in China

Published: 18 June 2009 12:51 | Changed: 18 June 2009 15:44

By NRC International, RNW

A parliamentary delegation from the Netherlands has been refused permission to visit China. The politicians will not receive the invitation needed to get an entry visa for the country and a meeting with the People's Congress.
 

A delegation of seven Dutch members of parliament had planned to visit China in July.

Although no official reason was given by the Chinese embassy, parliamentarians believe the refusal was prompted by the Dutch parliament's recent reception of the dalai lama, the Tibetan spiritual leader in exile. At the time, the Chinese ambassador in the Netherlands warned that the parliament's action might have negative consequences.

Christian democrat Henk Jan Ormel, who made the Chinese refusal public, told Radio Netherlands Worldwide he is disappointed about the Chinese decision.

"China's People's Congress, our colleagues in Beijing, were too busy to receive us, is what the Chinese ambassador told me. He did not say that our reception of the dalai lama was the reason, but we are quite convinced that it was. After our talks with the dalai lama I went to see the ambassador to ask him if he could help us get an invitation from the People's Congress. In reply, he took a sheet of paper from his pocket and read it out loud: it was a declaration by the Chinese leadership, expressing its regret and concern over our reception of the dalai lama."

The parliamentarians are members of the standing committee on foreign affairs in the Dutch Lower House. Earlier trips took the committee members to the US and Russia. Henk Jan Ormel said the delegation had hoped to talk to Chinese politicians about issues like the human rights situation in China and China's foreign policy, and see the reality of China for themselves.

Several committee members told the Dutch press they hope and expect that the visit will turn out to have been postponed rather than cancelled altogether.

Very childish,,,
dalai_lama

Disunity threatens the Dalai Lama’s timeless authority

undefined

Disunity threatens the Dalai Lama’s timeless authority

Buddhism exerts influence far beyond its home in Tibet, to the West and East. Uncharacteristic leadership questions now challenge its reputation


The news that a Tibetan monk, chosen as a child by the Dalai Lama as a reincarnation of a spiritual leader, has thrown off his robes and renounced his vows has caused consternation among some Buddhists.
Lama Tenzin Osel Rinpoche has changed his name, denounced the Buddhist order that revered him as a man of spiritual authority and is now studying film in Madrid. He has renounced the strict life of meditation and prayer that traditionally isolates lamas away from the hurly-burly of modern life and reportedly now attends discos. To some, this will be a shock. But it underlines the extraordinary hold that one country, Tibet, has on Buddhists throughout the world and the many strands of faith and monastic traditions that are found there.
Read more... )
4th-Jun-2009 11:10 am - Dalai Lama in the Netherlands
standunitedicon



Dalai Lama begins Dutch visit

AMSTERDAM (AFP) — Amid Chinese outrage, Tibet's spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, arrived in the Netherlands Wednesday for a three-day visit he described as "non-political".

"My visit is non-political. I am here simply to share with the public about two things: human values and religious harmony," he told reporters upon his arrival at Amsterdam's Schiphol airport.

The 73-year-old exiled Buddhist spiritual leader, due to meet Dutch Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen on Friday, said he was unfazed by Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende's decision not to receive him.

"No problem, I have no political agenda," he shrugged.

Read more... )

dalai_lama
Dutch to invite Dalai Lama to parliament
THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — Dutch lawmakers said Thursday they will invite the Dalai Lama to parliament despite a warning from China that the visit would harm relations between the two nations.
A lawmaker for the ruling Christian Democrats also sharply criticized China's ambassador for attempting to interfere with Dutch politics.
The ambassador sent a letter to the chairman of Parliament's foreign affairs committee urging lawmakers not to invite the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader.
The Dutch don't interfere with Chinese political meetings "and we expect the same respect from the Chinese ambassador," legislator Maarten Haverkamp said.
The Dalai Lama is expected to visit in June.
Read more... )
standunitedicon

Obama Had The Dalai Lama's Scarf In His Pocket During His Swearing In

Friday January 23, 2009

Lama Surya Das passed on this fascinating bit. Richard Blum, who is the husband of California Senator Diane Feinstein, also happens to be a major supporter of Buddhism. He was up on the platform during the swearing in.

Beforehand, he told Barack Obama that he had with him a white khata -- a silk Tibetan scarf -- given him by His Holiness the Dalai Lama. Blum described what happened next in a letter to an associate of the Dalai Lama:

"I offered it to President Obama before the ceremony. I said that I could get it delivered to him later. He said, no, that he was going to take it and have it with him; in fact, it was in his pocket when he was sworn-in."
(source: http://blog.beliefnet.com/stevenwaldman/2009/01/obama-had-the-dalai-lamas-scar.html)
This page was loaded Dec 11th 2009, 3:07 am GMT.