Whole Trouble – Occupation of Tibet brings Trouble for Asia

Trouble in Tibet – Trouble for Asia

Whole Trouble – Occupation of Tibet brings Trouble for Asia

People of Asia are slowly coming to grips with ‘Trouble in Tibet’. Red China’s military occupation of Tibet and dam-building to control flow of South Asia’s rivers is a security threat and it demands the use of military power to resolve Tibet’s Trouble.

Preventing a water war in Asia

China’s extensive dam-building would give it control of Southeast Asia’s rivers

An Indian washerman works on the banks of the River Brahmaputra on a foggy winter morning in Gauhati, India, Monday, Jan. 18, 2016. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath)
Whole Trouble – Occupation of Tibet brings Trouble for Asia

An Indian washerman works on the banks of the River Brahmaputra on a foggy winter morning in Gauhati, India, Monday, Jan. 18, 2016. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath)

By THE WASHINGTON TIMES – – Monday, January 18, 2016

Just when Asia was getting accustomed to the Chinese threat to the oceans of Southeast Asia, there’s another water worry for Asians. The government in Beijing controls the health of six major South and Southeastern Asian rivers, the heart of life in the region. All of the rivers rise on the Tibetan plateau. The Chinese have been on an intensive program of dam-building on the upper reaches of the Brahmaputra, the Irrawaddy, the Meman Chao Phya and the Mekong, which would give them the ability to control these arteries of commerce, as well as irrigation of rice and other crops, for vast areas downstream.

Snows are melting on thousands of glaciers, the largest concentration of ice north and south of the poles, repeating the ancient and constant cycle of change in the world’s weather. One Tibetan lake, Namtso, a holy site where pilgrims circumnavigate its banks in prayer, expanded by 20 square miles between 2000 and 2014. Tibet’s glaciers have shrunk by 15 percent over the past 30 years. Though subject to the whims of climate change, if melting continues at current levels the warmer temperatures could melt two-thirds of the plateau’s glaciers by 2050, and this would affect in unknown ways 2 billion people in China, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam.

The most dramatic example of prospective risk is China’s plan to divert the Brahmaputra from its upper reaches, where it flows a thousand miles through Tibet and another 600 miles through India, emptying into the harbor of Calcutta, the second-largest city of India. The Brahmaputra is the lifeline of northeast India, a troubled region with caste and other ethnic conflicts.

There’s concern in Thailand, Laos, Vietnam and Cambodia over eight dams under construction on the upper reaches of the Mekong River. The Burmese military junta canceled a dam under construction in Myanmar, formerly called Burma, one of six Chinese-led hydroelectric projects planned for the upper reaches of the Irrawaddy. These plants would have exported electricity to southern China.

Government and the business interests worry that China’s apparent intention to dam every major river flowing out of Tibet will lead to environmental imbalance, natural disasters, degrade fragile ecologies, and most of all, divert vital water supplies. The extent of the Chinese program is monumental — on the eight great Tibetan rivers alone, China has completed or started construction of 20 dams, with three-dozen more on the drawing board.

The Dalai Lama points out the obvious, that China’s dam-building could lead to conflict. He warns that India’s use of the Tibetan water “is something very, very essential. So, since millions of Indians use water coming from the Himalayan glaciers I think [India] should express more serious concern. This is nothing to do with politics, just everybody’s interests, including Chinese people.”

The Chinese program for the Brahmaputra is one of the issues which complicate the India-China relationship. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi blows hot and cold over the threat. Despite extensive contacts, Himalayan border disputes dating from almost a century are no nearer solution than ever, and water is one of the important irritants. Increasing penetration of the Himalayan kingdoms of Nepal and Bhutan, once dependencies of Britain, has become a new concern in New Delhi.

However, China has become India’s No. 1 trading partner — up to $80 billion in 2015, an increase of $10 billion over 2014. India exports mostly raw materials and imports mostly Chinese electronics and other manufactured goods. Economic relations are the usual guarantee that political and economic disagreements will somehow be sorted out. But not always. Keeping the peace if not necessarily tranquility between the Asian giants must be a priority of the U.S. government. A water war is in nobody’s interest.

Copyright © 2016 The Washington Times, LLC.

All site contents © Copyright 2016 The Washington Times, LLC|3600 New York Avenue NE | Washington, DC 20002 |202-636-3000

 

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Whole Consciousness – Red China’s Divide and Rule Policy in Tibet

Tibet Consciousness – United We Stand, Divided We Fall

The False Panchen Lama Ordains Monks in Tashi Lhunpo Monastery—for the Communist Party.

Red China is using religion as a political weapon to disrupt Tibetan Unity and to deliberately weaken Tibetan Solidarity. Red China apart from her military power, is using her economic power to tear apart Tibetan community by pitching followers of one group or sect against another Buddhist group or entity. This policy of ‘Divide and Rule’ is a strategy that is successfully used by Imperial Powers and Colonialist rulers to subjugate native population of countries they occupy, dominate, and exploit to accomplish their selfish goals.

November 4, 2023, corresponding to the twenty-second day of the ninth month in the Tibetan calendar, was the day of the Lhabab Düchen festival. It celebrates the descent of Buddha back to earth from heaven, where he had ascended at age 41 to impart teachings to the gods and liberate his mother from Samsara.
The false Panchen Lama selected this sacred day to ordain, for the first time, 28 monks in the Tashi Lhunpo Monastery in Shigatse. The monastery is the traditional seat of the Panchen Lamas, which he unlawfully occupies.

THE POLITICS OF TIBET’S POISONOUS RELIGIOUS DIVIDE

By Reuters Staff
December 23, 2015

Tibetan Buddhist monks attend a Buddhism gathering overseen by Gyaltsen Norbu, the 11th Panchen Lama, at the Tashilhunpo Monastery in Shigatse, Tibet Autonomous Region, China, December 8, 2015. REUTERS/China Daily)

The doctrinal schism that the Chinese Communist Party is using to hound the Dalai Lama arose long ago in the internecine politics of his own school of Tibetan Buddhism.
Dalai Lamas are drawn from the dominant Gelugpa School, one of the four major Buddhist traditions in Tibet.

When the 5th Dalai Lama united Tibet in the 17th Century, he made an effort to embrace the other schools to enhance political unity, according to the French Tibetologist Thierry Dodin.
This move angered other senior members of the Gelugpa School who opposed sharing power and privilege. They united in a clique within their school around the worship of Dorje Shugden, then a little-known “protector deity.”

Over the centuries, Shugden devotees came to dominate the Gelugpa School and the religious politics of Tibet. After the Communists came to power in 1949, Shugden practitioners became influential in the exiled Tibetan communities in India and Nepal. At first, they were hostile to Beijing, particularly after Tibetan monasteries and cultural relics were destroyed during the Cultural Revolution.

That changed with the current Dalai Lama, 14th in the line. He too had been educated under senior Shugden monks. But from the mid-1970s, he began to shape a more inclusive doctrine. In part, this was a political move aimed at unifying the different traditions in Tibetan Buddhism in the face of pressure from Beijing, according to Dodin and other Tibet scholars.
During a period of reflection, the Dalai Lama began to question the value of Shugden worship on the grounds it was harmful. In 1996, he publicly advised his followers to shun the practice.

Since then, scholars say, there has been a gradual shift towards Beijing by the Shugden movement – a move that accelerated in the past decade.
China is careful to avoid obvious public references to its Shugden strategy. But on the ground, evidence abounds that Beijing has thrown its weight behind Shugden devotees.

GENEROUS FUNDING

Chinese authorities have poured funds into rebuilding and maintaining Shugden monasteries in the Tibet Autonomous Region and surrounding provinces. Reports in the state-run media show that China has financed extensive restoration at the Ganden Sumtseling Monastery in Yunnan Province and the Dungkar Monastery near Tibet’s frontier with India, both leading Shugden monasteries.

“There’s a massive drive to keep the remaining Shugden strongholds alive with a lot of support from the party,” said Dodin, director of the website TibetInfoNet. “This does not mean that others are left in decrepitude, but there is no such thing as a poor Shugden monastery.”

Buddhists who openly follow the Dalai Lama’s teachings face persecution by Chinese authorities, according to human rights groups and exiled Tibetans. It is now a criminal offence to discourage Shugden worship, they say.

Beijing also allows Shugden monks to travel overseas to teach and study with foreign Buddhists and exiled Tibetans.

In December 2012, Beijing sponsored the visit to Switzerland of Lama Jampa Ngodup Wangchuk Rinpoche, the first Tibetan lama sent abroad by the government to teach, according to the website dorjeshugden.com, one of the websites that publish news and commentary about the sect.

“By officially nominating him to travel abroad to teach, this would mean that the Chinese government is openly encouraging the proliferation of Buddhism, China’s ancient heritage and Dorje Shudgen’s practice,” an article on the website said.

PROTECTIVE CUSTODY

Another clear signal of Beijing’s preference: Senior Shugden monks are central to China’s effort to educate the Panchen Lama, second only to the Dalai Lama in religious stature.
In 1995, the Dalai Lama recognized a six-year-old Tibetan boy, Gedhun Choekyi Nyima, as the reincarnation of the 10th Panchen Lama. The boy and his family soon disappeared; Chinese authorities have said he is in protective custody. To sideline the Dalai Lama’s choice, Beijing then recognized another Tibetan boy, Gyaltsen Norbu, as Panchen Lama. This maneuver was crucial to Beijing’s plans to control Tibetan Buddhism, as the Panchen Lama plays a major role in recognizing reincarnations of the Dalai Lama, according to supporters of the Dalai Lama and experts on Tibetan Buddhism.

Many of the senior teachers responsible for educating Beijing’s hand-picked Panchen Lama are Shugden practitioners, according to experts on Tibetan Buddhism. Lama Gangchen, the most influential Shugden monk living abroad, has been photographed with this Panchen Lama as well.

President Xi Jinping in June met the party-approved Panchen Lama in Beijing. The monk told Xi he would “resolutely uphold the unity of the motherland and its people,” state television reported.

Chinese authorities have put aside their atheist convictions to insist they will vet the selection of the next Dalai Lama, according to official statements and reports in the state-run media.
This is part of an effort to ensure that the future spiritual leader of the more than six million ethnic Tibetans in Tibet and bordering provinces are loyal to the Communist Party. In response, the Dalai Lama has suggested he may reincarnate outside China or, perhaps, not at all.

That idea drew an outraged response from Zhu Weiqun, the point man in Beijing’s efforts to neutralize the Dalai Lama. “The reincarnation of the Dalai Lama has to be endorsed by the central government, not by any other sides, including the Dalai Lama himself,” Zhu said, according to a March 11 report in the state-run Xinhua news agency.

Source: The politics of Tibet’s poisonous religious divide | Reuters

Gyaltsen Norbu (top 4th L), the 11th Panchen Lama, arrives at a Buddhism gathering at the Tashilhunpo Monastery in Shigatse, Tibet Autonomous Region, China, December 8, 2015. Picture taken December 8, 2015. REUTERS/China Daily/File Photo

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR HOMELAND

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR TIBET:

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK TIBET. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. EXPRESSION OF HOPE AT TASHI LHUNPO MONASTERY, BYLAKUPPE, COORG, KARNATAKA, INDIA ON DECEMBER 18, 2015.
TIBETANS WILL GET BACK TIBET. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. EXPRESSION OF HOPE AT TASHI LHUNPO MONASTERY, BYLAKUPPE, COORG, KARNATAKA, INDIA ON SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19, 2015.

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR HOMELAND – TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. EXPRESSION OF HOPE AT PRAYER HALL , BYLAKUPPE TIBETAN RESETTLEMENT CAMP, COORG(KODAGU) KARNATAKA, INDIA.

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR HOMELAND

 I visited Bylakuppe Tibetan Settlement Camp, Karnataka during 1974. I am pleased to read Karnataka Governor Vajubhai Vala’s expression of hope at Inaugural Ceremony of new Assembly Hall of Tashi Lhunpo Monastery during which he assured Tibetans that they will get back their Tibet for Tibet is always Tibetan.

Rudranarasimham Rebbapragada
Ann Arbor, MI 48104-4162 USA
SPECIAL FRONTIER FORCE

DALAI LAMA: TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR HOMELAND – THE NEW INDIAN EXPRESS
Sunday, December 20, 2015

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK TIBET. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. INAUGURAL CEREMONY OF NEW ASSEMBLY HALL AT TASHI LHUNPO MONASTERY, BYLAKUPPE, COORG, KARNATAKA, INDIA.
TIBETANS WILL GET BACK TIBET. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. INAUGURAL CEREMONY OF NEW ASSEMBLY HALL AT TASHI LHUNPO MONASTERY, BYLAKUPPE, COORG, KARNATAKA, INDIA.

Dalai Lama: Tibetans Will Get Back their Homeland

By Express News Service

MYSORE: Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama on Saturday described
India-Tibet as master and disciple. He spoke at the inauguration of a prayer
hall at the Bylakuppe Tibetan Settlement camp.

Thanking India for giving asylum to Tibetans, he said Tibetans are only
political refugees in India.

Governor Vajubhai Vala who inaugurated the prayer hall expressed confidence
that Tibetans would get their Tibet back and said there should be no doubt
about it.

“Have trust in the Dalai Lama. Tibet was always yours and you will surely
get it. Your next generation will be in Tibet,” he said.

Copyright © 2015, The New Indian Express. All rights reserved.

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR HOMELAND. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. HIS HOLINESS THE DALAI LAMA ARRIVING AT TASHI LHUNPO MONASTERY, BYLAKUPPE, COORG, KARNATAKA, INDIA.
TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR HOMELAND. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. HIS HOLINESS THE DALAI LAMA ARRIVING AT TASHI LHUNPO MONASTERY, BYLAKUPPE, COORG, KARNATAKA, INDIA.

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR HOMELAND. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. EXPRESSION OF HOPE AT BYLAKUPPE BUDDHIST GOLDEN TEMPLE, KARNATAKA, INDIA.

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR HOMELAND. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. EXPRESSION OF HOPE AT BYLAKUPPE BUDDHIST GOLDEN TEMPLE, COORG(KODAGU), KARNATAKA, INDIA.

 

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR HOMELAND. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. EXPRESSION OF HOPE AT BYLAKUPPE BUDDHIST GOLDEN TEMPLE, COORG, KARNATAKA, INDIA.

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR HOMELAND. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. EXPRESSION OF HOPE AT SERA MONASTERY, BYLAKUPPE, COORG, KARNATAKA, INDIA.

 

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR HOMELAND. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. EXPRESSION OF HOPE AT BUDDHIST GOLDEN TEMPLE, BYLAKUPPE, COORG, KARNATAKA, INDIA.

 

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR HOMELAND. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. BUDDHIST GOLDEN TEMPLE, BYLAKUPPE, COORG, KARNATAKA, INDIA.

 

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK TO THEIR HOMELAND. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. EXPRESSION OF HOPE AT BUDDHIST GOLDEN TEMPLE, BYLAKUPPE, COORG, KARNATAKA, INDIA.

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK TO THEIR HOMELAND. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. EXPRESSION OF HOPE AT SERA MONASTERY, BYLAKUPPE, COORG, KARNATAKA, INDIA.

 

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR HOMELAND. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. EXPRESSION OF HOPE AT TIBETAN RESETTLEMENT CAMP, BYLAKUPPE, COORG(KODAGU), KARNATAKA, INDIA.

 

TIBETANS WILL GET BACK THEIR HOMELAND. TIBET IS ALWAYS TIBETAN. EXPRESSION OF HOPE AT BYLAKUPPE TIBETAN RESETTLEMENT CAMP. ZANGDOKPALRI TEMPLE.

 

Tibetans will get back their Homeland. Tibet is always Tibetan. Expression of Hope at Bylakuppe Tibetan Resettlement Camp. Namrodoling Monastery, Buddhist Golden Temple. Padmasambhava Buddhist Vihara.

Tibetans will get back their Homeland. Tibet is always Tibetan. Expression of Hope at Bylakuppe Tibetan Resettlement Camp. Namrodoling Monastery, Buddhist Golden Temple.

Tibetans will get back their Homeland. Tibet is always Tibetan. Expression of Hope at Bylakuppe Tibetan Resettlement Camp. Dalai Lama delivering Jangchup Lamrim Teachings.

Tibetans will get back their Homeland. Tibet is always Tibetan. Expression of Hope at Bylakuppe Tibetan Resettlement Camp. Dalai Lama delivering Jangchup Lamrim Teachings.

Tibetans will get back their Homeland. Tibet is always Tibetan. Expression of Hope at Bylakuppe Tibetan Resettlement Camp, Coorg, Karnataka, India.

 

 

THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT DALAI LAMA

THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT DALAI LAMA

THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA AFTER DALAI LAMA. I HAVE NO CONCERNS FOR FUTURE OF TIBETAN BUDDHISM AFTER DALAI LAMA.
THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT  DALAI LAMA. I HAVE NO CONCERNS FOR FUTURE OF TIBETAN BUDDHISM WITHOUT DALAI LAMA.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What will be the future of Red China without Dalai Lama??? I am not asking about the future of Tibet or Tibetan Buddhism with or without Dalai Lama. As ‘Doomsayer of Doom Dooma’, I am predicting a future event, a sudden disaster, catastrophe, apocalypse, cataclysmic event that will bring downfall of Red China and there will be no person or nation to save her.

THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT DALAI LAMA. BEIJING IS DOOMED.
THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT DALAI LAMA. BEIJING IS DOOMED.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rudranarasimham Rebbapragada

Ann Arbor, MI 48104-4162 USA
SPECIAL FRONTIER FORCE

WHAT’S THE FUTURE OF THE DALAI LAMA? NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE POSES THE RIGHT QUESTIONS 

THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT DALAI LAMA. I HAVE NO CONCERNS ABOUT FUTURE OF TIBET OR TIBETAN BUDDHISM WITH OR WITHOUT DALAI LAMA.
THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT DALAI LAMA. I HAVE NO CONCERNS ABOUT FUTURE OF TIBET OR OF TIBETAN BUDDHISM WITH OR WITHOUT DALAI LAMA.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

JULIA DUIN, December 13, 2015

The Dalai Lama was the topic of a New York Times magazine profile recently, and unlike the laudatory sort of write-ups one usually sees about this 80-year-old religious icon, this one calls his leadership into question.

THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT DALAI LAMA. I PREDICT SUDDEN CATASTROPHIC DOWNFALL OF THE EVIL RED EMPIRE AFTER DALAI LAMA WITH OR WITHOUT HIS REINCARNATION.
THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT DALAI LAMA. I PREDICT SUDDEN CATASTROPHIC DOWNFALL OF THE EVIL RED EMPIRE AFTER DALAI LAMA WITH OR WITHOUT HIS REINCARNATION.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Not only his leadership, but his legacy is questioned this time around

We’ve written about how he decided four years ago to give up his political role as head of the world’s exiled Tibetan community. The Buddhist leader will be dying sooner or later, the article says, and maybe sooner. So what will happen then to Tibetan Buddhism and the cause of free Tibet?
So you get paragraphs like this:

The economic potency of China has made the Dalai Lama a political liability for an increasing number of world leaders, who now shy away from him for fear of inviting China’s wrath. Even Pope Francis, the boldest pontiff in decades, report­edly declined a meeting in Rome last December. When the Dalai Lama dies, it is not at all clear what will happen to the six million Tibetans in China. The Chinese Communist Party, though officially atheistic, will take charge of finding an incarnation of the present Dalai Lama. Indoctrinated and controlled by the Communist Party, the next leader of the Tibetan community could help Beijing cement its hegemony over Tibet. And then there is the 150,000-strong community of Tibetan exiles, which, increasingly politically fractious, is held together mainly by the Dalai Lama. The Tibetan poet and activist Tenzin Tsundue, who has disagreed with the Dalai Lama’s tactics, told me that his absence will create a vacuum for Tibetans. The Dalai Lama’s younger brother, Tenzin Choegyal, was more emphatic: ‘‘We are finished once His Holiness is gone.’’

I had forgotten the dust-up about the pope not meeting with the Buddhist leader, but a year has passed since then and they have yet to meet.
The article continues on, recounting how 140 Buddhist monks and nuns have publicly set themselves on fire to protest the suppression of Tibet by China. And what does the Dalai Lama do in response?

As if in response to these multiple crises in his homeland, the Dalai Lama has embarked on some improbable intellectual journeys. In 2011, he renounced his role as the temporal leader of the Tibetan people and declared that he would focus on his spiritual and cultural commitments. Today, the man who in old photos of Tibet can be seen enacting religious rites wearing a conical yellow hat — in front of thangkas, or scrolls, swarming with scowling monsters and copulating deities — speaks of going ‘‘beyond religion’’ and embracing ‘‘secular ethics’’: principles of selflessness and compassion rooted in the fundamental Buddhist notion of interconnectedness.

Increasingly, the Dalai Lama addresses himself to a nondenominational audience and seems perversely determined to undermine the authority of his own tradition. He has intimated that the next Dalai Lama could be female. He has asserted that certain Buddhist scriptures disproved by science should be abandoned. He has suggested — frequently, during the months that I saw him — that the institution of the Dalai Lama has outlived its purpose. Having embarked in the age of the selfie on a project of self-abnegation, he is now flirting with ever-more-radical ideas. One morning at his Dharamsala residence in May this year, he told me that he may one day travel to China, but not as the Dalai Lama.

As much as this leader would like to shuck off his political obligations, the world won’t let him, the article notes. There is simply no one to take his place.
Still, as a political negotiator, the article states, he has failed. But who wouldn’t? Was the Dalai Lama supposed to be a modern-day Gandhi, bringing China to its knees somehow? Rather, it’s China that is setting the conditions. The Dalai Lama very much wants to return to Tibet before he dies. By the time you’ve finished this piece, you’ll be convinced that will never happen.
One thing the writer — who is an Indian intellectual and author who’s had access to the Buddhist spiritual leader for years — brings out is the ordinariness of the man. He lists a number of things the Dalai Lama will do to confound people and keep them from putting him on a pedestal.
I have covered two of the DL’s appearances in the Washington, DC area. The one included an esoteric discourse on Buddhism that defied translation. But the other had quite a bit of barnyard humor, which was tough to square with a world-famous monk. I never knew if the latter was part of an earthiness that comes with being from that part of the world, or something else. The author of this piece likewise captures the oddity of the Dalai Lama, who will sometimes make weird jokes or pronouncements in public settings that make little or no sense or seem odd at best.
Couple that with examples throughout the piece about how the Dalai Lama and his cause are losing traction throughout the West, and one concludes that by waiting out the Dalai Lama, the Chinese may win this battle.
The piece has way more to say about politics than religion, although it does have flashes of insight like the following:

The ‘‘world picture,’’ as he saw it, was bleak. People all over the world were killing in the name of their religions. Even Buddhists in Burma were tormenting Rohingya Muslims. This was why he had turned away from organized religion, engaged with quantum physics and started to emphasize the secular values of compassion. It was no longer feasible, he said, to construct an ethical existence on the basis of traditional religion in multicultural societies.

When asked if he means to reincarnate once he dies, the Dalai Lama answers that he does not. Our GetReligioncolleague Ira Rifkin covered this pronouncement earlier this year. The institution of the Dalai Lama, the author of the magazine article points out, has reached the end of its usefulness.
So what will happen with Tibet? In one sense, the article leaves you hanging. In another sense, it’s clear that the Dalai Lama has already checked out.
There are a few journalistic burps in this piece, one being that the Buddha was born in Nepal, not India as the article says. And as one commentator pointed out, Tibetan Buddhism believes its leaders must reincarnate until everyone is ready for full enlightenment. So how can this Dalai Lama say he will not reincarnate?
Otherwise, it raises the right questions about a man who, along with Pope Francis, is one of the world’s top spiritual leaders.

Shutterstock photos by Nadezda Murmakova and Phaendin.

© 2014 GetReligion.org unless otherwise noted.

All rights reserved.

THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT DALAI LAMA. RED CHINA'S FUTURE IS SEALED BY THIS PROPHECY.
THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT DALAI LAMA. RED CHINA’S FUTURE IS SEALED BY THIS PROPHECY.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT DALAI LAMA. BEIJING IS DOOMED. THE FUTURE OF TIBETAN BUDDHISM IS NOT AT RISK. RED CHINA IS DESTINED TO LOSE POWER AND STATUS.
THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT DALAI LAMA. BEIJING IS DOOMED. THE FUTURE OF TIBETAN BUDDHISM IS NOT AT RISK. RED CHINA IS DESTINED TO LOSE POWER AND STATUS.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT DALAI LAMA. BEIJING IS DOOMED.
THE FUTURE OF RED CHINA WITHOUT DALAI LAMA. BEIJING IS DOOMED.

 

Whole Problem – The Problem of Red China – Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely

The Problem of Red China – Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely

THE PROBLEM OF RED CHINA – ABSOLUTE POWER CORRUPTS ABSOLUTELY. RED CHINA’S DICTATORIAL REGIME IS ENEMY OF LIBERTY, INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS, HUMAN FREEDOM, PEACE, DEMOCRACY AND JUSTICE

“Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely.” This statement is entirely true of Red China’s Dictatorial Regime. Red China’s use of ‘Absolute Power’ is Enemy of Liberty, Individual Rights, Human Freedom, Peace, Democracy, and Justice. There is no ‘Goodwill’ for Red China’s tyranny. I am not surprised to note that Red China cannot understand the problem of Terror. I predict the downfall of this utterly corrupt regime which is subjugating Tibet without any moral authority.

THE WASHINGTON POST

A Chinese official said the Dalai Lama supports the Islamic State. Ridiculous — and telling.

By EMILY RAUHALA

The Problem of Red China – Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely.

Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama speaks at a peace conference in Bangalore, India. (AP/Aijaz Rahi)

It’s no secret that China’s leaders dislike the Dalai Lama. Over the years, Communist Party cadres have denounced the exiled spiritual leader as a “separatist,” a “splittist,” and a “wolf in monk’s robes.”

On Tuesday, the chairman of China’s top religious affairs committee, Zhu Weiqun, extended that war of words, telling a Chinese reporter that the Dalai Lama sympathized with the Islamic State.

“While the whole world has reached a preliminary consensus on fighting against IS and its cruel, violent behaviors, the Dalai Lama suggested listening, understanding and respecting them,” read an account of Zhu’s comments published by the Global Times, a Chinese newspaper known for its strident nationalism.

“This shows that the Dalai Lama, deep down, sympathizes or approves of ISIS.”

The interview came two days after the Dalai Lama told an Italian newspaper that dialogue was necessary to defeat extremists.

To tackle the Islamic State, “there has to be dialogue,” he told La Stampa on Monday, according to a report by the French news agency, Agence France Presse.
“One has to listen, to understand, to have respect for the other person, regardless. There is no other way.”
Zhu’s attempt to cast a call for dialogue as an endorsement of violence is telling — for two reasons.

First, it calls attention to the Chinese government’s ongoing effort to tarnish the Dalai Lama and, in so doing, try to nullify Tibetan demands for autonomy, religious freedom and human rights.

The Dalai Lama was born in what is today Qinghai province, moved to Lhasa as a child and, after a failed 1959 uprising against Chinese rule, fled over the Himalayas to India, where he has lived in exile ever since.

In the late 1980s, he publicly abandoned the pursuit of Tibetan independence in favor of what he calls “the Middle Way.” The strategy, which is unpopular among some Tibetans, seeks greater autonomy within the People’s Republic of China, not a new state.

But the central government insists the Dalai Lama is a determined separatist who works to divide China from abroad. They blame him — not economic, religious and cultural discrimination — for the riots that swept across the plateau in 2008, as well as more than 140 Tibetan self-immolations since 2009.

Indeed, in his interview with Global Times, Zhu reportedly said the Dalai Lama “incited” Tibetans to burn themselves to death. He called this “a form of violent extremism,” rhetorically linking public suicides in Tibetan areas to acts of terrorism committed by the Islamic State.

Second, and in a similar vein, Zhu’s comments come amid a post-Paris push to tie what is happening in China’s west to a global war on terror.

In the aftermath of the deadly attacks in Paris last month, China’s top leaders were quick to denounce the violence, but also used the moment to remind the world that, as Foreign Minister Wang Yi put it, China is “also a victim of terrorism.” There should be no “double standard” in how we think about terrorism, he said — a sentiment later echoed by Xi Jinping.
The notion that the West dismisses China’s terror problem is popular here.

In 2014, attackers with knives slaughtered 29 people, and injured more than 100, in an attack at a train station in Kunming. Blocked from reporting at the scene, many foreign reporters avoided using the word “terrorism” or “terrorists” or did so quoting state media — a linguistic hedge that outraged many Chinese.
The same sentiment proved salient after Paris. “In their eyes, only terrorist attacks that happen on Western soil can be called acts of terrorism,” read a China Daily editorial.

The challenge for those researching or writing about mass violence in China is that the word terrorism — tough to define in any context — is used in an extraordinary range of ways here.
China’s top leaders have long warned against the “three evil forces”— terrorism, separatism and religious extremism — and use the words in almost interchangeable ways, observed Australian scholar James Leibold in a recent piece for the National Interest.

Acts of mass violence by Han Chinese are not treated as terrorism, he noted, but for Tibetan and Uighurs, a wide range of non-violent acts seem to count.

“The line between peaceful political activism and violent acts of terror is frequently blurred in China, as the sentencing of Uyghur scholar ILHAM TOHTI and the Tibetan monk TENZIN DELEK RINPOCHE on charges of terrorism and separatism suggests,” Leibold wrote.

“In Chinese discourse, terrorism is employed exclusively in reference to Tibetans and Uyghurs.”

That means that a Nobel Peace Prize winner like the Dalai Lama is an advocate, by Zhu’s count, of “forms of violent extremism.” And so is Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

RauhalaE.png?ts=1440434927026&w=180&h=180

Emily Rauhala is a China Correspondent for the Post. She was previously a Beijing-based correspondent for TIME, and an editor at the magazine’s Hong Kong office.

© 1996-2015 The Washington Post

The Problem of Red China - Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely. Red China Enemy of Democracy.
The Problem of Red China – Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely. Red China Enemy of Democracy.
The Problem of Red China - Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely - Red China Enemy of Freedom.
The Problem of Red China – Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely – Red China Enemy of Freedom.
The Problem of Red China - Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely - Red China Enemy of Justice.
The Problem of Red China – Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely – Red China Enemy of Justice.
The Problem of Red China - Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely - Red China Enemy of Liberty
The Problem of Red China – Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely – Red China Enemy of Liberty.
The Problem of Red China - Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely - Red China Enemy of Peace and Justice.
The Problem of Red China – Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely – Red China Enemy of Peace and Justice.
The Problem of Red China - Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely - Red China Enemy of Freedom, Liberty, Democracy, Peace, Justice and Goodwill for all men.
The Problem of Red China – Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely – Red China Enemy of Freedom, Liberty, Democracy, Peace, Justice and Goodwill for all men.

Whole Aggressor – Red China’s Dictatorial Regime

Tibet Consciousness – Red China’s Dictatorial Regime

TIBET CONSCIOUSNESS – RED CHINA’S DICTATORIAL REGIME. RED CHINA’S COMMUNIST PARTY CHAIRMAN MAO ZEDONG FOUNDED CHINA’S DICTATORIAL REGIME ON OCTOBER 01, 1949. Red China’s Communist Party is a dictatorial regime for this one-party governance has absolute control of political, economic, and military power giving no room for any kind of dissent.

On this Thursday, December 10, 2015, World Human Rights Day, I state that Red China is autocratic, domineering, and tyrannical for she exercises power suppressing the views of all others. Her actions are arbitrary, unreasoned, and unpredictable. Red China uses power or authority in accord only with her own will or desire. Red China’s Communist Party is a dictatorial regime for this one-party governance has absolute control of political, economic, and military power giving no room for any kind of dissent.

CHINA CRACKS DOWN ON AGGRIEVED PARTY CADRES IN XINJIANG AND TIBET

Critics say hardline stance against ‘separatism and religious extremism’ has provoked significant disquiet

Tibet Consciousness – Red China’s Dictatorial Regime. Red China’s Communist Party is a dictatorial regime for this one-party governance has absolute control of political, economic, and military power giving no room for any kind of dissent.

A paramilitary policeman stands guard in front of the Potala Palace in Lhasa, Tibet. Photograph: Damir Sagolj/Reuters

SIMON DENYER for the Washington Post

Tuesday 8 December 2015 04.32 EST Last modified on Tuesday 8 December 2015 04.34 EST

China has mounted an extraordinary set of attacks against Communist party members in the troubled western regions of Xinjiang and Tibet, with accusations of disloyalty, secret participation in religious activity, sympathy with the Dalai Lama and even support for terrorism.

The accusations reflect a hardening of the party’s stance in Buddhist Tibet and Muslim-majority Xinjiang, experts said, as well as President Xi Jinping’s determination to push for ideological purity within the party nationwide, quashing debate and dissent. But critics say they also reflect the fact that the party’s hardline approach towards crushing “the three evils of separatism, terrorism and religious extremism” in both regions has not only alienated many ordinary ethnic Tibetan and Uighur people but has also provoked significant disquiet in its own ranks.
Some party officials openly criticise policies handed down from above, complained Xu Hairong, secretary of Xinjiang’s Commission for Discipline Inspection, making the unusual admission in a commentary published last month.

“Some waver on clear-cut issues of opposing ethnic division and safeguarding ethnic and national unity, and even support participating in violent terrorist attacks,” Xu wrote in his agency’s official newspaper.

“This does not mean the cadres participated in attacks,” said Nicholas Bequelin, East Asia director for Amnesty International, “but rather is the equivalent of local officials saying: ‘The central authorities are sending leaders who are so ham-fisted they have driven people to the edge and understandably they have started blowing up things.’”

With Xi taking the lead in formulating policy toward Xinjiang, “everybody has to march to the same drumbeat”, Bequelin said.

An article published last Friday on China Tibet Online, a party website, said that 355 party members had been punished in Xinjiang last year for violating “political discipline”.

The article said that one had joined a social media chat group titled “Uighur Muslim” that was meant to undermine ethnic unity, while another had reposted an interview given by the prominent Uighur intellectual Ilham Tohti, who was sentenced last year to life in prison on charges of advocating separatism.

Written by Zhao Zhao, the article said that some officials blame social problems on ethnic discrimination, thereby inciting ethnic hatred. “There is also a lack of faith in Marxism. Some grassroots party members even participate in religious activities,” he wrote, adding that this would never be allowed.

Tibet Consciousness – Red China’s Dictatorial Regime. Red China’s Communist Party is a dictatorial regime for this one-party governance has absolute control of political, economic, and military power giving no room for any kind of dissent.

A street in Urumqi, in 2009, shows the scars of riots. Photograph: Peter Parks/Getty

Critics say there is widespread economic, cultural and religious discrimination against Uighurs and Tibetans.
After 2009 riots in Xinjiang’s capital, Urumqi, left at least 192 people dead, the party acknowledged that it needed to address Uighur grievances, Bequelin said.

But later, with an increase in violent attacks by Uighurs, the party changed course, asserting at a major meeting on the region in 2014 that the priorities were stability and unity rather than economic development and combating discrimination.

The imprisonment of Tohti, a moderate economist whose work had detailed the problems Uighurs face, sent a strong signal to academics and party officials alike that the debate about discrimination had been closed, Bequelin said. The party now vehemently asserts that Uighur terrorism is directed by Islamist militants based abroad and is increasingly rooted in extremist ideas picked up on the internet.

At the same time, the Communist party has been recruiting, and the number of members in Xinjiang is reported to have risen by 21,000 to 1.45 million in 2014. And that has brought other problems.

“The Chinese Communist party believes that it is witnessing a ‘crisis of faith’ in Xinjiang and Tibet in particular,” said Julia Famularo, an international securities studies fellow at Yale University.

“It has actively endeavoured to draw ever greater numbers of ethnic minorities into the party, but it now fears that these new recruits possess only superficial loyalty to the party-state,” Famularo wrote in an email. “Beijing laments that these minority party members still make clandestine visits to mosques and monasteries, and that they still have stronger ties to their own people than to the party or to China.”

In Tibet, 15 party members were investigated last year and 20 this year for violating political discipline, China Tibet Online reported, saying that some had participated in organisations supporting “Tibetan independence”.

Last month, Tibet party boss Chen Quango said the party would go after officials who held “incorrect views” on minority issues or who “profess no religious belief but secretly believe,” including those who follow the Dalai Lama or listen to religious sermons.

China accuses the Dalai Lama, the exiled spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhists, of trying to divide the country and pry Tibet away from China. The Dalai Lama insists he only wants meaningful autonomy for the region.

This article appeared in GUARDIAN WEEKLY, which incorporates material from the Washington Post

© 2015 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved.

Tibet Consciousness – Red China’s Dictatorial Regime. Red China’s Communist Party is a dictatorial regime for this one-party governance has absolute control of political, economic, and military power giving no room for any kind of dissent.
Tibet Consciousness – Red China’s Dictatorial Regime. Communist Party Dictator Chairman Mao Zedong subjugated Tibet. Red China’s Communist Party is a dictatorial regime for this one-party governance has absolute control of political, economic, and military power giving no room for any kind of dissent.
DOOMED HUMAN RIGHTS IN OCCUPIED TIBET – TIBETANS HAVE NO SAFE PLACE TO LIVE.
Tibet Consciousness – Red China’s Dictatorial Regime. Save Tibet from  One-Party Dictatorship. Red China’s Communist Party is a dictatorial regime for this one-party governance has absolute control of political, economic, and military power giving no room for any kind of dissent.

 

Whole Consciousness – A Special Tribute to Monk Thomas Merton, Spiritual Brother of Tibet

Tibet Consciousness – Monk Thomas Merton, Special Friend, Spiritual Brother of Tibet

TIBET CONSCIOUSNESS – MONK THOMAS MERTON, SPECIAL FRIEND, SPIRITUAL BROTHER OF TIBET. FINAL WEEKS OF MONK MERTON’S LIFE. HIS MEETING WITH DALAI LAMA IN 1968 PRIOR TO HIS DEATH ON DECEMBER 10, 1968.

At Special Frontier Force, I host The Living Tibetan Spirits. I am sharing a news story on Kentucky Monk and influential author Thomas Merton who is described by His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama as a special friend, and spiritual brother of Tibet.

December 5, 2015

New film explores last, eventful year of Thomas Merton’s life

Tibet Consciousness - Monk Thomas Merton - Special Friend, and Spiritual Brother of Tibet. Documentary Film by Morgan Atkinson.
Tibet Consciousness – Monk Thomas Merton – Special Friend, and Spiritual Brother of Tibet. Documentary Film by Morgan Atkinson.

Louisville filmmaker got an interview with the Dalai Lama.
As film came out, Pope Francis praised Merton to US Congress.
KET will air documentary about the monk and writer Dec. 10-15.

Thomas Merton, the Kentucky monk and influential author, met in 1968 with the Dalai Lama in Asia during the final weeks of his life. Louisville filmmaker Morgan Atkinson’s new film about Merton’s pivotal last year will debut on KET on Dec. 10. Photo used with permission of the Thomas Merton Center, Bellarmine University.

By Tom Eblen

For his new documentary about the last, eventful year of Thomas Merton’s life, Louisville filmmaker Morgan Atkinson needed a special, hard-to-get interview.
He needed the Dalai Lama.

Merton, the Trappist monk and acclaimed writer who for 27 years lived at the Abbey of Gethsemani in Nelson County, spent his last weeks in 1968 traveling through Asia to meet and have dialogue with leaders of other religions.

Perhaps the most eventful of those meetings was with the spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhists, then a young man of 33.

When the Dalai Lama visited Louisville two years ago, Atkinson was hired to produce a short film for the people who hosted him. With their help — and after a U.S. State Department background check — Atkinson and his video camera were promised a brief audience.

He remains a source of spiritual inspiration.

Pope Francis on Merton

“What was supposed to be a five-minute visit became 15 or 20 minutes,” Atkinson said. “He was just delighted. The meeting with Thomas Merton had taken place 45 years ago, but you could tell that it had been really meaningful to him.”

Atkinson’s new film, The Many Stories and Last Days of Thomas Merton, includes an engaging interview with His Holiness.

“I myself consider him a close friend, a most special friend, a spiritual brother,” the Dalai Lama told Atkinson, who gave him an old photograph from their meeting.
“This looks like I’m his son,” the Dalai Lama said with a laugh, before turning serious. “I think spiritually he is elder. So, I am younger.”

That interview is one of many highlights in the excellent hour-long film, which will air on KET eight times from Dec. 10-15. Atkinson wrote and produced the documentary, which is narrated by poet Nikky Finney.

Atkinson had made a successful PBS documentary, Soul Searching: The Journey of Thomas Merton, in 2006. But for the centennial of Merton’s birth this year, he thought there was more to say about Merton’s contributions to inter-faith dialogue and understanding. And he wasn’t alone.

In his speech to Congress in September, Pope Francis cited Merton as one of four Americans who inspire him. (The others are Abraham Lincoln, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Catholic social activist Dorothy Day.)

“He remains a source of spiritual inspiration and a guide for many people,” the pope said of Merton. “He was also a man of dialogue, a promoter of peace between peoples and religions.”

The pope’s comments came as Atkinson was on a West Coast tour with his just-finished film. “If I had asked for a press agent,” he said, “I couldn’t have had a better one.”

Merton was born in France to an American mother and a New Zealand father. After earning English degrees at Columbia University, he became a Catholic at age 23. He went to a retreat at Gethsemani in 1941 and, eight months later, asked to join the order.

As a monk, he wrote more than 70 books of poetry and essays about spirituality, pacifism and social justice. His 1948 autobiography, The Seven Storey Mountain, became a best-seller and made Merton an unlikely celebrity. He also attracted a following in the 1960s with his advocacy for civil rights and stance against war.

You could tell that it had been really meaningful to him.

Morgan Atkinson, on Dalai Lama’s visit with Merton

Merton’s fame led him to correspond with leaders from many religions, and he longed to meet them. But it was only when a new abbot took over Gethsemani that Merton was finally given permission to travel. While on that trip to Asia, he was accidentally electrocuted in his Bangkok hotel room by a defective fan on Dec. 10, 1968.

The pope’s praise for Merton was notable, because some Catholic leaders have often tried to minimize him.

“Merton was seen by some as too liberal, or too open to dialogue with other faith traditions,” Atkinson said. “To have Pope Francis sort of push him up as an exemplar of a good spiritual path is really a good thing.”

Atkinson was raised Presbyterian, but he said he has been intrigued by Merton since he first read his books three decades ago. He thinks Merton remains popular because people are attracted to different aspects of his life and work.

Tom Eblen

Thomas Merton and the Dalai Lama - Thomas Merton Center
On www.merton.org

Disk 1 Track 1 When I first came into contact with Thomas Merton
On article.wn.com

Faith, Fiction, Friends: Saturday Good Reads: “A Silent Action”
On faithfictionfriends.blogspot.com

Thomas Merton was a monk, poet and social activist. He wrote over 70 ...
On pinterest.com

Thomas Merton and the Dalai Lama - Thomas Merton Center
On www.merton.org

Recent Photos The Commons Getty Collection Galleries World Map App ...
On www.flickr.com

Thomas Merton Quote WOW
On donquixotedotme.wordpress.com

Thomas Merton: Paradoxical Thinking is a Key to Creativity ...
On www.improvisedlife.com

Thomas Merton and the Wisdom of Non-Violence
On www.universalheartbookclub.com

... Louisville of Thomas Merton and the Dalai Lama (Lori Erickson photo
On www.spiritualtravels.info

TIBET CONSCIOUSNESS – INDIA – TIBET RELATIONS

TIBET CONSCIOUSNESS – INDIA – TIBET RELATIONS

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Relations. Kiren Rijiju, Union Minister of State for Home Affairs stressed historical relevance of India – Tibet Relations.

Special Frontier Force welcomes statement made by Mr. Kiren Rijiju, India’s Minister of State for Home Affairs regarding historical India – Tibet Relations.

Rudranarasimham Rebbapragada
Ann Arbor, MI 48104-4162 USA
SPECIAL FRONTIER FORCE

INDIA SHOULDN’T CHANGE ITS POLITICAL PATH ON TIBET: KIREN RIJIJU

JAGRAN POST

21 Nov 2015, 18:15 Jagran Post News Desk Jagran Post Editorial | Last

Updated: 21 Nov 2015, 18:15

Himachal Pradesh: India should not change its political path when it comes
to Tibet keeping in mind the long traditional relationship between the two
countries, Union Minister Kiren Rijiju said on Saturday.

“India has a long tradition of relations with Tibet and its dharma gurus
(religious leaders). India should not change its political path. India is
the land of Gautama Buddha and the land of Mahatma Gandhi,” said Rijiju.

The minister of state for home affairs also said it was the Bharatiya Janata
Party-led NDA government that decided to declare Buddha Jayanti a national
holiday.

Rijiju was addressing the Tibetan community at the Palpung Sherabling
Monastery on the occasion of Guru Padma Sambhava maha puja.

Veteran BJP leader and former chief minister Shanta Kumar was also present
on the occasion.”After we formed the government last year, we declared
Buddha Jayanti as a national holiday.

“Indians and Tibetans have a spiritual relationship. Guru Padma Sambhava
went to Tibet and at a later day, Buddhism returned to India in its purest
form,” said Rijiju.

Rijiju further stressed the role of religious leaders in containing the
threat of violence faced by society. “Only the government and the security
forces cannot stop violence. We have to depend on the dharma gurus to spread
the message of peace,” he added.

Tags:

Union Minister Kiren Rijiju
Kiren Rijiju on Tibet India ties
India
Kiren Rijiju
Tibet India ties
Tibet India relationship

Copyright 2014 | All Rights Reserved

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Relations. Palpung Sherabling Monastery. Guru Padma Sambhava.On www.kkcw.org

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Relations. Palpung Sherabling Monastery. Guru Padma Sambhava.On www.kkcw.org

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Relations. Palpung Sherabling Monastery. Guru Padma Sambhava.On www.kkcw.org

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Relations. Palpung Sherabling Monastery. Guru Padma Sambhava.On www.kkcw.org

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Historical Relations. Guru Padma Sambhava.

 

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Historical Relations. Guru Padma Sambhava.

 

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Historical Relations. Guru Rinpoche Padma Sambhava.

 

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Historical Relations. Guru Rinpoche Padma Sambhava.

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Historical Relations. Statue of Guru Padma Sambhava.

 

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Historical Relations. Guru Rinpoche Padma Sambhava.

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Historical Relations. Guru Rinpoche Padma Sambhava.

 

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Historical Relations. Guru Rinpoche Padma Sambhava.

 

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Historical Relations. Guru Rinpoche Padma Sambhava.

 

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Historical Relations. Guru Rinpoche Padma Sambhava.

Tibet Consciousness – India – Tibet Historical Relations. Guru Rinpoche Padma Sambhava.

TIBET EQUILIBRIUM – TIBET IS NOT IN CHINA – CHINA IS IN TIBET

TIBET EQUILIBRIUM – TIBET IS NOT IN CHINA – CHINA IS IN TIBET

TIBET EQUILIBRIUM – TIBET IS NOT IN CHINA – CHINA IS IN TIBET AS AN OCCUPYING POWER. POTALA PALACE IS MUCH OLDER THAN THE WHITE HOUSE.

US Lawmakers in a recent visit to Red China have discovered that Tibet is not in China. The problem of Power Equilibrium is explained as due to China is in Tibet as an Occupying Power.

Rudranarasimham Rebbapragada
Ann Arbor, MI 48104-4162 USA
SPECIAL FRONTIER FORCE

 
         
The Spirits of Special Frontier ForceThe Spirits of Special Frontier Force, Ann Arbor, MI. At Special Frontier Force, I host ‘The Living Tibetan Spirits’ to…
 
View on www.Facebook.com
 
 

VOA

After Tibet Visit, US Lawmakers Air Concerns

TIBET EQUILIBRIUM – TIBET IS NOT IN CHINA – CHINA IS IN TIBET AS AN OCCUPYING POWER.

 

U.S. House of Representatives Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, left, greets Chinese Premier Li Keqiang as she arrives for a bilateral meeting at the Zhongnanhai leadership compound in Beijing, Nov. 13, 2015

VOA News

November 14, 2015 2:56 PM

A group of U.S. Congress members has completed the first such trip to Tibet in at least seven years, saying they recognize China’s commitment to building infrastructure in the territory but remain concerned about its cultural, religious and linguistic heritage.

Nancy Pelosi, leader of the opposition Democratic Party in the House of Representatives, said she and six other party members also visited Beijing and Hong Kong.
In a formal statement issued from an air base in Alaska on the way home, she said the trip’s purpose had been “to deepen understanding, increase mutual respect and further strengthen U.S.-China ties.”
Pelosi, a strong critic of China’s Tibet policy who was denied permission to visit the region six years ago, noted that her congressional delegation was the first to visit Tibet since a series of protests, demonstrations and violence there in 2008.

TIBET EQUILIBRIUM – TIBET IS NOT IN CHINA – CHINA IS IN TIBET AS AN OCCUPYING POWER.

Tibet’s 1,300-year-old Potala Palace, the Dalai Lama’s traditional home, is a UNESCO World Heritage site.
“The delegation recognized China’s commitment to building infrastructure across China, including in Tibet, and addressing climate change,” her statement said.

But, it said, the lawmakers expressed concerns regarding “freedom of religion and expression for the Tibetan people; the preservation of Tibet’s unique cultural, religious and linguistic heritage; and diplomatic and public access to Tibet.”

Support for Dalai Lama

Pelosi conveyed to the Chinese government officials “the strong, bipartisan support the Dalai Lama enjoys in the Congress of the United States and among the American people,” the statement said.

The U.S. delegation also visited UNESCO World Heritage sites in Tibet, including the Potala Palace, which served as the living quarters and burial site for former Dalai Lamas; and the Jokhang Temple, a sacred destination for religious pilgrims. The delegation also met and observed monks at the Sera Monastery.
Pelosi has been a frequent, fierce critic of China’s human-rights record in Tibet, and has been an advocate for the Himalayan region’s spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama.

TIBET EQUILIBRIUM – TIBET IS NOT IN CHINA – CHINA IS IN TIBET AS AN OCCUPYING POWER.

FILE – U.S. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of Calif., second from left, smiles during a bilateral meeting with Zhang Ping, vice chairman of China’s National People’s Congress, at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Nov. 12, 2015.

Chinese authorities accuse the Dalai Lama of separatism, claiming that he seeks independence for Tibet, which Beijing has ruled since 1951. The Dalai Lama insists he seeks only political autonomy.

The United States and the West have long accused Beijing of suppressing demands for greater religious and cultural freedom in Tibet.

High-level meetings

In Beijing, the delegation met with Chinese Prime Minister Li Keqiang and leaders of National People’s Congress.

The delegation and Chinese officials discussed the importance of building upon agreements reached by Presidents Barack Obama and Xi Jinping on climate change, protection of cyberspace and countering the proliferation of nuclear weapons.

Li said Friday that China and the United States have more interests in common than they have differences, and he emphasized the steady growth of the two nations’ relations.
Human rights

The U.S. delegation, however, reiterated the imperative of respect for religious freedom and expression in Tibet; autonomy and democracy in Hong Kong; and respect for human and women’s rights across China,” Pelosi said.

TIBET EQUILIBRIUM – TIBET IS NOT IN CHINA – CHINA IS IN TIBET AS AN OCCUPYING POWER.

FILE – U.S. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of Calif., left, speaks with Zhang Ping, vice chairman of China’s National People’s Congress, as she arrives for a bilateral meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Nov. 12, 2015.

The delegation also expressed specific concerns related to the recent arrest and detention of human rights lawyers and activists.

At Peking University in the Chinese capital, the delegation participated in a climate change forum with students who shared their determination to address the climate crisis.
In Hong Kong, the U.S. delegation met with top local officials and legislators and discussed the importance of preserving Hong Kong’s autonomy and the value of U.S.-Hong Kong bilateral relations.

The U.S. delegation included Representatives Jim McGovern of Massachusetts, Betty McCollum and Tim Walz of Minnesota, Joyce Beatty of Ohio, and Alan Lowenthal and Ted Lieu of California.

VOA’s Cindy Saine-Spang contributed to this report.

Chinese Grip on Tibet, Buddhists | Uyghur American Association
On uyghuramerican.org

Do not be fooled by China's propaganda on Tibet and Tibetans
On www.thetibetpost.com

Earthquake's aftershocks shake Tibetan way of life in Yushu prefecture ...
On guardian.co.uk

Pro-Tibetan demonstrators protest against Chinese-ruled Tibet in front ...
On internationalpoliticalforum.com

TIBET_CHINA_Army.jpg
On www.asianews.it

Eight Things You Need to Know About Tibet | Story South Asia
On storysouthasia.com

Tibetans Clash With Chinese Police in Second City - New York Times
On www.nytimes.com

La República Popular China se anexionó el Tíbet a principios de los ...
On www.imperioromano.com

... Tibet's capital Lhasa, amid Tibetan pilgrims performing their rituals
On www.thetibetpost.com

Tibet: China Destroys Ancient Buddhist Symbols Of Lhasa City.
On www.mfs-theothernews.com

The Potala Palace in Lhasa, Tibet was the chief residence of the Dalai ...
On www.tibetanreview.net

 

Whole Leadership – Tibet’s Right to Self-Preservation

Tibet’s Right to Self-Preservation of its Land and its denizens

The Battle of Right against Might: Self-Defense. Whole Dude – Whole Leadership: Self-defense is a Right, it is a Duty, and it does not qualify as violence even when it involves killing the aggressor
TIBET’S RIGHT TO SELF-PRESERVATION. TIBET HAS NATURAL RIGHT TO OPPOSE MILITARY OCCUPATION USING FORCE OR VIOLENCE FOR OCCUPATION IS ILLEGAL, IMMORAL, UNFAIR, AND UNJUST.On bhavanajagat.com

Natural Law or Dharma, the Code for righteous or virtuous conduct commands man to do whatever is required for Peace and Self-Preservation. Direction of virtuous conduct is determined by its end or goal of Self-preservation. The more each person strives and is able to preserve his own being, the more virtue does he possess. Self-Preservation is a virtue which is common to all men, and can be equally possessed by all in so far as they are of the same nature. Virtue in the context of Self-Preservation may involve use of physical force or power to achieve its objective or accomplish its purpose. The endeavor after Self- Preservation is the primary and only foundation of Virtue or Right Conduct.

Both Tibet, and India recognize the virtue of “Ahimsa” or Non-Violence as the highest principle. At the same time, use of physical force, “Himsa”, or violence is equally the highest principle when it is used in defense of the Righteous. Indian tradition stated this guiding principle:

“Ahimsa ParamO DharmaH
Dharma Himsa tathaiva cha.”

For occupation of Tibet using military force and violence is illegal, immoral, unfair, and unjust; under Natural Law, Tibet has Right to Self-Preservation. Tibet has Natural Right to use physical force or violence to oppose occupation and in an endeavor to Self-Preservation. In Mahatma Gandhi’s words, I want world’s sympathy in this Battle of Right Against Might.

DALAI LAMA’S ADVICE TO KAMAL HAASAN

IndiaGlitz [Wednesday, November 11, 2015]

TIBET'S RIGHT TO SELF-PRESERVATION. HIS HOLINESS THE DALAI LAMA WITH ACTOR AND FILM PRODUCER KAMAL HAASAN, AND ACTRESS GAUTHAMI.
TIBET’S RIGHT TO SELF-PRESERVATION. HIS HOLINESS THE DALAI LAMA WITH ACTOR AND FILM PRODUCER KAMAL HAASAN, AND ACTRESS GAUTHAMI.

On the day of the release of his new action thriller film ‘Thoongavanam’, Ulaganayagan Kamal Haasan along with Gauthami met world-renowned Buddhist monk and spiritual leader Dalai Lama.The meeting sparked surprise for Kamal is a rationalist and kept away from spiritualism. But however the legendary’s actor’s comments issued in a press statement after the meeting seems that the meeting was mutually pleasing and delightful.Here is what Kamal had to say about his meeting with Dalai Lama:”Today (November 10) morning I met The Dalai Lamaji .Have admired his resilience and purpose. Being a fan of Gandhi ji it is not to too farfetched to become his admirer. In spite of the fact that I am rationalist and hence not spiritually bent my meeting was invigorating and felt purposeful.My lack of interest in matters of things spiritual in nature was matched by his disinterest in cinema. ‘I have not watched a single movie not even Television ” he told me with a smile.Yet he opined that I could use my craft and medium to propagate the great philosophy offered to the world by India: ahimsa.I confirmed my faith in ahimsa and said I will venture soon in that direction.For a man of his position he indulged in small talk with abandon a sign of a man who had no worldly worries.Above all he loved the company of strangers. He reminded me of Jain Tamil poetry 2000 year-old. “Everywhere is my town; All are my kin (Yaadum ooray yaavarum kayLir.)” Meanwhile ‘Thoongavanam’ directed by Kamal’s erstwhile assistant Rajsh.M.Selva has opened to phenomenally positive reviews and has been running in to packed houses.

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TIBET’S RIGHT TO SELF-PRESERVATION. TIBET HAS NATURAL RIGHT TO OPPOSE MILITARY OCCUPATION USING FORCE OR VIOLENCE FOR OCCUPATION IS ILLEGAL, IMMORAL, UNFAIR, AND UNJUST.On bhavanajagat.com
TIBET’S RIGHT TO SELF-PRESERVATION. TIBET HAS NATURAL RIGHT TO OPPOSE MILITARY OCCUPATION USING FORCE OR VIOLENCE FOR OCCUPATION IS ILLEGAL, IMMORAL, UNFAIR, AND UNJUST.On bhavanajagat.com
TIBET’S RIGHT TO SELF-PRESERVATION. TIBET HAS NATURAL RIGHT TO OPPOSE MILITARY OCCUPATION USING FORCE OR VIOLENCE FOR OCCUPATION IS ILLEGAL, IMMORAL, UNFAIR, AND UNJUST.On bhavanajagat.com
TIBET’S RIGHT TO SELF-PRESERVATION. TIBET HAS NATURAL RIGHT TO OPPOSE OCCUPATION USING FORCE OR VIOLENCE. SELF-PRESERVATION IS THE PRIMARY AND ONLY FOUNDATION OF VIRTUE.

The View of Sri Aurobindo Ghosh on Gandhi’s adherence to Non-Violence 

Whole Dude – Whole Leadership: Sri Aurobindo has asked us to remember the two sentences of this well-known aphorism: “Ahimsa paramo dharmah; Dharma himsa tathaiva cha”-Non-violence or Ahimsa is the highest principle, and so is Violence or Himsa in defense of the righteous.

The method of absolute non-violence that was followed during the ‘Satyagraha’ movement should be questioned. It led to the breaking of skulls and a great deal of suffering for the freedom fighters. Two questions arise in the context of the use of non-violence: 1. Was it right and healthy for the nation to go through this kind of non-violence? and 2. Does Indian culture and spirituality enjoin this kind of non-violence?  


Whole Dude – Whole Leadership: Self-defense is a Right, it is a Duty, and it does not qualify as violence even when it involves killing the aggressor

Non-violence or Ahimsa is the highest principle, and so is violence or Himsa in defense of the righteous. Sri Aurobindo had also pointed out that, “Politics is concerned with masses of mankind and not with individuals. To ask masses of mankind to act as saints, to rise to the height of divine love and practice it in relation to their adversaries or oppressors is to ignore human nature. It is to set a premium on injustice and violence by paralyzing the hand of the deliverer when raised to strike. The Gita is the best answer to those who shrink from battle as a sin, and aggression as a lowering of morality.” 

Whole Dude – Whole Leadership: Self-defense is a Right, it is a Duty, and it does not qualify as violence even when it involves killing the aggressor

The sword of the warrior is as necessary to the fulfillment of justice and righteousness as the holiness of the saint. Saint Ramdas is not complete without Shivaji. To maintain justice and prevent the strong from despoiling, and the weak from being oppressed is the function for which the ‘Kshatriya’ was created. “Therefore,” says Sri Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita, “God created battle and Armor, the sword, the bow, and the dagger.”   

Whole Dude – Whole Leadership: Saint Samarth Ramdas and Warrior King Shivaji are the two aspects of the leadership equation.

Self-defense is a Right, it is a Duty, and it does not qualify as violence even when it involves killing the aggressor

TIBET'S RIGHT TO SELF-PRESERVATION. HIS HOLINESS THE DALAI LAMA ENCOURAGED FILM ACTOR AND PRODUCER KAMAL HASAN TO PROMOTE THE VIRTUE OF AHIMSA OR NON-VIOLENCE.
TIBET’S RIGHT TO SELF-PRESERVATION. HIS HOLINESS THE DALAI LAMA ENCOURAGED FILM ACTOR AND PRODUCER KAMAL HASAN TO PROMOTE THE VIRTUE OF AHIMSA OR NON-VIOLENCE.