
|
 
| Dalai Lama speaks to
thousands in Vancouver |
| Canadian Press,
April 19, 2004 |
By EMILY YEARWOOD-LEE
 |
| B.C. Premier
Gordon Campbell listens to the Dalai Lama speak Sunday at
a luncheon in Vancouver. (CP/Richard Lam) |
VANCOUVER, April 18 - Awed silence gave way to laughter Sunday as
the Dalai Lama spoke urged his audience of 13,000 to show
compassion to others.
The exiled spiritual leader of Tibet, who arrived in Vancouver on
Saturday, elicited giggles as he tested the cushion of his ornate
throne before being seated, then later donned an orange visor.
The 68-year-old Tibetan Buddhist monk appeared relaxed before his
expectant listeners, which included devout followers and the
curious.
Before speaking on the importance of cultivating "a good
heart," the Dalai Lama said he realized there were
non-Buddhists at the meeting and that it might be "better and
safer to keep one's own tradition."
Organizers of the Dalai Lama's spiritual teaching, to be followed
by a public talk later in the day introduced by South African
Archbishop Desmond Tutu, said they expected many of those in the
audience to have had little prior exposure to Buddhism.
Tickets for both 13,000-seat events Sunday were sold out.
"I think this particular area," the Dalai Lama said,
referring to Vancouver, "multi-cultural, multi-religion, to
them I think it is useful to know about other traditions."
He then launched into an explanation of basic Buddhist values,
including the importance of compassion and recognizing the
temporary nature of common human desires.
"What is most important is to ensure in our day-to-day life
that we have a resolve not to . . . embrace an ill will or harmful
intent but rather to nurture the good heart and compassion,"
he said in Tibetan through a translator.
The monk, dressed in his traditional red and yellow robes, sat
cross-legged on a three-metre-high throne on a stage draped with
carpets and lined with white flowers.
He was later whisked out of the Pacific Coliseum to be greeted
privately by B.C. Premier Gordon Campbell at a luncheon also
attended by fellow Nobel Peace Prize winners Tutu and Shirin Abadi.
Tutu and the Dalai Lama embraced when they saw each other.
The premier's handlers have emphasized the spiritual nature of
Campbell's meeting with the monk, taking a similar line to Prime
Minister Paul Martin who will greet the Dalai Lama in Ottawa later
this week.
Thousands of people crowded the sidewalks and streets around the
Pacific Coliseum two hours before the Dalai Lama began the
spiritual teaching.
The crowd was triple the size that Teoni Spathelfer said she saw
the last the Dalai Lama visited Vancouver in 1993.
People are drawn out by his inclusive message, said Spathelfer,
who travelled from the B.C. Sunshine Coast to hear his teaching
with her teenage daughter.
"I think his role is just to remind us about what's important
and our common humanity," she said.
She acknowledged some might be attending because of a sense of
hype attached to the Dalai Lama's visit.
"That could happen in any area. If the Pope came, there would
be many more people and not everybody knows what it is to be
Catholic," she said.
"I don't think it's necessary to know all the fine details of
being a Buddhist because the Dalai Lama doesn't insist I come here
as a Buddhist."
Filing out after the teaching, one woman struggled to hold back
tears.
"He reminds me sometimes we know something, but we need to be
reminded to grow stronger," said Rinchen Wang-Mo, who moved
to Vancouver from Taiwan and has heard the monk speak previously.
"The first time I saw the Dalai Lama, I just (wanted) to cry
because the love is so strong."
China has objected to Martin meeting the monk , saying the Dalai
Lama also has a political role and is working to separate Tibet
from China.
But the Dalai Lama insists he wants only autonomy so Tibetans can
preserve their language, religion and culture.
The Dalai Lama told reporters on Saturday that he is not concerned
by the politicians' preference to keep their discussions on a
religious level.
The Vancouver visit will also include a Monday roundtable
discussion with Tutu and Ebadi. Later, the Dalai Lama will attend
a musical tribute hosted by actress Goldie Hawn.
The majority of the monk's time in Canada will be spent in
Toronto, where he will lead followers and others in the Kalachakra
ritual, a ceremony that lasts several days and is among the most
important in the Tibetan Buddhist faith.
It will be the first time the ritual, which involves visualization
and purification exercises, as well as the construction of an
elaborate mandala symbol from sand, has been performed in Canada. |
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