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Dalai
Lama speaks in NYC, draws huge crowd
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By VERENA DOBNIK |
Associated Press Writer
New York, October 11 (AP): A Manhattan convention hall
turned into a sea of Buddhist faithful on Thursday as
followers gathered to listen to the Dalai Lama speak for two
intense hours.
He delivered his entire speech without notes, pausing to
take a sip of tea only at the end as tears of joy flowed
through the crowd.
"The Tibetan cause is a cause of justice, and that's
something that cannot fade away," the exiled Tibetan
Buddhist leader said at the Jacob Javits Convention Center.
"That is the nature of truth - that it cannot die
with time and with the change of generations."
The Dalai Lama spoke as the White House announced that
President Bush will attend a ceremony in Congress on
Wednesday to award the 72-year-old Nobel Prize winner the
Congressional Gold Medal, whose recipients have included
Mother Teresa, former South African President Nelson Mandela
and Pope John Paul II.
China announced that it "resolutely opposes" the
U.S. award to a man Beijing reviles as a separatist.
The Dalai Lama told the New York audience, his voice rising
emphatically: "The Chinese call us separatists, but I
tell them they are the separatists."
He spoke in native Tibetan, and his remarks were translated
by a reporter in attendance who covers the Tibetan
community.
Weeping as she sat in a wheelchair after her fourth audience
with the Dalai Lama, 89-year-old Ang Phurba said: "I
feel so satisfied, I feel so blessed. Now, I have no fear
when I die. I will be reborn with him as the leader."
Thousands of people - including Buddhists from Tibet,
India, Nepal and Mongolia - filled the exhibition
space to see the Dalai Lama.
They laughed when he told them he felt as if he had arrived
at a Tibetan settlement in India, which has for decades
served as a home to Tibetans fleeing Chinese control.
Unlike the audiences that greeted him a day earlier in
Ithaca, N.Y. - a mostly - American mix of admirers -
he spoke to his own people in their language. And he was
somewhat different, said Robert Thurman, an influential
American Buddhist writer and academic in the audience.
"He's more at home, he's relaxed, he cracks
jokes," Thurman said.
The afternoon started with the Dalai Lama conducting an
informal poll of who was there, eliciting a stream of
chuckles.
He asked if there were any Mongolians, cupping his hand over
his eyes to peer into the audience. There were. He asked if
anybody was over 70. Dozens and dozens. "Between 50 and
70? ... Between 30 and 50? ... Below 30?"
Clearly, youth dominated. So the Dalai Lama proceeded to
teach them the details of their history - especially
about the hardships he and other Tibetans had suffered.
At 24, he said he left for exile in India, where he and
other monks struggled to survive. There, he trained several
generations of Buddhist monks now scattered around the
world; he recognized some of his students among the rapt
faces listening to him, pointing to them. |
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Last updated: 12-Oct.-2007
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