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Dalai
Lama: Fight violence with peace, poverty with compassion
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Associated
Press: September
12, 2005
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By JOHN MILLER
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The Dalai Lama speaks
Sunday, Sept. 11, 2005 at the Wood River High School
stadium in Hailey, Idaho to a crowd of about 10,000. The
Dalai Lama focused his message on the theme of compassion.
(AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)
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HAILEY, Idaho - With his amplified words bouncing off the
mountains surrounding Sun Valley, the Dalai Lama told a crowd of
about 10,000 people Sunday to fight violence with peace and
poverty with compassion.
The wide-ranging address by the spiritual leader of Tibetan
Buddhists touched on the Chinese occupation of his homeland, the
fourth anniversary of the Sept. 11 terror attacks and Gulf Coast
hurricane destruction.
The Dalai Lama brought the crowd to giggles with his mix of
one-liners and a look of good-natured surprise.
The 1989 Nobel Peace Prize winner - for his advocacy of nonviolent
resistance to China's occupation of Tibet, from which he's been
exiled since 1959 - urged victims of the Sept. 11 attacks and
Hurricane Katrina to turn their tragedies into something that
makes them stronger.
"Your sadness, your anger will not solve the problem,"
the 70-year old monk said. "More sadness, more frustration
only brings more suffering for yourself."
The speech was televised live on CNN.
As he condemned violence, the Dalai Lama acknowledged conflicted
feelings over the U.S. invasion of Iraq, telling reporters at a
news conference following his hour-long address that "history
would decide."
His speech came on a day when many Americans were reflecting on
the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and on the intervening
four years in which nearly 1,900 American troops have died in Iraq
and more in Afghanistan. In Washington, D.C., an estimated 15,000
people marched from the Pentagon, site of one of the 9-11 suicide
attacks, to the National Mall in support of more than 100,000
troops abroad.
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The Dalai Lama speaks
Sunday, Sept. 11, 2005 at the Wood River High School
stadium in Hailey, Idaho to a crowd of about 10,000. The
Dalai Lama focused his message on the theme of compassion.
(AP Photo/Paul Hosefros pool)
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"Violence is unpredictable," said the Dalai Lama, who
has won support from the Bush administration, including Secretary
of State Condoleeza Rice, for his campaign to restore Tibetan
political autonomy. "In the case of Afghanistan, perhaps
there's something positive. In Iraq, it's too early to tell."
The Dalai Lama came to Idaho at the invitation of wealthy
financial consultant and Buddhist Kiril Sokoloff, who has raised
thousands of dollars for Tibetan school children.
The visit cost Sokoloff a reported $1 million and included an army
of 200 lime-green-clad local volunteers, dozens of professional
security officers in yellow T-shirts, and U.S. State Department
bodyguards.
Three more days of events were planned in Sun Valley, including an
invitation-only address Monday morning to business and financial
professionals. At 2 p.m. Monday, he's due to speak to thousands of
Idaho school children at a gathering organized by Gov. Dirk
Kempthorne.
Asked why he brought the Dalai Lama to Sun Valley, Sokoloff said
he relied on knowledge from the financial world - his Boca Raton,
Fla.-based company, 13D Research, publishes a stock-market
newsletter - to determine the timing was right.
"I've had a powerful vision for the past two years that we
are at a pivotal moment in history," Sokoloff told the crowd.
"The Dalai Lama has joined us for one specific reason: To
show us the way to the tipping point for global compassion."
Much of the audience seemed to agree, as they interrupted the
speech by the Dalai Lama - the title means "Ocean of
Wisdom" - with polite and frequent applause.
The Dalai Lama arrived at Wood River High School in a white
Chevrolet Suburban. He wore a traditional maroon robe trimmed in
vivid yellow and was flanked by four similarly dressed monks, all
with shaven heads.
He repeatedly poked fun at himself, and at some of the questions
he was asked in an informal Q&A session following his address.
Asked what the secret to compassion was, the man whose worldly
name is Tenzin Gyatso looked at the container he was sipping from
and said: "Water. And sleep."
Gripping both sides of the rostrum, he urged his listeners to
become more introspective and to practice "inner
warmheartedness."
It's this humorous touch, members of the crowd said, that makes
the Dalai Lama such an appealing figure. David Burdge, who
traveled from Sacramento, Calif., for the address, said: "He
has a lighthearted character."
Scholars say the Dalai Lama has become a pop-culture hero.
"He's managed single-handedly to make Buddhism popular, from
Australia to Europe to South America," said Robert W. Clark,
a Stanford University professor who spent more than eight years in
a Buddhist monastery in the 1960s and 1970s and has worked as a
translator for the Dalai Lama.
The son of a barley, buckwheat and potato farmer, the Dalai Lama
took reporters' questions about his views on the environment,
nuclear-waste dumping in Tibet and Idaho, and the divide between
rich and poor in America - a gap underscored by TV images from
Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama since Hurricane Katrina struck.
His advice to residents of Idaho's wealthiest region: "Even
if you have 100 diamonds, you still only have 10 fingers."
Thhe crowd was peppered with well-known faces. Tony Robbins, the
motivational speaker, stood just to the right of the stage wearing
sunglasses.
"He goes beyond religion, he goes to his heart," Robbins
said afterward. "For somebody who has lived through all he
has, he can still show a level of love and compassion that
inspires the human spirit." |
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Last updated: 12-Sept-2005
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