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Tibetan
leader meets US Speaker, Foreign Affairs Committee head
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Prof. Samdhong
Rinpoche, Chairman of the Tibetan Cabinet with
American Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi
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Washington DC, 7 February, ICT: Prof. Samdhong Rinpoche,
Chairman of the Tibetan Cabinet (Kalon Tripa), today visited
the U.S. Capitol and paid a courtesy call on the Speaker of
the House. Speaker Pelosi has been a long time friend of His
Holiness the Dalai Lama and supporter of Tibetan issues in
the Congress.
The Speaker warmly welcomed the Kalon Tripa and Special
Envoy Lodi Gyari and discussed plans for the next meeting
she would be having with His Holiness the Dalai Lama.
Representative Tom Lantos, Chairman of the House Foreign
Affairs Committee, also met with the Kalon Tripa and said
that Tibet would be a priority in the Committee's
examination of US-China policy and, further, that it was his
desire to schedule a hearing within the next weeks on the
status of the dialogue between the Dalai Lama's envoys and
Chinese officials.
The Tibetan leader is on a week-long visit to Washington,
D.C. to meet with Congressional and other US Government
officials, and members of the Tibetan community, including
US-based Tibetan officials. This is his first visit to the
United States following his re-election as Kalon Tripa in
June 2006.
Samdhong Rinpoche also visited the National Endowment for
Democracy and met with its President, Carl Gershman. The NED
provides grant assistance to democracy-promotion programs in
Dharamsala, India, headquarters of the Central Tibetan
Administration (CTA) of His Holiness the Dalai Lama.
Rinpoche heads the CTA's executive branch (Kashag). Until
1990, members of the Kashag were appointed by the Dalai
Lama. As part of an effort to further democratize the
Tibetan polity, the Dalai Lama devolved the authority to
elect the members of the Kashag to the Tibetan Parliament.
In the late 1990s, the Dalai Lama called for further changes
so that the Chairman of the Kashag is directly elected by
the Tibetan people. After several years of discussion, the
Assembly adopted such a proposal in 2001. Prof. Samdhong
Rinpoche became the first to be elected to this position.
In testimony on Tibetan democracy before the Congressional
Human Rights Caucus in in December 2001, Eva Herzer of the
Tibet Justice Center, commented on this development saying:
"Having that person (the Kalon Tripa) chosen by popular
election represents a major shift in the Tibetan political
landscape. Up to now, the only person who enjoyed clear and
undisputed leadership status in the Tibetan society was His
Holiness."
Prof. Samdhong Lobsang Tenzin, the 5th Samdhong Rinpoche,
was born on November 5, 1939 in Tibet. At age five, he was
recognized as the reincarnation of 4th Samdhong Rinpoche and
enthroned in Gaden Dechenling Monastery in his village of
Jol (in present-day Dechen Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture,
Yunnan Province). He was educated in Drepung Monastery in
Lhasa. He fled to India in 1959 after the Chinese occupation
of Tibet. He served as a teacher in Tibetan schools in
Shimla and Darjeeling and as principal of the school in
Dalhousie, all in India.
From 1971 to 2001 he served as the Principal and
subsequently as the Director of the internationally-renowned
Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies (CIHTS, Varanasi).
In 1990, he was a member of the Committee that drafted the
Charter for the Tibetans in exile. From 1991 to 1995 he was
specially appointed to the Assembly of Tibetan People's
Deputies by His Holiness the Dalai Lama and was unanimously
elected as Chairman. From 1996 to 2001 he served as an
elected representative of Kham province and continued as
Chairman.
In 2006, Rinpoche received over 90 percent of votes cast to
become the first Chairman of the Tibetan Cabinet to be
directly elected by the Tibetan people. He has advocated
Gandhi-style passive resistance instead of confrontational
protest in dealing with Beijing and has become a crucial
player in the political changes taking place in the Tibetan
exile world. Rinpoche is a steadfast supporter of His
Holiness the Dalai Lama's Middle Way approach, which seeks a
negotiated solution for Tibet based on genuine autonomy
within the People's Republic of China.
"Political separation from China is not
important," Rinpoche has said. "What is important
is to restore Tibetan civilization. Tibet is not simply a
nation or state. It is a unique cultural and spiritual
heritage. It could be preserved within China - or it could
not be preserved even if we were separate from China. Our
basic objective is to preserve it in future for the benefit
of all humanity, all sentient beings.
"China is not our enemy," Samdhong Rinpoche said.
"China is a people who need our cooperation, who need
our guidance, spiritually. It has been so for more than
1,000 years." |
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Last updated: 7-Feb-2007
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