
Dalai Lama says he plans to reincarnate after his death
Speaking at prayer celebrations ahead of his 90th birthday on Sunday, the Nobel Peace Prize-winning spiritual head of Tibetan Buddhism said the next Dalai Lama should be found and recognised as per past Buddhist traditions, while signalling that China should stay away from the process of identifying his successor.
The Dalai Lama's succession plan is politically consequential for most Tibetans who oppose Beijing's tight control of Tibet and have struggled to keep their identity alive, in their homeland or in exile.
It is also profound for Tibetan Buddhists who worship him as a living manifestation of Chenrezig, the Buddhist god of compassion.
The Dalai Lama presides over an event celebrating his 90th birthday in Dharamshala (Ashwini Bhatia/AP)
The statement is expected to anger China, which has repeatedly said that it alone has the authority to approve the next religious leader. It insists the successor must be found in China's Tibetan areas, giving communist authorities power over who is chosen.
Many observers believe there eventually will be rival Dalai Lamas — one appointed by Beijing, and one by senior monks loyal to the current Dalai Lama.
Tenzin Gyatso became the 14th Dalai Lama in 1940. He fled Tibet when Chinese troops crushed an uprising in the Tibetan capital Lhasa in 1959 and has since been living in exile in the Indian town of Dharamshala.
Tibetan Buddhists believe the Dalai Lama can choose the body into which he is reincarnated. The current Dalai Lama has said in the past that his successor will be born outside China.
He laid out his succession plan in a recorded statement that was televised at a religious gathering of Buddhist monks in Dharamshala. He said the process of finding and recognising his reincarnation lies solely with the Gaden Phodrang Trust — an organisation founded by him in 2015.
'No one else has any such authority to interfere in this matter,' he said, adding that the search for a future Dalai Lama should be carried out in 'accordance with past tradition'.
The search for a reincarnation begins after the incumbent's death. In the past, the successor has been identified by senior monastic disciples, based on spiritual signs and visions, and it can take several years before the next Dalai Lama is identified as a baby and groomed to take the reins.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Examiner
5 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Chinese aircraft carrier sails into Hong Kong to boost patriotism
China's first domestically built aircraft carrier has arrived in Hong Kong as part of a drive to drum up patriotism, days after the former British colony marked the 28th anniversary of its return to Chinese rule. The Shandong entered the city's waters alongside another vessel from its battle group in the early hours of Thursday. According to state media, two destroyers and a frigate had accompanied the aircraft carrier into Hong Kong. The warships will be open for public visits this weekend. All 10,000 available tickets for visits have already been claimed by eager residents. Two thousand of them were for seeing the Shandong, while the others were for one of the destroyers and the frigate, local media reported. People watch the Shandong sail into Hong Kong (Chan Long Hei/AP) The arrival of the carrier comes days after the Asian financial hub marked 28 years since it was turned over to China after more than a century of British rule. The ship is China's second aircraft carrier and first to have been fully self-built. It is smaller than US carriers, carrying 24 Shenyang J-10 fighters. China has redoubled its patriotism drive in Hong Kong since crushing anti-government and pro-democracy street protests in 2019. A large number of opposition figures have been imprisoned after the passage of a sweeping new national security law. Hong Kong enjoys a degree of semi-autonomy and civil liberties compared with other major Chinese cities. But its government has no jurisdiction over military and foreign affairs, with Chinese military officers and a garrison of land, sea and naval forces based in the city. The Shandong is China's first domestically built aircraft carrier (Chan Long Hei/AP) In April, the Chinese military sent the Shandong, named after the Chinese province of the same name, to conduct training exercises with some naval and air forces in the eastern sea area and airspace of Taiwan, a self-ruled island Beijing claims as its territory. Beijing sends warplanes and naval vessels towards Taiwan regularly, and it has stepped up the scope and scale of these exercises in recent years. A month later, the Shandong and China's first carrier, the Liaoning, stirred considerable attention by conducting joint exercises in the Pacific beyond what is referred to as the first island group, showing a degree of assertiveness not seen before. The Liaoning, built from an unfinished hulk purchased from Ukraine, visited Hong Kong in 2017. Another carrier, this one with a flat top rather than the 'ski jump' type decks used by the first two, is undergoing sea trials, and a fourth is under construction.


Irish Independent
12 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Reincarnation, trouble with China and a stateless people: inside the Dalai Lama's succession story
As the Nobel Peace Prize winner celebrates his 90th birthday, the future of Tibetan government-in-exile is shrouded in uncertainty ©UK Independent In March 1959, the 14th Dalai Lama left the Tibetan capital of Lhasa in the dead of night to flee from Mao Zedong's Communist regime. Over the course of the next seven decades, the Dalai Lama has inspired generations of Tibetans in exile as first the political and then spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism. Born with the name Lhamo Dhondup on July 6, 1935, the Nobel Peace Prize winner has become synonymous with his stateless people's struggle in exile, and the arrival of his 90th birthday this month has left many of his followers considering the future after his death.


The Irish Sun
a day ago
- The Irish Sun
North Korea ‘offers 30,000 MORE troops' for Putin's meatgrinder war after tyrant Kim Jong-un wept over soldiers' coffins
NORTH Korea is reportedly planning to send 30,000 more troops to fight alongside the Russians against Ukraine . It comes just a day after tyrant 12 Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un exchange documents during a signing ceremony of a new partnership in Pyongyang Credit: AP 12 A young-looking North Korean fighter stares down the lens of a Ukrainian drone Credit: Rex 12 Leaked footage showed Kim Jong-un's soliders training in Kursk Credit: Telegram 12 North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un posing with troops during an inspection at a training base Credit: AFP North Korea has so far sent an estimated total of And a new Ukrainian intelligence assessment says Pyongyang is preparing to dispatch 30,000 more soldiers in the coming months to join the fight with the Russians, According to the intel report, there is a high chance that troops from North Korea will soon enter Russian-occupied Ukraine 'to strengthen the Russian contingent, including during the large-scale offensive operations.' The document adds Russian Ministry of Defence is "capable of providing needed equipment, weapons and ammunition' with the aim of 'further integration to Russian combat units.' Ukrainian intelligence also reported that Russian military aircraft are being modified to carry thousands of military personnel. Last week, South Korea's National Intelligence Service (NIS) told a closed-door parliamentary committee meeting that a dispatch of those 6,000 additional military personnel will likely come as early as July or August, North Korea has begun recruiting soldiers to be sent to Russia , according to Lee Seong Kweun, one of the lawmakers who attended the meeting. He told reporters the NIS noted that North Korea's dispatch of combat troops last year came about one month after Shoigu visited North Korea and signed an agreement with Pyongyang officials. Most read in The US Sun In return for North Korea's supply of troops and weapons, Russia is believed to have given North Korea military and economic assistance. South Korea, the US and their allies are concerned that Russia could even transfer sensitive technologies that can enhance North Korea's nuclear program. Watch moment North Korean quadbike troops WIPED OUT as Putin sends waves into meatgrinder to retake Kursk from Ukraine In April, Kim Jong-un confirmed for the first time that North Korean troops were sent to fight alongside the Russians against Ukraine . Pyongyang's state TV and Kim's propaganda machine KCNA reported that North Korean soldiers made an "important contribution" to help the Russians flush out Kyiv's troops from Kursk. It said Kim deployed "sub-units of our armed forces" to Russia as part of a treaty with Moscow. The troops "participated in the operations for liberating the Kursk areas," the report added. North Korea "regards it as an honor to have an alliance with such a powerful state as the Russian Federation," KCNA said. Just two days ago, Kim draped flags over at least six coffins, and could be seen resting his hands on them in reflection. Watching the scenes back, the dictator's eyes shone with emotion. Other members of the audience - which reportedly included North Korean and Russian soldiers - were also visibly moved. Kim hosted a ceremony which remembered the soldiers taken out by Zelensky's brave army - and things got emotional for the tyrant. Thousands of North Koreans stood to attention in the vast auditorium, with Kim in the front row. Images of Kim draping the North Korean flag over soldiers' coffins were broadcast on a giant screen at the front while a huge orchestra played emotional music. Women in long dresses sang passionately and there was even a harp player stationed on the stage. 12 Kim Jong-un teared up as he watched himself laying the North Korean flag over soldiers' coffins Credit: Reuters 12 The coffins are thought to contain the bodies of North Koreans killed while fighting for Russia in Ukraine Credit: X 12 Russia's President Vladimir Putin and North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un attend a state reception in Pyongyang Credit: Reuters 12 North Korea's Storm Corps pictured in Moscow Credit: X In January, Ukraine claimed to have captured two North Korean soldiers in the Kursk region. They were among the first 11,000 of Kim's troops drafted into Putin's illegal war after the pariah pair sealed a pact to unite against the West. The military card of one of the captured men shows that the Russians gave the North Koreans fake identities with the pretence that they were from a remote region of Siberia. One of the captives was given a false Russian identity of Antonin Ayasovich Arankyn, born 03.10.1998 in the republic of Tuva. His document shows him to be single, with secondary higher education and the profession of a tailor. The ID was issued by the Military Commissariat of the Pyi-Khemsky district, of Tuva, a mountainous Russian republic bordering Mongolia. The other had no documents. The SBU believes the pair are North Koreans after saying that the captive soldiers do not speak Ukrainian, English or Russian. The soldier with the Russian identity said this was issued to him when he was brought to fight in the war. Images have shown a line of dead North Korean troops laid out in the snow moments after they joined the fight on the front lines. Read more on the Irish Sun Numerous reports have shown a disturbing pattern beginning to emerge of North Korean troops being sent out on suicide missions on behalf of Russia. Footage emerged recently of Kim Jong-un's fighters being sent to jog through snowy no-man's-land and fatally soak up Ukrainian ammo. 12 One of the men was found with documents giving him a fake identity Credit: East2West 12 The Russian-issued false document claimed that the man was from a remote region of Siberia Credit: East2West 12 A captured North Korean soldier said he thought he was sent for training 12 The prisoners of war are being given medical treatment while undergoing questioning from the Secret Service Credit: Getty