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Dalai Lama says he hopes to live more than 130 years ahead of 90th birthday

Dalai Lama says he hopes to live more than 130 years ahead of 90th birthday

Yahoo20 hours ago
Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama has said he hopes to live until he is more than 130 years old, days after he laid out succession proposals by saying he plans to reincarnate after his death.
The Dalai Lama, who is celebrating his 90th birthday on Sunday, made the comments during a ceremony organised by his followers to offer prayers for his long life.
'I have been able to serve the Buddha dharma and the beings of Tibet so far quite well, and I hope to live over 130 years,' the Dalai Lama told thousands of followers who had gathered on Saturday in India's northern town of Dharamshala.
Dharamshala has been the Dalai Lama's home in exile since 1959 after he fled Tibet in the wake of a failed uprising against Chinese rule.
Since then, he has sustained Tibet's aspirations for greater autonomy under Chinese Communist Party rule and mobilised Tibetans inside and outside China.
On Wednesday, the Dalai Lama said that he intends to reincarnate, paving the way after his death for a successor to take on a mantle stretching back 500 years. Tibetan Buddhists believe the Dalai Lama can choose the body into which he is reincarnated.
That announcement ended years of speculation that started when he indicated that he might be the last person to hold the role.
The Nobel Peace Prize-winning spiritual head of Tibetan Buddhism also said that the next Dalai Lama should be found and recognised as per past Buddhist traditions, while stressing that his office will lead the search.
China views the Dalai Lama as a separatist and has insisted that only Beijing has the authority to approve his successor.
Meanwhile, the exiled Tibetan community of more than 20,000 people in Dharamshala is gearing up to celebrate the Dalai Lama's birthday on Sunday.
His followers have put up giant posters and billboards across town, as tens of thousands of people are expected to attend the event, including Buddhist leaders of various sects and followers from across the world.
Barbara Weibel, a US citizen who has been following Buddhism for more than 30 years, said she 'had to be here for this'.
'I want this long life ceremony to keep him alive as long as possible,' she said.
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Calling himself a "simple Buddhist monk" who usually didn't celebrate birthdays, the Dalai Lama marked his 90th on Sunday by praying for peace after China insisted it would have final say on who succeeded the Tibetan spiritual leader. Chanting of red-robed monks and nuns rang out from Himalayan hilltop forested temples in India, home to the Dalai Lama since he and thousands of other Tibetans fled Chinese troops who crushed an uprising in their capital Lhasa in 1959. "I am just a simple Buddhist monk; I don't normally engage in birthday celebrations," the Dalai Lama said in a message, thanking those marking it with him for using the opportunity "to cultivate peace of mind and compassion". Dressed in traditional robes and a flowing yellow wrap, walking with the aid of two monks while flashing his trademark beaming smile to thousands of followers, he watched dramatic dance troupes with clanging cymbals before the start of prayers. Beijing condemns the Nobel Peace Prize winner -- who has led a lifelong campaign for greater autonomy for Tibet, a vast high-altitude plateau -- as a rebel and separatist. Alongside the celebrations, however, is the worry for Tibetans in exile that China will name its successor to bolster control over the territory it poured troops into in 1950 and has ruled ever since. That raises the likelihood of rival challengers to the post; one by self-declared atheist Beijing, the other by the Dalai Lama's office based in neighbouring India, a regional rival of China. - 'Good heart' - The celebrations on Sunday are the culmination of days of long-life prayers for Tenzin Gyatso, who followers believe is the 14th reincarnation of the Dalai Lama, a man whose moral teachings and idiosyncratic humour have made him one of the world's most popular religious leaders. "While it is important to work for material development, it is vital to focus on achieving peace of mind through cultivating a good heart and by being compassionate, not just toward near and dear ones, but toward everyone," he said in his birthday message. "Through this, you will contribute to making the world a better place." The celebrations also included his key announcement that, after being inundated with messages of support from fellow Tibetans both inside and in exile, the spiritual institution will continue after his death. He said he had received appeals from followers from across the Himalayan region, Mongolia and parts of Russia and China. The seemingly esoteric matters of reincarnation have real-world political consequences, with Tibetans fearing his death will mark a major setback in his push for more autonomy for the Himalayan region. The Dalai Lama said his India-based office alone would "exclusively" identify that successor -- prompting a swift and sharp reply from China that the reincarnation "must be approved by the central government" in Beijing. China said the succession would be carried out "by drawing lots from a golden urn", foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning told reporters on Wednesday. That urn is held by Beijing, and the Dalai Lama has warned that, when used dishonestly, it lacks "any spiritual quality". str-pjm/sco

The little mountain democracy that sustains Tibet's refugee nation
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So over the decades, he gradually devolved his own power to an elected Parliament based in the Indian Himalayas, then retired his political role completely in 2011. Creating a robust structure not dependent on a single leader, he believed, according to senior monks and officials close to him, would help exiled Tibetans withstand Beijing's efforts to crush their movement for freedom and autonomy. Advertisement 'The rule by kings and religious figures is outdated,' the Dalai Lama, who celebrates his 90th birthday Sunday, said the year he gave up his political role. 'We have to follow the trend of the free world, which is that of democracy.' Recently, the Dalai Lama seemed to rule out the unorthodox ideas he had suggested over the years to prevent the Chinese government from meddling in the process of finding a successor in the vacuum after his death. He reaffirmed his commitment to traditional practices while declaring that his office had sole authority over them. 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But what we do is, in all the Tibetan communities in the West, we have weekend schools.' The challenges of migration and demographic change were most visible in the Tibetan settlements in Bylakuppe, in the south Indian state of Karnataka. More than 5,000 residents live in the settlements, as well as thousands of monks who flow through the monasteries. The exile government has two senior settlement officers who oversee the delivery of services with the help of a staff of nearly 200. The refugees run shops and restaurants and often hire local labor. Advertisement 'Our death rate is higher than our birthrate. People are also migrating out of India,' said Sonam Yougyai, 55, a hospital administrator. 'You go inside the house, and you only find old people.' At the Sambhota Tibetan Primary School, classes were sparsely attended. The school has 49 students from grades 1 to 5. They are taught the Tibetan language, English, environmental sciences, math, and arts. Sherab Wangmo, 34, the school's head teacher, said that in addition to teaching the students language and culture, they are shown videos to remind them of how they became refugees. She, like a majority of the diaspora population, was born outside Tibet and has never seen her homeland. 'Through dance and songs, we teach them about the Tibetan rivers,' she said. 'We also teach them through songs and dances that good days will come one day, and we will go back to our homeland.' This article originally appeared in

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As the Dalai Lama built a nation in exile after fleeing Chinese persecution in the 1950s, the young leader pinned its survival on an idea that had long fascinated him: democracy. It was part natural inclination, part strategy. On visits to neighboring India, he had been charmed by its nascent republic's culture of open debate. He also knew that too much power had been vested in one man as both the spiritual and political leader of Tibet. So, over the decades, he gradually devolved his own power to an elected Parliament based in the Indian Himalayas, and then retired his political role completely in 2011. Creating a robust structure not dependent on a single leader, he believed, according to senior monks and officials close to him, would help exiled Tibetans withstand Beijing's efforts to crush their movement for freedom and autonomy. 'The rule by kings and religious figures is outdated,' the Dalai Lama, who celebrates his 90th birthday on Sunday, said the year he gave up his political role. 'We have to follow the trend of the free world, which is that of democracy.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

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