Dalai Lama eyes retirement

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joequinn
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Post by joequinn » 05-15-2007 04:13 PM

The Dalai Lama can't retire. He's a God, and Gods are not covered by Social Security!

:D :D :D
"Fuggedah about it, Jake --- it's Chinatown!"

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Shimmering Auro
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Post by Shimmering Auro » 05-15-2007 07:17 PM

The DL is not saying he will retire from his spiritual position on earth, it seems he wishes to retire from his political role.

http://www.unpo.org/article.php?id=6696

Tibet: Dalai Lama to Reduce Political Role
2007-05-14


The Dalai Lama announced to students that he would retire completely within a few years. The Tibetan religious leader will retain his spiritual role but transfer his political functions.

Below is an article written by Penny MacRae published by Phayul.com:

NEW DELHI - The Dalai Lama will keep his spiritual role but wants to lessen his political burden as he moves into "retirement," an official in the Tibetan spiritual leader's office said.

The remarks by the official came after the 71-year-old exiled spiritual head told students in the United States that he would "retire completely" within a few years and was already "semi-retired."

"The political leadership will be transferred over a period of time but he will continue to be the spiritual leader because as the Dalai Lama, the issue of relinquishing the post does not arise," Chhime Rigzing, a senior spokesman for the Tibetan leader, said on Saturday.

"The temporal part (of his role) he wants to transfer," said Rigzing by telephone from the northern Indian town of Dharamsala, in the foothills of the Himalayas, that serves as the seat of the Tibetan government-in-exile.

But "you can't transfer spiritual leadership in Buddhism, you can't change that," Rigzing told AFP.

The Dalai Lama, who maintains a hectic work, prayer and travel schedule and rises before dawn each day, has lived in Dharamsala since fleeing Tibet after a failed uprising against Chinese rule in 1959.

China has ruled Tibet since sending troops in to "liberate" the region in 1951 and has violently suppressed a number of uprisings since then.

The Dalai Lama would like the elected Tibetan parliament-in-exile, which is the policy-making body for tens of thousands of refugees who have fled Tibet -- most of whom live in India -- to have more responsibility, said Rigzing.

"His Holiness has already been taking a less active role in day-to-day administration -- delegating more responsibility to the elected leadership," he said.

But "he will continue to be the spokesperson of the six million Tibetans, because he is undisputedly the leader of the Tibetans -- people look up to him to lead," said Rigzing.

Even as the Dalai Lama's political role becomes less "he will continue as a senior advisor until a solution is found to the Tibetan question," he added.

The Tibetan leader would also continue to champion human values and "inter-religious harmony," Rigzing said.

The Dalai Lama, awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989 for his dedication to Tibet's non-violent liberation, has abandoned his original demands of independence for his homeland.

He instead talks of "meaningful autonomy" to preserve Tibet's language, culture and environment.

However, opposition has been mounting among Tibetans in exile, especially those who are younger, to the Dalai Lama's quest for autonomy within China, the so-called "middle way."

China has rejected the overtures of the Dalai Lama whom it regards as a traitorous trouble-maker.

Last week, the Dalai Lama called off a visit to Brussels amid Chinese objections ahead of an important Belgian trade mission to China.

One Tibetan activist in exile, who wants Tibet's total independence from China rather than autonomy, welcomed the spiritual leader's plans to get the parliament to shoulder more responsibility.

"I see this as a positive movement. This is how the Dalai Lama has been nurturing Tibetan democracy," said Tenzin Tsundue, a poet and an official of the Friends of Tibet, said from Dharamsala.

Shirleypal
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Post by Shirleypal » 05-15-2007 07:23 PM

Thanks Shimmering Auro, that makes sense.:)

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Post by mrbrusher » 06-08-2007 10:02 PM

>Life after the Dalai Lama<

Shimmering Auro:

Your post is articulate, thoughtful, full of depth and great value.
Sell your cleverness and purchase bewilderment - Rumi

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