Dalai Lama Says His "Feudal System...Should End"
BANGKOK, Thailand -- In a surprise reversal, the Dalai
Lama said his
Tibetan Buddhist tradition of reincarnated
dalai lamas "should end
now" because the hierarchy
created "a feudal system," a description
echoing decades
of communist China's condemnation.
The Dalai Lama's public
statement comes amid attempts by Beijing to
control who
can be legally recognized as a reincarnated lama in
Tibet
and what laws they must obey.
"Institutions need
to be owned by the people, not by an individual,"
the
self-exiled 14th Dalai Lama said in a speech at his
residence in
McLeod Ganj, a small town on the outskirts
of Dharamsala, India.
"Like my own institution, the Dalai
Lama's office, I feel it is linked
to a feudal system. In
1969, in one of my official statements, I had
mentioned
that it should continue...but now I feel, not
necessarily.
"It should go. I feel it should not be
concentrated in a few people
only," he told college
students from Bhutan and India on October 25.
"The
tradition should end now, as reincarnation has some
connection
with the feudal system.
"There have been
cases of individual lamas who use reincarnation
[for
personal gains] but never pay attention to study and
wisdom," he said,
according to the Times of India.
The
Dalai Lama did not express doubt about the concept
of
reincarnation. Buddhism claims all people are
reincarnated even if
they are not Buddhists.
Meanwhile
on October 28, U.S. Ambassador for Religious Freedom
Samuel
D. Brownback and his delegation met the Dalai Lama
in McLeod Ganj.
"The U.S. government supports the Dalai
Lama and supports for the
succession of the Dalai Lama to
be done by the Tibetan Buddhist
leadership," Mr.
Brownback said, criticizing China's interference in
the
procedure.
"The role of picking a successor to the Dalai
Lama belongs to the
Tibetan Buddhist system, the Dalai
Lama, and other Tibetan leaders. It
does not belong to
anybody else, not any government or any entity,"
Mr.
Brownback said.
Beijing swiftly responded to the U.S. ambassador's remarks and visit.
"We strongly urge the U.S.
side to stop any form of contact with the
Dalai clique,
stop making irresponsible remarks, stop
using
Tibet-related issues to interfere in China's
internal affairs, and do
more to advance China-U.S.
mutual trust and cooperation," China's
foreign ministry
spokesperson Geng Shuang told reporters.
The current 14th
Dalai Lama fled his majestic Potala Palace in
Lhasa,
Tibet in 1959 along with 80,000 Tibetan refugees
to escape invading
communist Chinese troops. They secured
sanctuary in India's Himalayas.
Since the 1950s, China
repeatedly said Tibetan Buddhism and the
institutional
power of dalai lamas and other senior clergy was one
of
the main reasons Tibetans lived in "feudal" poverty,
often treated as
serfs by Tibetan officials, nobles and
lamas.
Tibetan historians said the centuries-old system of
reincarnated dalai
lamas, panchen lamas and other clergy
contributed to repression in
Tibet, but Tibetans should
have been allowed to fix their homeland
instead of
submitting to anti-Buddhist Chinese.
"For centuries, Tibet
was ruled by feudal serfdom under theocracy,"
China's
State Council Information Office reiterated in
March.
"Millions of serfs were subjected to cruel
exploitation and oppression
until [China's] democratic
reform in 1959," it said in a report
titled, Democratic
Reform in Tibet, 60 Years On.
"Even as they were aware
that feudal serfdom under theocracy was
coming to an end,
the 14th Dalai Lama and the reactionaries in
Tibet's
upper class had no wish to conduct
reform.
"Instead, they tried to maintain the system for
fear that reform would
deprive them of their political
and religious privileges, together
with their huge
economic benefits," the report said, according
to
Beijing's official Xinhua news agency.
Also
beginning in the 1950s, the U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency
trained and financed Tibetan guerrillas to conduct
scattered assaults
against China's powerful People's
Liberation Army.
The CIA secretly trained ethnic Khampas
and other Tibetans in Colorado
state's Rocky Mountains
before giving them supplies and parachuting
them into
Tibet.
The CIA manipulated that small, bloody insurgency
until 1972 when
President Richard Nixon abruptly ended
U.S. armed support and traveled
to Beijing to improve
ties with Chinese Chairman Mao Zedong.
China's communists
destroyed most of Tibet's monasteries and shrines
during
the 1960s and 70s. Thousands of Tibetans reportedly
perished
from persecution, economic disruption and other
policies.
The Dalai Lama repeatedly said he is a Marxist
and would accept
autonomy for Tibet under China's
domination. But Beijing suspects he
is a "splittist"
conspiring to achieve independence.
Buddhism arrived in Tibet from India during the seventh century.
"Dalai Lama"
is a Mongolian title meaning "Ocean of Wisdom."
Followers
also refer to him as, "His Holiness" or
"Wish-Fulfilling Gem."
Dalai lamas and others senior lamas
are revered even though they have
not achieved the
spiritual enlightenment and nirvana of a Buddha.
Instead
they are described as incarnations of Avalokitesvara
the
Bodhisattva of Compassion, who delays achieving
nirvana to
altruistically help others.
The first dalai
lama was born in 1390. Tibetan Buddhists believe
this
same person has been reincarnated 14 times.
The current Dalai Lama was born on July 6, 1935 shortly after the 13th died.
Two years later, a delegation of high lamas
searched Tibet for the
Dalai Lama's reincarnation and
conducted traditional tests with
several children born
amid "prophetic signs."
Clergymen selected an infant named
Lhamo Thondup. He picked out, from
among various items,
things which belonged to the 13th Dalai Lama
and
performed other feats which they interpreted as
evidence of
reincarnation.
Today, the 84-year-old Dalai
Lama appears jovial and spontaneous,
frequently traveling
abroad.
***
Richard S. Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based
journalist from San Francisco,
California, reporting news
from Asia since 1978 and winner of Columbia
University's
Foreign Correspondent's Award. He co-authored
three
non-fiction books about Thailand, including "'Hello
My Big Big Honey!'
Love Letters to Bangkok Bar Girls and
Their Revealing Interviews," "60
Stories of Royal
Lineage," and "Chronicle of Thailand: Headline News
Since
1946." Mr. Ehrlich also contributed to the chapter
"Ceremonies
and Regalia" in a book published in English
and Thai titled, "King
Bhumibol Adulyadej, A Life's Work:
Thailand's Monarchy in
Perspective." Mr. Ehrlich's newest
book, "Sheila Carfenders, Doctor
Mask & President Akimbo"
portrays a 22-year-old American female mental
patient who
is abducted to Asia by her abusive San
Francisco
psychiatrist.
His online sites are:
https://asia-correspondent.tumblr.com
https://flickr.com/photos/animists/albums
https://www.amazon.com/Hello-Big-Honey-Revealing-Interviews/dp/1717006418
https://www.amazon.com/Sheila-Carfenders-Doctor-President-Akimbo/dp/1973789353/
https://www.facebook.com/SheilaCarfenders