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The Dalai Lama

Page 52

by Alexander Norman


  Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR), 145, 150, 159, 172, 211, 250, 255–56, 268

  Tibet House, 275

  Tibet Improvement Party, 92

  Tibet Work Committee (TWC), 166

  Tibetan army, 179, 230

  Tibetan Art of Living and Dying (Sogyal Rinpoché), 253 n

  Tibetan Book of the Dead, 241–42

  Tibetan government in exile

  Beijing and, 249, 255–56, 303, 304

  Central Tibetan Administration, 303

  CIA funding of, 223

  Congressional Gold Medal and, 304–5

  Dalai Lama and, 264

  Dalai Lama on, 204, 206, 313–14

  democracy and, 312–13

  Dorje Shugden, 283

  established, 193

  Gyalo Thondup and, 267

  impeachment clause, 207–8

  India-Chinese conflict, 214

  relocation threat, 283

  United Nations appeals, 200

  United States and, 266

  See also India

  Tibetan identity, 250, 323–24

  Tibetan independence

  China and, 244, 267, 269–70

  Dalai Lama and, 223–24, 308, 327–28

  Deng Xiaoping on, 255 n

  International Commission of Jurists, 199–200

  international support, 265

  March riots (1959), 178–79, 268

  middle-way political approach, 258–59

  Nehru on, 198

  restoration of religion, 322

  Strasbourg Statement, 269

  Third National Forum for Work in Tibet, 277

  Tibetan Work Committee’s claims, 180

  Tibetan Youth Congress, 269

  United Nations’ involvement, 223

  See also Amdo; Kham

  Tibetan Institute of Performing Arts, 208

  Tibetan National Assembly, 134, 172

  Tibetan National Uprising Day, 223

  Tibetan New Year celebrations, 271

  Tibetan People’s Association (TPA), 134–35, 150–51, 164

  Tibetan studies, 325 n

  Tibetan tradition

  vs. Christianity, 70

  of counting age, 123 n

  Dalai Lama, 54

  debate within, 100–102

  defined, xv–xvi

  folktales, 88

  food, 38–39

  interference, attitude towards, 11–12

  karma and feudalism, 125

  Lhasa and, 57

  loyalty, 89

  measurement of time or distance, 355 n59

  monasteries and, 70

  “nameless religion,” 40–44

  priest-patron (cho-yon) relationships within, 9–10

  realms, 105–7

  rebirth and merit, 74

  response to Lungshar’s vision, 25–26

  tobacco, 8 n

  urgent, interpretation of, 93

  on warfare, 153–54

  world origins, 4–5

  World War II, 84

  Tibetan Women’s Association, 175

  Tibetan Work Committee (Chinese organization in Tibet), 180

  Tibetan Youth Congress, 269, 308

  tobacco, 8 n

  Tolstoy, Ilya, 83–84

  tong len, 212, 227

  tongdra, 20

  tonsuring ceremony, 61

  torma (butter sculptures), 63, 64, 91–92

  tradition, defined, xv

  travels, of Dalai Lama (14th), 213, 237–38, 246–48, 251–54, 263–64, 272–75

  Trijang Rinpoché, 82–83, 90

  China and, 126, 169

  Dalai Lama and, 150, 198, 224–25, 231, 254, 296

  death of, 254–55

  Dorje Shugden and, 297

  exams, of Dalai Lama, 174–75

  in India, 162

  Khampas near monastery, 192

  plots, against Dalai Lama, 297

  Pope Paul VI and, 220

  protector support, 114

  radio communication, 117

  Shugden devotee, 295

  signs and omens, 149

  Special Frontier Force, 229

  Switzerland visit, 264

  Taktra Rinpoché and, 295

  thangka restoration, 138

  threats against, 284

  on travel with PLA, 140

  Westerners, spiritual depth, 220, 248

  Yellow Book, The, 234, 237

  See also Dorje Shugden (deity)

  Trikamdas, Purushottam, 207

  Trimon Shapé, chief minister, 23–24, 234

  “Trouble in Shangri La” article, 93

  Tsal Gungthang (Tibetan monastery), 173

  tsampa, 38, 43, 88, 147

  Tsarong (Tibetan war hero), 19–20, 190

  tsenshab, 102

  Tsering, Diki (mother). See gyalyum chenmo

  tsit tsab (ministers), 124, 134, 158

  tsoe pa (debate or dialectics), 99–102

  Tsongkhapa (14th-century scholar-saint), 81, 105, 286, 291–92, 381–82 n292

  See also Gelug tradition

  tukdam (equipoise in dying), 256–57

  tulkus, 30, 72, 78 n

  tum mo (Fierce Woman yoga), 225–27, 227 n, 376 n226

  tutors. See education; Harrer, Heinrich; Ling Rinpoché

  Tutu, Archbishop Desmond, 315

  TV interviews and appearances, 318

  U

  Uban, General S. S., 228, 230–31, 376–77 n228

  umaylam (middle-way). See Middle Way policies

  United Nations, 123, 134, 194 n, 200, 206

  United States

  Chinese-American relations, 223, 266

  Dalai Lama visits, 245–48, 251–54, 263, 265–66, 273–75

  Ling Rinpoché and, 256

  rebel forces training, 201

  recognition of Dalai Lama, 265–66, 273, 312

  on Seventeen Point Agreement, 130

  support and aid from, 132, 163, 192, 194, 202, 206, 246

  on Tibet’s independence, 116, 122

  See also CIA

  Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 300–301

  Urgya (Ulaanbaatar), 8

  USSR (Soviet Union), 245, 271

  V

  vajra, 132–33

  Vajrabhairava, 127

  Vajrapani (wrathful bodhisattva), 305

  Vajrayana Buddhism, xiv–xv

  Vanis, Jan, 141 n

  Varela, Francisco, 264–65

  vegetarianism, 314, 383 n314

  Verses on the Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way (Nagarjuna), 172–73

  videos, 287, 310, 378 n252, 383 n310

  Vietnam, 325

  vinaya (monastic personal code), 14, 253, 357 n79

  violence, in Buddhist tradition, 153–54, 267–68, 309

  Vishvamata, 137

  Volunteer Force for the Protection of the Dharma. See Chushi Gangdruk resistance

  vows, 14, 79, 79 n, 123, 154, 253

  W

  Walt van Praag, Michael van, 270 n

  Wangdu, 163

  Wannsee Conference, 110

  warfare

  Batang uprising, 10–12

  British massacre in Tibet (1904), 7–8

  in Buddhist tradition, 153–54

  Dalai Lama on, 302

  India vs. Pakistan, 228, 230

  Lhasa during World War II, 84

  Nyingma art of war magic, 293

  Pakistan, 228–31, 327

  Sino-Indian War (1962), 213–14, 224

  Special Frontier Force, 201, 214, 228–31, 238–39

  Tibet vs. China, 189

  Tibet’s effectiveness, 201

  See also military action; political discord

  “When Wrong Is Right,” (Millington jazz-funk composition), 251

  White Lotus Rebellion, 322

  Winnington, Alan, 149

  Wisdom Mantra, 162

  women, 175

  in Buddhist ceremonies, 310

  Dalai Lama’s commitment to, 206, 297

  e
ducation, 354 n48

  Enlightenment, 328

  as future Dalai Lama(s), 328

  geshema degree eligibility, 328

  independence, 181

  as nuns, 139 n, 215, 277, 322, 328

  ordination, 328

  in riots, 306

  World Fellowship of Buddhists conference, 219

  X

  Xi Xinping, 323

  Xining, 48

  Xunhua Incident, 171

  Y

  yabshi kung (father), 52–53, 61, 85, 92

  Yamantaka (Lord of Death), 28

  Yauch, Adam, 276

  Yellow Book, The, 232–37

  Yellow Hat sect. See Gelug tradition

  yidag (hungry ghosts), 105–6, 329

  yoga, 104, 127, 127 n, 225–27, 227 n, 251

  Younghusband, Francis, 6, 7, 8

  Youth Organisation, 138–39

  Yuan dynasty, 9, 114, 115–16

  Z

  Zhang Zhinwu, 131, 133, 136

  Zhao Erfeng, 9, 12–13

  zhonghua minzu, 86

  Zhongnanhai, 141

  Zhou Enlai, 128, 145, 156, 159, 160, 161, 166, 249

  Zhu De, Marshal, 141, 145

  About the Author

  © E. A. Norman

  Alexander Norman has collaborated with the Dalai Lama on several best-selling books, including the autobiography Freedom in Exile and Beyond Religion. He is the author of a critically acclaimed history of the Dalai Lamas, Secret Lives of the Dalai Lama: The Untold Story of the Holy Men Who Shaped Tibet, from Pre-History to the Present Day.

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  Footnotes

  * I once calculated that these books alone entailed spending in excess of 250 hours working alone, or in narrowly restricted company, with the Dalai Lama.

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  * He also gave $200,000 to the Mind and Life Institute and the remainder, approximately $75,000, for science education within the Tibetan monasteries in exile.

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  * Whether by spooky coincidence or as evidence of some strange karmic link, the first of these was put by my great-grandfather Sir Henry Norman, Baronet (then plain Mr.).

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  * From the perspective of the tradition, tobacco is an intoxicant and is therefore prohibited.

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  † From the Chinese perspective, the Manchus themselves were, like the Tibetans, a “barbarian” race—in contrast to the “civilized” Han over whom they ruled from 1644 to 1912.

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  * Remarkably, this allegation found its way onto the front page of the Daily Illini, the student newspaper of the University of Illinois, on December 20, 1933. Presumably the story was picked up from a British source.

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  * Also known as Yamantaka.

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  * Probably meaning “uncle” but used by children to refer to any authority figure.

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  † Mani probably refers either to a mani stone—a stone with a prayer inscribed on it—or the prayer (mantra) itself.

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  * It is also worth remembering that the dominance of this impoverished view of what is possibly true is a very recent development in the history of thought. Most people, most of the time, have taken the larger view that our senses are not the only source of reliable evidence—even if the contrary idea has been around as far back as we can see. In the West, the ancient Greek philosopher Democritus, a contemporary of Gautama Buddha, is associated with this position.

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  * It is impossible to give an accurate number for the total population of Tibet. Even today, no reliable numbers exist. Suffice it to say that Tibetans have traditionally claimed around 6 million, while the Chinese offer a figure around half this.

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  * This was Archibald Steele, a reporter for the Chicago Daily News.

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  * This was Ditru Rinpoché, still alive at the time of writing and a respected lama in his own right.

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  * Still in common use today, honorific Tibetan is almost an entirely different language from colloquial Tibetan.

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  * Although, strictly speaking, one should say “the medium of the Nechung oracle,” it is simpler to refer to him as Nechung or “the oracle.”

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  * On February 22, 1940, to be precise.

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  * The Tsarong mansion already had two.

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  † I use this term to translate chos srid zung ’brel.

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  * A thangka is a religious painting executed on a scroll that is generally bordered with silk brocade. The most important contain paint infused with the powdered relics of one or more high masters.

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  * This was Karma Pakshi, ca. 1204–1283.

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  † All lamas who reincarnate in this way enjoy the highest status: there are no low-status or minor reincarnate lamas.

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  * Roughly equivalent to a modern-day personal trust, the labrang is the legal owner of the estates and other property attaching to the tulku who becomes its life tenant. When he “manifests the act of passing away,” the assets of the labrang pass to his successor. Much like a modern-day trust, the labrang may well have a trading arm, and it will also have a household which it maintains. At that time, the labrang manager of Reting was a notably grasping character, a man completely unable to resist an opportunity to make money, whether by extortion, taxation, or pushing the boundaries of trade agreements entered into innocently by others.

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  * Besides chastity, these included vows not to kill, not to steal, and not to boast about one’s spiritual attainments.

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  * Mahayana means literally the Great Vehicle, in contrast to Hinayana, meaning, pejoratively, the Lesser Vehicle, though this usage is less usual today. Instead, Theravada is preferred. This—earlier—tradition rejects (generally speaking) as spurious the Mahayana scriptures, which only began to emerge at the beginning of the first millennium, some five hundred years after the death of the historical Buddha.

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  * This was Chatral Rinpoché (1913–2015). Note that it is not enough merely to read and accept the validity of a body of scripture. The seeker must receive them in a transmission from a suitably qualified master.

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  * Che was one of the two khang tsen, or colleges, that made up Sera Monastery, the other being Sera Mey.

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  * This was Chang Ngopa Rinzin Dorje, also known as Kusho Ringang.

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  * The word “Buddha” may be translated as “one who is awakened.”

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  * It is important to realize that the doctrine of karma is by no means deterministic. The most highly realized practitioners may in certain circumstances be immune to its effects. Moreover, the present moment is precisely an opportunity to effect a transformation of one’s accumulated karma. For example, when a negative memory (itself a karmic residue) is correctly contextualized, it may go from being a negative to a positive imprint. My memory of an accident or mishap may continue to distress me until I understand it as a timely warning to change
my behavior.

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  † Such liberation is often termed “Enlightenment,” but this can be misleading. It suggests a moment of epiphany. From the Buddhist perspective, one who is enlightened is straightforwardly one who has passed beyond suffering into nirvana.

 

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