Berliner Boersenzeitung - As Dalai Lama approaches 90, Tibetans weigh future

EUR -
AED 4.165526
AFN 80.357438
ALL 98.658221
AMD 441.284057
ANG 2.043957
AOA 1038.825357
ARS 1330.049869
AUD 1.762624
AWG 2.044195
AZN 1.942722
BAM 1.957913
BBD 2.290372
BDT 137.818747
BGN 1.958237
BHD 0.427462
BIF 3374.171473
BMD 1.134089
BND 1.471902
BOB 7.838598
BRL 6.422301
BSD 1.134324
BTN 95.867159
BWP 15.444806
BYN 3.712339
BYR 22228.144687
BZD 2.278559
CAD 1.567657
CDF 3258.238098
CHF 0.934291
CLF 0.028009
CLP 1074.843703
CNY 8.246358
CNH 8.202951
COP 4761.858318
CRC 573.624167
CUC 1.134089
CUP 30.053359
CVE 110.384137
CZK 24.918168
DJF 201.999798
DKK 7.462011
DOP 66.623081
DZD 150.38812
EGP 57.578142
ERN 17.011335
ETB 151.793368
FJD 2.558956
FKP 0.854418
GBP 0.853243
GEL 3.113066
GGP 0.854418
GHS 15.937482
GIP 0.854418
GMD 81.087246
GNF 9825.604709
GTQ 8.736506
GYD 238.021092
HKD 8.789184
HNL 29.459055
HRK 7.532599
HTG 148.051096
HUF 404.090686
IDR 18650.320664
ILS 4.0872
IMP 0.854418
INR 95.592873
IQD 1486.016951
IRR 47759.323169
ISK 146.297557
JEP 0.854418
JMD 179.924191
JOD 0.804296
JPY 163.905342
KES 146.705978
KGS 99.175866
KHR 4544.945405
KMF 492.763211
KPW 1020.678627
KRW 1585.416775
KWD 0.347829
KYD 0.945329
KZT 586.027663
LAK 24529.691025
LBP 101638.594065
LKR 339.676611
LRD 226.87887
LSL 20.881622
LTL 3.34867
LVL 0.685999
LYD 6.193685
MAD 10.518345
MDL 19.511403
MGA 5151.605518
MKD 61.506236
MMK 2380.932304
MNT 4052.358345
MOP 9.056595
MRU 45.182163
MUR 51.589927
MVR 17.476897
MWK 1966.957612
MXN 22.326147
MYR 4.832921
MZN 72.58193
NAD 20.881622
NGN 1818.897126
NIO 41.745424
NOK 11.755116
NPR 153.387255
NZD 1.908133
OMR 0.436597
PAB 1.134324
PEN 4.158825
PGK 4.703118
PHP 62.994063
PKR 318.757754
PLN 4.274634
PYG 9075.795445
QAR 4.139468
RON 4.977498
RSD 117.32663
RUB 93.850463
RWF 1601.056244
SAR 4.252952
SBD 9.482456
SCR 16.120082
SDG 681.019651
SEK 10.932142
SGD 1.469513
SHP 0.891216
SLE 25.845438
SLL 23781.261177
SOS 648.311151
SRD 41.787752
STD 23473.352887
SVC 9.925713
SYP 14745.271758
SZL 20.872712
THB 37.468599
TJS 11.740575
TMT 3.969312
TND 3.403233
TOP 2.656146
TRY 43.744405
TTD 7.69237
TWD 34.707667
TZS 3057.02992
UAH 47.361735
UGX 4155.521669
USD 1.134089
UYU 47.601376
UZS 14632.793075
VES 98.368579
VND 29491.984826
VUV 137.310837
WST 3.14242
XAF 656.671531
XAG 0.035015
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.064933
XDR 0.81996
XOF 656.665735
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.794838
ZAR 20.849739
ZMK 10208.173548
ZMW 31.484258
ZWL 365.1762
  • RBGPF

    4.2100

    67.21

    +6.26%

  • CMSC

    0.0150

    22.045

    +0.07%

  • RIO

    1.1300

    59.68

    +1.89%

  • BTI

    -0.1000

    43.2

    -0.23%

  • AZN

    1.0900

    71.6

    +1.52%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    10.12

    -0.99%

  • SCS

    0.1500

    10.02

    +1.5%

  • GSK

    0.4350

    39.185

    +1.11%

  • BP

    -0.3310

    27.549

    -1.2%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    9.68

    -0.52%

  • RELX

    0.9270

    55.007

    +1.69%

  • BCC

    2.5750

    95.285

    +2.7%

  • CMSD

    0.0200

    22.28

    +0.09%

  • NGG

    0.0900

    71.74

    +0.13%

  • BCE

    0.2000

    21.64

    +0.92%

  • JRI

    0.0900

    13.1

    +0.69%

As Dalai Lama approaches 90, Tibetans weigh future
As Dalai Lama approaches 90, Tibetans weigh future / Photo: Douglas E. CURRAN - AFP

As Dalai Lama approaches 90, Tibetans weigh future

When the Dalai Lama turns 90 in July, the Buddhist monk, who for many exiled Tibetans personifies dreams of a free homeland, will ask if they want a successor.

Text size:

For the charismatic Nobel Peace Prize-winning leader, his landmark birthday will be a time to encourage people to plan for an eventual future without him and address whether there will be another Dalai Lama.

The answer, at least according to his translator of nearly four decades, is clear: yes.

"I know for a fact that he has received petitions from across the Tibetan Buddhism communities, including some from inside Tibet," said Thupten Jinpa, 66, a Buddhist scholar who helped produce the leader's latest book, "Voice for the Voiceless".

Jinpa believes the post, which he likens to a Buddhist "papal institution" not only for Tibet but also encompassing the Himalayan regions of India, Bhutan and Nepal, as well as Mongolia and some Russian republics, will continue.

"My hope is that before his birthday, July 6, he will issue a final statement," Jinpa said, speaking in India, where the Dalai Lama has been based since fleeing into exile in 1959.

"If my guess is right, and he says that the continuity of the institution will remain, that means then there will be a new Dalai Lama."

Many exiled Tibetans fear China will name a successor to bolster control over a land it poured troops into in 1950.

- 'Almost unthinkable' -

The current Dalai Lama was identified in 1936 when, aged two, he passed a test by pointing to objects that had belonged to the post's previous occupier.

He was hailed as the 14th reincarnation of the Dalai Lama, a role that stretches back more than 600 years.

"One constant in everybody's life has been the presence of the Dalai Lama," said Jinpa, who fled Tibet with his parents as a baby, around the same time the Dalai Lama escaped.

If there is to be a 15th, the Dalai Lama has said he will "leave clear written instructions" on what will happen after his death.

Jinpa, who trained as a monk before completing his doctorate at the University of Cambridge, said that a foundational principle of Buddhism was the contemplation of impermanence.

"Anything that comes into being will come to an end," he said. "Where there is birth, there will be death."

But he said the Dalai Lama -- who has said he wants to live until he is 113 -- also wants followers to confront a future, someday, without him.

"The idea of a world without him is almost unthinkable," Jinpa said. "But that will happen, and His Holiness has himself been very explicit in making sure that people are thinking about it."

- 'Symbol of a nation' -

Jinpa said that plans for the future had long been in progress.

The Dalai Lama stepped down as his people's political head in 2011, passing the baton of secular power to a government chosen democratically by 130,000 Tibetans around the world.

"He has already prepared the formal political structure for carrying on the struggles of the Tibetan cause beyond his lifetime," Jinpa said.

"But one of the things that he can't just transfer to an elected body... is the moral authority, and his status as the symbol of a nation, and a symbol of the aspiration of the Tibetan people," he added.

"This is why the continuity of the Dalai Lama institution becomes important."

China, which says Tibet is an integral part of the country, insists the Dalai Lama "has no right to represent the Tibetan people".

Jinpa said the Dalai Lama is only advocating for greater Tibetan autonomy.

"If we were asking for independence, it's a completely different thing," he said.

- 'People's heart' -

The Dalai Lama has already said that if there "is a consensus that the Dalai Lama institution should continue", then the Office of the Dalai Lama -- the Gaden Phodrang Trust in India's Himalayan hill town of McLeod Ganj -- would hold the responsibility for the recognition of the next leader.

He has also made it clear that any successor would by necessity be "born in the free world".

In 1995, Beijing selected its own child as the Panchen Lama, another influential Tibetan religious figure, and detained a Dalai Lama-recognised six-year-old, described by rights groups as the world's youngest political prisoner.

"The Chinese will choose another 'Dalai Lama', that's for sure," Jinpa said. "It will be ridiculous, but they will do it."

But he is confident that Tibetans will not acknowledge whoever Beijing selects.

"They can suppress, they can ban, they can force," said Jinpa, noting that Beijing forbids the Dalai Lama's photograph in Tibet.

"But you can never change people's heart. What's in the heart belongs to the individual, and the loyalty will always be to this Dalai Lama, and whoever is going to be chosen through the traditional system."

(U.Gruber--BBZ)