"Separatist" Dalai Lama snubbed by Palestinians
The Dalai Lama just visited Israel, where no Israeli official would meet with him. According to the following account, a Palestinian NGO also agreed to cancel his visit to the occupied Palestinian territories at China's request. From the Middle East Times, Feb. 20:
Dalai Lama visit to Bethlehem canceled to avoid China clash
BETHLEHEM, West Bank -- The Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, had a visit to Bethlehem canceled at the request of the Palestinian Authority, which is unwilling to antagonize China, organizers said on Monday.
Palestinian nongovernmental organization Holy Land Trust, which invited the Buddhist spiritual leader to visit the birthplace of Jesus Christ, withdrew the invitation at China's request, said an official from the group.
The Dalai Lama was to have visited the Church of the Nativity, a mosque, Bethlehem town hall and a nearby refugee camp, the Holy Land Trust source said.
A senior official in the Palestinian foreign ministry confirmed that organizers had been asked to cancel the trip following a request from China.
"At the request of the Chinese government, we have not received or dealt with him given his separatist ambitions for Tibet," Majdi Al Khaldi said.
"Given our friendly relations with the Chinese government, which supports the Palestinian people, we asked the local [Bethlehem] authorities as well as civil society groups not to receive him and they acquiesced with our request."
The Dalai Lama last week paid a five-day private visit to Israel. Beijing accuses him of trying to lead the Tibetan province to secede from China and lodged an official protest against the visit.
He received the Nobel Peace prize for his peaceful opposition to Chinese rule and has long abandoned calls for Tibetan independence.
Seriously lame. See our last post on Israel/Palestine, and on Tibet.
HLT
Some folks from Holy Land Trust went to meet the Dalai Lama in Jerusalem: http://chrisinpalestine.blogspot.com/2006/02/afternoon-with-his-holiness-dalai-lama.html
Dalai Lama does Jerusalem
From the Jerusalem Post, Feb. 20, online at the Tibet solidarity site Phayul.com. A "religious United Nations"? It couldn't happen soon enough, and may it be more successful than the actually-existing political United Nations.
Dalai Lama meets chief rabbis, Muslim leaders
Chief Rabbi Yonah Metzger called on Sunday for the establishment of "a religious United Nations" representing the religious leaders of all the countries in the world. Metzger suggested establishing the religious UN in Jerusalem and placing the Dalai Lama at its head.
Metzger raised the idea during a meeting that includedd himself and the Sephardic Chief Rabbi, Muslim leaders, and His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Nobel Prize-winning peace activist and leader of the exiled Tibetan people.
"Religious leaders will get the opportunity to meet one another and discover that they have more in common than they may have realized," he continued.
The meeting, organized by Rabbi Menahem Fruman of the Samarian settlement Tekoa who supports negotiations with the Hamas, came just hours after Palestinians, including Hamas representatives, cancelled a meeting with the Dalai Lama that was to take place in Bethlehem.
According to a spokesman for Israeli Friends of the Tibetan People, Palestinians said the timing for the meeting was bad. They did not elaborate.
Alluding to the cancellation, Rabbi Metzger told a story that made the Dalai Lama smile.
"Once there was a hassidic rebbe who wanted to instill in his followers the importance of giving to the poor before Passover," said Metzger.
"He sent out a messenger to spread the message. When the messenger returned he said to the rebbe, 'I was 50% successful.'
"'What do you mean?' asked the rebbe.
"'The poor agreed to accept.'
"The situation is the same here in Israel. Fifty percent of us are open to your message of peace. We are waiting for the other 50% to accept."
Kadi Muhamed Zibde, a judge on Jerusalem's State Sha'aria Court told The Jerusalem Post ahead of the meeting that he hoped to present to the Dalai Lama and to the chief rabbis "a more sane version of Islam."
"Peace is the principle wish of Islam," said Zibde, who said the common denominators in different religions could be used to cultivate fruitful dialogue.
"All monotheistic religions believe there is inherent holiness in human life. Nonviolence is a value."
The Dalai Lama said religious leaders had a special responsibility to change the situation.
"Any noble work is bound to have obstacles," said the Dalai Lama. "We need determination to pursue justice and truth."
Fruman said dialogue based on mutual religious respect could help Israel receive from the Hamas recognition of Israel's right to existence, the honoring of past agreements and at least a temporary halt to terrorism.
"The Zionist secular state of Israel is considered an evil knife of blasphemy by Hamas leaders," said Fruman.
"But if you send the Chief rabbis to speak with the Hamas in religious language I believe we can get them to recognize a Jewish entity of some kind."
Parallels are often made between the Tibetan people's exile in 1959 and the Jews' exile from the land of Israel. Dharamsala, the Indian city that has become the Tibetan's spiritual center, has been likened to Yavneh after the destruction of the Temple.
The Dalai Lama, a self-proclamed admirer of the Jewish people, has met in the past with Jewish rabbis and spiritual leaders to learn more about Judaism and more specifically how to survive in exile.
One of these meetings was depicted in The Jew in the Lotus, by Rodger Kamenetz. Much in common was found between Jewish Kabbala and Buddhist Tantric mediations.
Question: Who is the 50% that Rabbi Metzger says don't want peace? The intransigent Israelis or the Palestinians?
The former, I hope. Especially since His Holiness laughed.
Dalai Lama meets with Iraeli Rabbis
Yes, I think it's clear that it's probably the same half (aprox.) of Israeli's that don't believe in Palestinian rights. What I think is admirable the myrid ways that the Dalai Lama has been reaching out beyond his natural constituency (i.e. Tibetans in exile & Tibetan Buddhist students from all parts of the globe). He has been meeting with all sorts of interfaith & ecological groups & attending scientific conferences. He is as concerned about the deforestation and contamination of the himilayan region by Chinese policies, industry & mining over the past 50 yrs. as he for the self-determination of the Tibetan people. We would all do well to remember that most of the weather in the Northern Hemisphere ariginates in those, the highest moountains on earth. Regardless of ideology, I have found the current Dalai Lamas actions & statements consistently free of dogma and and helpful in thinking about crucial issues in innovative ways. I will also never forget the image of him holding the hand of the elderly & frail founder of Liberation Theology , Dom Helder Camera from Brazil at a "Spiritual Summit" many years ago. Also part of that group were Pir Vilijat Khan,founder of the Sufi Order of the West, Swami Satchitananda, founder of Integral Yaga and several Indigenous Elders, all sadly gone now. To be con't...




Palestine and China
Excuse me while I bash my head against a wall...
I dug up this from Xinhua, 2005:
That report came a couple of days after this one: