INDIAl: A five-day long teaching session by the Dalai Lama begins in northern Dharamsala
Record ID:
1374643
INDIAl: A five-day long teaching session by the Dalai Lama begins in northern Dharamsala
- Title: INDIAl: A five-day long teaching session by the Dalai Lama begins in northern Dharamsala
- Date: 13th December 2005
- Summary: MORE OF PEOPLE SITTING
- Embargoed: 5th January 2006 17:41
- Keywords:
- Topics: Religion
- Reuters ID: LVA8ZS9ZKH4H1G5FHHN6MNWLKZ09
- Aspect Ratio: 4:3
- Story Text: Hundreds of Buddhists from Korea have gathered in India's northern Dharamsala town for a five-day long teaching session by Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama that began on Monday (December 12).
The teaching session, which is an annual feature, is being held for Taiwanese and Korean Buddhists in the headquarters of the Tibetan government-in-exile after a gap of two years.
Do-Eung Surin, a Buddhist from Korea, said the teachings that took place in Indian capital New Delhi for the past two years were a lifetime experience.
"We are coming from Korea, almost 300 people have come to take His Holiness' teachings. This teaching is the way of the Bodhi Satva," said Do-Eung.
The Dalai Lama, a 70-year old Buddhist spiritual leader, fled to India after a failed uprising by Tibetans in 1959, nine years after China's People's Liberation Army marched into Tibet to establish communist rule.
The Dalai Lama runs a government-in-exile in the hill station of Dharamsala.
The Dalai Lama has renounced the goal of an independent Tibet and says he only wants more autonomy. China accuses the Dalai Lama with continuing to spark separatist efforts for the 2.7 million Tibetans and refuses to allow him back inside its borders.
In September 2004, private envoys of the Dalai Lama visited China as part of a delicate and slow-moving process to pave the way for dialogue on the future of Tibet.
Beijing, which imposed Communist rule on Tibet after its troops entered in 1950, established direct contacts with the Dalai Lama in 1979 and allowed him to send representatives on four fact-finding missions, the last of which was in 1985.
But it suspended official dialogue, mostly through the Chinese embassy in New Delhi, in 1993 and maintained only sporadic and unofficial contacts until 2003.
The Dalai Lama has said that China lacked the political will to address the issue of Tibet "sensibly" and "pragmatically". Beijing has refused to grant Tibet autonomy on the pattern of Hong Kong and Macau.
Tibetans say more than 1.2 million fellow countrymen have died in their homeland since Chinese rule because of violence. - Copyright Holder: ANI (India)
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