Archbishop Desmond Tutu and the Dali Lama

seen from Russia
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Pakistan
seen from Yemen
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Australia

seen from Israel
seen from Spain
seen from Spain
seen from Spain

seen from United States

seen from Spain

seen from Israel
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Pakistan
seen from United States
Archbishop Desmond Tutu and the Dali Lama
Certain people in my life might not change, but I can. By change, I mean shifting the habit of not liking myself, of hating my body, of suppressing my deepest desires and the truths of who I am.
“Whenever someone stood up – this happened after almost every large public lecture – and asked him what to do after you’ve been disappointed in some dream (to bring peace to the Middle East, to reverse climate change, to protect some seeming idyll), the Dali Lama looked over at the questioner with great warmth and said, “Wrong dream!” You have to analyze, research real causes and conditions and take the long view, he always stressed, before coming up with any plan. Pursuing an unrealistic dream was an insult to reality, as well as to dreamer and dream.” – Pico Iyer, The Half Known Life
Sorrel Neuss: While the world moralises over China's occupation, feudalism and abuse in Tibetan culture has been conveniently forgotten
Sexual abuse in monasteries and oppressive feudalism in traditional Tibetan society has been factored out of the argument against China's occupation, oversimplifying it.
Han Chinese guards deliberately obstruct the pilgrim route through Lhasa to the holy Jokhang temple by sipping tea at strategically placed tables in the middle of the road. In front of the Potala, the Dalai Lama's former seat of power, an imposing guarded concrete square glorifies China's occupation.
Tibet seems like as a celestial paradise held in chains, but the west's tendency to romanticise the country's Buddhist culture has distorted our view. Popular belief is that under the Dalai Lama, Tibetans lived contentedly in a spiritual non-violent culture, uncorrupted by lust or greed: but in reality society was far more brutal than that vision.
"We have a saying in Tibet: if the problem can be solved there is no use worrying about it. If the problem can't be solved worrying will do no good. So stop worrying."
~ The Dali Lama (film: 7 Years in Tibet)
Dalai Lama being smuggled out of the country by Tibetan guerrillas