 | | The
Dalai Lama watches a dancer from Halau Hula Wehiwehi O Leilehua perform
before his address. Photos by CHRISTIE WILSON | The Honolulu Advertiser |
WAILUKU,
Maui 25 April 2007 (By Christie Wilson, The Honolulu Advertiser) — Even before the Dalai Lama Tenzin Gyatso appeared on stage
yesterday at War Memorial Stadium, his message of peace and compassion
permeated through the crowd, estimated at more than 10,000.
"You
get that vibe that everyone's together," said Mike Serro, 27, of
Brooklyn, N.Y., as he wandered around the booths selling food and
Tibetan crafts with Jen Bino, 25, of Toronto.
"I'm just thinking how lucky I am that he's here right now. It's amazing," Bino said about the Dalai Lama's first visit to Maui.
Wailuku
resident Tina Del Dotto said she's not a Buddhist and never studied
Buddhism, but felt a need to experience the occasion. "If there was
going to be an opportunity to be with people of Maui who have a heart
of peace and kindness in this world of turmoil, I want to feel that
Maui energy and the peace," said Del Dotto, 55.
Tenzin Gyatso,
known as his Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama, visited O'ahu and the Big
Island in 1980 and 1994. His Maui appearances this week kick off a U.S.
tour of eight cities.
The 71-year-old spiritual leader, Nobel
Peace Prize winner and author of the best-selling "The Art of
Happiness" fled into exile in India in 1959 after a failed uprising
against Chinese communist rule in Tibet. He continues to negotiate with
the Chinese government over maintaining some degree of self-rule and
cultural autonomy for Tibet.
A group of kumu hula from four
islands yesterday welcomed the Dalai Lama with a series of oli and lei
offerings, followed by a performance by Halau Hula Wehiwehi O Leilehua.
The guest of honor noted with a chuckle that the women's Hawaiian garb
resembled the robes worn by Buddhist nuns.
He was quick to laugh
throughout his hour-plus talk, titled "The Human Approach to World
Peace," enchanting the crowd with his humor and humble demeanor. The
Dalai Lama said religion may not be essential to a happy life, but that
respect for basic human values is.
Many people consider love and
compassion as a religious matter and not important in daily life, the
Tibetan leader said. "That's totally wrong, he said." In fact, in a
busy world, love and compassion are even more critical than ever, he
said.
Just as we choose the right foods that are good for our
bodies, we should make proper choices from our "supermarket of
emotions" for the good of our mental health, he said, avoiding hatred,
jealousy, envy and anger.
CRITICIZES ISOLATION
 | | More
than 10,000 people packed the War Memorial Stadium in Wailuku, Maui, to
hear the Dalai Lama speak on peace, compassion and preserving the
culture of indigenous peoples. |
Speaking to the
issue of cultural preservation, the Dalai Lama said he disagrees with
those who think isolation is the best way to protect indigenous
cultures. He said native peoples should take advantage of education and
"modernization" to keep their identity.
He also said that in the
context of a modern world, cultural leaders should pick which
traditions to perpetuate and which to abandon because they are no
longer relevant or helpful to their cause.
After the Dalai Lama
departed the stage with a simple "aloha," Maui kumu hula Hokulani
Holt-Padilla told The Advertiser he was a "practical man who offered
practical, useful advice." She said she agrees that some cultural ideas
must change while Hawaiians and other native peoples preserve their
language and "hold out the values and things we have that keep us who
we are."
The Dalai Lama's remarks on the worth of pursuing a
right and just cause even though it may seem hopeless in one's lifetime
put the struggle for Native Hawaiian rights in perspective for Big
Island kumu hula Pualani Kanaka'ole Kanahele.
"It may take more
than one lifetime to do it. Sometimes we get a little bit anxious about
it getting done in our lifetime," she said.
Maui audience hears Tibetan monk's counsel on preserving indigenous cultures, compassion |