 | | The Dalai Lama bows to the crowd during his address at Smith College on Wednesday morning. (GORDON DANIELS) |
Northampton, Massachusetts 10 May 2007 (By Larry Parnass, gazettenet.com)
- In a half-hour address at Smith College this morning, the 14th Dalai
Lama pledged himself to three continuing causes, as an individual and
worldwide leader of Tibetan Buddhism.
Speaking in Smith's Indoor
Track and Tennis facility, the Dalai Lama said that until his death, he
will work for humanity by speaking out on the importance of "the
compassionate heart," by urging people to put their faith into practice
and by working for the well-being of Tibet.
His Holiness
accepted an honorary doctorate from Smith, which co-sponsored the
address with Hampshire College, and then cautioned the capacity crowd
that knowledge is not enough. Education can guide, but the heart must
lead, he said, using a slow, measured English.
The Nobel Peace
Prize winner, who is 72, asked listeners to consider the feeling of
security instilled in a newborn child by a mother's love and devotion.
"That is the most crucial experience. That is the beginning of our
life," he said.
The Buddhist leader spoke calmly and with humor,
as if to a small circle of students and monks, not a yawning athletic
arena. He joked that he is semi-retired.
When asked later in a
question-and-answer session how people should raise their children, the
unmarried monk quipped, "I am the wrong person to ask."
Knowledge
in itself, and modern technology, His Holiness had said earlier, can be
guided by hate, as some "suppress" their inner values. "I think we
should pay more attention to warm-heartedness. ... With action, I think
it is very important to cultivate the usefulness of these qualities,"
he said.
"I'm always sharing with people ... if they are
negligent ... then our world may not be a happy world," His Holiness
said, occasionally looking to his translator for the right English word.
His
Holiness also pledged to urge people to put their religious beliefs
into action in the interests of humanity. He said people of all faiths
need to act purposefully. "All religious traditions are meant to
provide happiness for humanity," His Holiness said. "We need a
different way of approach to increase and promote these inner values."
"Sad events" in world history, he said, even if associated with religious division, are not the fault of belief, he said.
"The main reason is not religion itself, but some other interest of power, or economy, or organization," he said.
His
Holiness said it is up to the individual to put religion into action
for the benefit of all: "If we accept religion, we should be serious
and sincere ... and implement what the teachings say."
He joked
that too often, people who proclaim themselves to be tolerant lose
their commitment and patience. "As soon as you meet someone who
disagrees with you, the practice of tolerance, (it's) completely
forgotten."
His Holiness noted that he is often credited with being a good Christian or Muslim.
"I
don't know whether I've deceived these people," he said, drawing
laughter from the arena. Then he leaned to his translator seeking a
word. "Or whether they are words of flattery."
"All these traditions have the same potential," he said. |