photo:Pat Greenhouse of the Globe staff, April 29, 2009
Cambridge, MA, USA, 30 April 2009 (By Michael Paulson, The Boston Globe) - The
Dalai Lama, kicking off a four-day visit to the Boston area, today
acknowledged China's extraordinary economic and political might, but
said the world's largest nation's quest to be considered a superpower
will be stymied as long as China continues to dodge human rights
concerns.
The 73-year-old spiritual and political leader of
Tibetan Buddhism, who has led a government in exile in India for 50
years, beamed and laughed as he fielded questions from the Boston news
media at the Charles Hotel, sitting in a conference room decorated with
images of doodles and notes by former President John F. Kennedy. As he
began the session, he was noticeably fatigued, but he became
increasingly animated, and as he rose to leave, a reporter's shouted
question about whether he ever expected to set foot in Tibet again
prompted a lengthy finger-pointing response about the meanings of home
and of hope, and he then plunged into the media scrum to bow, shake
hands, and pose for pictures.
Photo: Pat Greenhouse of the Globe staff, April 29, 2009
Perhaps
the most pointed moment of the news conference came when the Dalai Lama
appeared to compare the U.S. to China, criticizing the wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq alongside his criticism of China's repression of
Tibetan demonstrators last year.
Despite the fact that some have
criticized the Obama administration, and particularly Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton, for allegedly soft-pedalling human rights
concerns when talking with China, the Dalai Lama said he saw no change
in American policy toward Tibet with the arrival of the new
administration, and he praised Obama as "straightforward" and for
trying to improve some of America's testier foreign relationships.
But
the Dalai Lama also acknowledged that he is not meeting with Obama
during his current trip the US, and said that he hopes, but is not
certain, that he will meet the president during another trip to the
U.S. in October. And the Dalai Lama said, referring to former President
George W. Bush, "I love President Bush,'' acknowledging serious policy
disagreements, but citing Bush's warm personality.
The Dalai
Lama offered warm remarks about Harvard University, which he first
visited in 1979, and will visit again tomorrow with a speech at The
Memorial Church and a tree-planting ceremony in Harvard Yard. The Dalai
Lama has cultivated a relationship with Harvard because of a perception
that many the nation's future leaders study there.
During this
visit to Boston -- the Dalai Lama's sixth trip to the region -- he will
also dedicate a new ethics center, named after him, at MIT; will
discuss the relationship between meditation and psychotherapy at a
Harvard Medical School sponsored panel discussion, and will host two
large public events, including an introductory course in Buddhism, that
are expected to be attended by as many as 13,000 people on Saturday at
Gillette Stadium in Foxboro.
While in Cambridge, the Dalai Lama
was scheduled to meet privately with a handful of elderly and disabled
Tibetan-Americans, but most of the area's tiny Tibetan community --
estimated at about 600 people -- is expected to arrive en masse in
Foxboro on Saturday.
"I doubt there is a single Tibetan in
Boston who won't be there -- this is a huge deal for Tibetans to see
His Holiness,'' said Dhondup Phunkhang, a spokesman for the Tibetan
Association of Boston. "Tibetans in Tibet risk their lives to see him,
so of course we who live in a free country should go. It's a huge honor
to be able to see him and to associate with His Holiness.''
The
Dalai Lama, asked whether, after 50 years with no success in his quest
to win greater autonomy for Tibet, there is any reason for hope for the
Tibetan cause, acknowledged that rationally there is little cause for
optimism. However, he offered a brief history of post-revolutionary
China, suggesting that the nation has repeatedly changed course in
serious ways, and so it is possible it will change again. He said China
has essentially abandoned socialism -- he called it a "capitalist
autocratic communist'' nation. And he said the Chinese people have been
more sympathetic to the Tibetan cause than has the Chinese government
-- he cited as evidence what he said were articles sympathetic to Tibet
that have been written by Chinese authors over the last year.
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