Sunday, April 25, 2010

Obama & Dalai Lama voted most popular leaders in survey: Popularity of Buddhist leader grows


In an Internet survey released April 23, 2010 and made between March 31 and April 12, H.H. the Dalai Lama was voted the second most popular leader in the world behind U.S. President Barack Obama. Although the poll only took the opinion of 6,135 adults between the ages of 16 and 64, it did survey people in many countries including Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the USA.
So the trend of increasing popularity continues for the exiled Tibetan leader and the young, African-American president – both of whom have emerged from relative obscurity to dominate the world stage. This is particularly unusual for the Dalai Lama as he did not seek that attention, and as he so often reminds people, he is just a “simple monk.”
President Obama had a 77% rating, while the Dalia Lama had a 75 percent rating. They were followed by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at 62%. Another spiritual leader, Pope Benedict XVI came in seventh with a 36% rating.
Other leaders ranked in the pole were
4th - German Chancellor Angela Merkel with 54 percent.
5th (tie) - French President Nicolas Sarkozy 37% and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon at 37%.
May we all recognize the equanimity in all things and realize that all people, including ourselves, are equally important.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Dalai Lama panelists named

CEDAR FALLS - Four leaders in education and violence prevention will join the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet for a panel discussion, "A Conversation with His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet: Educating for a Non-violent World," at the University of Northern Iowa on May 18.

The panel discussion begins at 9:30 a.m. in UNI's McLeod Center, and will be moderated by UNI Provost and Executive Vice President Gloria Gibson.
Art Erickson, founder and CEO of Urban Ventures Leadership Foundation; Judy Jeffrey, director of the Iowa Department of Education; Jackson Katz, co-founder of Mentors in Violence Prevention program; and Lee Rainey, a Minneapolis business leader who has devoted significant time to youth development programs, will join the Dalai Lama to discuss ways in people and a society can address issues of violence, promote civility and enhance understanding through education.
The public may submit questions related to the panel-discussion topic. To send in questions for consideration, visit www.uni.edu/dalailama/morning-session-questions.
Tickets are available for the panel discussion. To order, call 273-4849, visit www.unitix.uni.edu or stop at the ticket offices at the McLeod Center or the Gallagher-Bluedorn Performing Arts Center. Tickets cost $15 (plus $2 handling fee). All seating is reserved.
In addition to the morning panel discussion, the Dalai Lama will deliver a keynote address, "The Power of Education," at 2 p.m.
Live streaming of both events will be available from links at http://live.uni.edu.

Monday, April 19, 2010

U.S.-China Relations: Vision Needed


Although there are some signs of improvement, columnist Wenran Jiang says Beijing and Washington have very different views about how to manage ties

The good news is that ties are showing signs of improvement. During Chinese President Hu Jintao's visit to Washington on Apr. 12-13 for the nuclear security summit, he met with Obama and indicated Beijing's willingness to work with the U.S. on U.N.-sponsored sanctions against Iran. Adding to the spirit of reconciliation, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has delayed a report to Congress, which has been pressuring the Obama Administration to name China as a currency manipulator. Geithner even made a quick stop in Beijing on Apr. 8 to meet with Chinese Vice-Premier Wang Qishan, prompting reports that China may let the yuan float more flexibly with the dollar.
Before we conclude that U.S.-China ties are warming up, it is worth noting that Beijing and Washington have very different views on how to manage their relationship.
Take the telephone conversation between Obama and Hu in early April, before their meeting at the summit. Immediate reports in the U.S. media following the hourlong exchange of the two presidents praised the event as a turning point in bilateral relations, focusing on Obama's effort to convince Hu of the need for a common stand in sanctioning Iran over its pursuit of nuclear weapons.

PERCEPTION GAP

Yet the Chinese news releases at the same time gave no indication of a "breakthrough." Beijing stressed Hu's demand that the U.S. "properly handle" the issues of Taiwan and Tibet, which represent China's "core interests." And there was not even a mention that the two leaders discussed Iran, other than one line saying they exchanged views on international issues of common concern.
Such discrepancies reflect a broader perception gap. On the American side, the emerging consensus is that the Obama Administration began its term committed to working closely with Beijing on a range of issues. It took extra steps in not being openly critical of China's currency policy, expanded the high-profile U.S.-China Strategic & Economic Dialogue, which under Bush was led by the Treasury Secretary, to include Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as well as Geithner. Obama also delayed a meeting with the Dalai Lama prior to his China trip and showed substantial patience with the Chinese concerns at the Copenhagen conference.
That conciliatory approach, not without domestic criticism, does not seem to be appreciated by the Chinese side. Beijing displayed angrier-than-before reactions to the U.S. arms sale to Taiwan, something that has been going on for decades, and to Obama's low-key meeting with the Dalai Lama, already a deferred event that the Chinese were well aware would happen. To many in Washington, what is the point of continuing to be nice when there are no obvious benefits?
On the Chinese side, the initial accommodating approach by Obama, although met with a level of caution and skepticism, was perceived as a potential new approach to China that respects the rise of China and its more equal status with the U.S. After all, many argue, China continues to buy U.S. Treasury bonds and now shoulders the largest amount of U.S. debt, thus financing whatever the Americans are doing—from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to health care at home. China has played a vital role in getting the global economy on a speedier path to recovery, thanks to its effective stimulus package. Beijing is also expected to help with the nuclear issues of North Korea and Iran, two countries that are hostile to Washington but less of a threat to China.

STRATEGIC ACCOMMODATION

So Beijing felt a sense of betrayal when Obama, shortly after an all-positive visit to Beijing, went on with the arms sales to Taiwan and the meeting with the Dalai Lama. Many mainstream, liberal-minded Chinese academics have complained that such moves are not part of a fresh approach to China. Rather, these are old policies that do not accommodate China's new status.
The key here is not the lack of communication channels. Both countries have interacted with each other for more than three decades. There are no language problems, little cultural barriers, and plenty of conferences, track-two mechanisms, and personal correspondence. We have seen elegant op-ed articles written on both sides articulating how one side is right and the other side wrong. The end result? They talk past each other rather than with each other.
The fundamental issue in today's U.S.-China relationship is how Washington and Beijing manage their relations with a long-term strategic vision that rewards both sides. The Americans tend to think what's good for America must be good for the world. Beijing, and for that matter much of the world, may not think so. Chinese leaders tend to think nothing matters that much unless it is good for China.
The starting point is to acknowledge that both countries have their own domestic and foreign policy priorities. Some of them may be shared, some may not, and others may be in conflict. To accommodate and bridge different interests, the U.S. and China need to engage in more than just frank discussions. Tangible strategic concessions from both sides must be made in order to promote cooperation and avoid confrontation.
Wenran Jiang is the Mactaggart Research Chair of the China Institute at the University of Alberta and the senior fellow of the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada. He was also a public policy fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C., from September 2009 to March 2010.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Indians are sometimes lazy, says the Dalai Lama

New Delhi, Apr 16 (PTI) Indians are "lazy" and must work hard like the Chinese, Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama said here today.

"As a critic, I feel sometimes people in India are lazy.

You should work hard. Look at the Chinese, they work very hard," he said.

In a lighter vein, he also said, "Wherever the Chinese go, they make China towns. However, nowhere in the world there are any 'India towns'."

However, negating China's economic growth, the Dalai Lama attacked it for "lacking" values like transparency and free information which were important for a successful democracy.

"Money is important. Nobody is denying that. But there are other values like democracy, respect for others' views...

these are the foundations of successful democracy," the Tibetan spiritual leader said.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Dalai Lama offers condolences over Chinese quake


DHARAMSHALA, India - The Dalai Lama offered his condolences to victims of a devastating earthquake which hit a remote northwestern area of China on Wednesday, killing at least 400 people.

The exiled Tibetan spiritual leader said he would organize a special prayer service in his home in exile, Dharamsala, in northern India and would explore ways in which he could help.

The quake, measuring at least 6.9, rocked a mainly Tibetan area in the province of Qinghai, also injuring about 10,000 people as homes and other buildings including schools collapsed.

"We pray for those who have lost their lives in this tragedy and their families and others who have been affected," the Dalai Lama said in a statement.

"A special prayer service is being held at the main temple (Tsuglagkhang) here at Dharamsala on their behalf," said the Buddhist leader who is at loggerheads with the Chinese leadership over the future of Tibet.

"It is my hope that all possible assistance and relief work will reach these people. I am also exploring how I, too, can contribute to these efforts," the Dalai Lama said, without elaborating.

The Dalai Lama, who has been living in India since he fled Tibet following a failed uprising in 1959 against Chinese rule, wants to see greater autonomy for Tibet within China, but Beijing accuses him of being a separatist.