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Partito Radicale Massimo - 20 febbraio 2000
TIBET/AFP/DALAI LAMA AND TIBETAN FREEDOM MOVEMENT (1)

Dalai Lama calls for renewed and stronger Tibetan freedom movement

by Abhik Kumar Chanda

DHARAMSALA, India, Feb 18 (AFP) - Tibet's exiled spiritual leader the

Dalai Lama marked the 60th anniversary of his enthronement Friday by

calling for a strengthening of the movement to end Chinese oppression in

his homeland.

The Nobel peace laureate presided over a glittering religious ceremony

attended by top Tibetan monks including the 14-year-old Karmapa Lama,

who escaped from China to India last month.

The 64-year-old leader told his followers that the future of the Tibetan

freedom movement lay with them.

"Today is a good day to renew and reinforce your dedication for the

Tibetan freedom struggle," he told several thousand admirers in the

northern Indian hill resort of Dharamsala where he has lived since

fleeing Tibet in 1959.

"The most important thing today is to save Tibetan Buddhism and culture.

The younger generation has to take more responsibility ... and work for

the Tibetan issue in a non-violent way."

The Dalai Lama thanked officials of his exiled government for working

ceaselessly over the past 40 years for the Tibetan cause.

"You are really dedicated and hardworking. But there is always scope for

improvement," he said.

He also expressed happiness that the Karmapa Lama -- spiritual head of

one of the four schools of Tibetan Buddhism -- had managed to escape

from Tibet to Dharamsala, where he arrived on January 5.

"I am very glad that the Karmapa Lama has been able to flee Tibet. He is

safe here. He is very young right now," he said, referring to the newly

arrived adolescent monk.

The Karmapa, who was attending his first official function in

Dharamsala, has been tipped by many Tibetan experts as a possible

successor to the Dalai Lama as the figurehead of the Tibetan freedom

movement.

The Dalai Lama was honoured by senior monks of the four schools of

Tibetan Buddhism at a ceremony replete with pomp and circumstance.

Sitting on an ornately carved throne in front of a gilded statue of Lord

Buddha in an audience room plastered with religious scrolls known as

'tankhas,' he first accepted greetings from senior monks.

He was then presented with sacred Tibetan relics -- including a knotted

garland of gold, holy banners, the eyes of a fish crafted in gold, and

silver vases by the Sakya Dhatri Rinpoche, the head of the Sakya school

of Tibetan Buddhism.

The Dalai Lama, who in 1988 toned down his demand for independence to

greater autonomy for Tibet, urged new refugees from Tibet to return

home.

"It is not easy to go back to a motherland where there is repression.

But I ask you to go back with happiness because the future of Tibet

depends on the six million Tibetans living there."

The Dalai Lama also stressed the role played by "westerner friends" and

the international community "who have shown interest, sympathy, support

and solidarity" for the Tibetan cause.

"It is because of them that the Tibetan cause is known in every corner

of the world. Ours is a demand based on truth and justice. I appeal to

the world community for more support."

Friday's ceremony included traditional dances by men and women dressed

in colourful brocade robes, offerings of rice cakes and Tibetan tea and

holy scarves to the Dalai Lama.

The dancing continued in the streets of Dharamsala throughout the

afternoon, as vendors hawked photographs of the Dalai Lama and the

Karmapa.

The underlying message of the day was that the Dalai Lama remained the

fulcrum on which the Tibetan movement balanced. Banners carried slogans

like "The Dalai Lama is the guiding force of the Tibetan freedom

struggle."

Thubten Samphel, an official at the information department of the exiled

Tibetan government said Friday's celebrations were tempered by the fact

that Tibet was still under Chinese rule.

"The estimated 134,000 Tibetan refugees worldwide are of course happy

today but their joy is subdued by the fact that these should have been

held at the Potala Palace," the traditional seat of the Dalai Lama in

the Tibetan capital Lhasa, he said.

 
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