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Barkha interviews His Holiness The Dalai Lama in Bodh Gaya

Thanks for that post it shows your level of thinking:


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Rubbish source is say the least :lol:

fotos done lies mate
 
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Now see what the 'real' world think of his Holiness

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fotos done lies mate


For once i agree

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Sikh leaders are fully behind his Holiness
 
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Jealous hater China even tried to stop Obama meeting but to no avail
 
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Heinrich Harrer with the Dalai Lama
long after the Holocaust and after the
crimes committed by Harrer's SA thugs in
Austria. Harrer was reportedly a die-hard
Nazi and Hitler supporter to the very end
dl3a.jpg
 
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Jealous hater China even tried to stop Obama meeting but to no avail

Everyone hates a CIA "agent" ... Not just China ... What exactly does Dalai Lama that CCP would be jealous of ? :azn:
 
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dl4.jpg


A 1994 photo from the Dalai Lama's own website. In the middle is The Dalai Lama. On the Dalai
Lama's immediate right is former Nazi SS Death Squad Leader, Heinrich Harrer. On the Dalai Lama's immediate left
is friend of the Dalai Lama, Nazi SS Death Squad Leader and convicted Nazi War Criminal, Dr. Bruno Beger who
was convicted of mass murder at Auschwitz Nazi Death Camp in Poland during World War II. Compare with earlier
pictures of the Dalai Lama (above) being embraced by mass murderer, Bruno Beger and appearing on the front
cover of Bruno's book.
 
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Everyone hates a CIA "agent" ... Not just China ... What exactly does Dalai Lama that CCP would be jealous of ? :azn:


Abuse of a religious figure is aganist PDF rules please refrain from it

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Ajmer, July 9 : Tibetan Spiritual leader the Dalai Lama visited the revered Ajmer Sharif shrine in Rajasthan this morning to offer prayers on the occasion of ''Urs'', the 796th death anniversary of Sufi saint, Khwaja Moin-ud-Din Chishti.

The Tibetan Spiritual leader offered prayers at the Dargah Sharif during his two days visit to Rajasthan.

The Dalai Lama said promotion of harmony for lasting world peace has been his life-long commitment.

"All major religions of the world present the same potential to promote wholeheartedness or compassion. Through that way, genuine and lasting world peace can exist. You know for that reason, harmony among different traditions is very essential. This is my life-long commitment," said the Dalai Lama.

Thousands of devotees congregate at the Ajmer Sharif shrine every year to offer prayers on the occasion of ‘Urs’, which began on July 5 this year.
 
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Tibet Was No Shangri-La Under The Rule of the Dalai Lamas; It Was ‘Hell On Earth’ Before Revolution

Tibet was a feudal society before the revolutionary changes that started in 1949. There were two main classes: the serfs and the aristocratic serf owners. The people lived like serfs in Europe’s “Dark Ages,” or like African slaves and sharecroppers of the U.S. South.

Tibetan serfs scratched barley harvest from the hard earth with wooden plows and sickles. Goats, sheep and yaks were raised for milk, butter, cheese and meat. The aristocratic and monastery masters owned the people, the land and most of the animals. They forced the serfs to hand over most grain and demanded all kinds of forced labor (called ulag). Among the serfs, both men and women participated in hard labor, including ulag. The scattered nomadic peoples of Tibet’s barren western highlands were also owned by lords and lamas.

The Dalai Lama’s older brother Thubten Jigme Norbu claims that in the lamaist social order, “There is no class system and the mobility from class to class makes any class prejudice impossible.” But the whole existence of this religious order was based on a rigid and brutal class system.

Serfs were treated like despised “inferiors”–the way Black people were treated in the Jim Crow South. Serfs could not use the same seats, vocabulary or eating utensils as serf owners. Even touching one of the master’s belongings could be punished by whipping. The masters and serfs were so distant from each other that in much of Tibet they spoke different languages.

It was the custom for a serf to kneel on all fours so his master could step on his back to mount a horse. Tibet scholar A. Tom Grunfeld describes how one ruling class girl routinely had servants carry her up and down stairs just because she was lazy. Masters often rode on their serfs’ backs across streams.

The only thing worse than a serf in Tibet was a “chattel slave,” who had no right to even grow a few crops for themselves. These slaves were often starved, beaten and worked to death. A master could turn a serf into a slave any time he wanted. Children were routinely bought and sold in Tibet’s capital, Lhasa. About 5 percent of the Tibetan people were counted as chattel slaves. And at least another 10 percent were poor monks who were really “slaves in robes.”

The lamaist system tried to prevent any escape. Runaway slaves couldn’t just set up free farms in the vast empty lands. Former serfs explained to revolutionary writer Anna Louise Strong that before liberation, “You could not live in Tibet without a master. Anyone might pick you up as an outlaw unless you had a legal owner.”

Born Female–Proof of Past Sins?

The Dalai Lama writes, “In Tibet there was no special discrimination against women.” The Dalai Lama’s authorized biographer Robert Hicks argues that Tibetan women were content with their status and “influenced their husbands.” But in Tibet, being born a woman was considered a punishment for “impious” (sinful) behavior in a previous life. The word for “woman” in old Tibet, kiemen, meant “inferior birth.” Women were told to pray, “May I reject a feminine body and be reborn a male one.”

Lamaist superstition associated women with evil and sin. It was said “among ten women you’ll find nine devils.” Anything women touched was considered tainted–so all kinds of taboos were placed on women. Women were forbidden to handle medicine. Han Suyin reports, “No woman was allowed to touch a lama’s belongings, nor could she raise a wall, or ‘the wall will fall.’… A widow was a despicable being, already a devil. No woman was allowed to use iron instruments or touch iron. Religion forbade her to lift her eyes above the knee of a man, as serfs and slaves were not allowed to life the eyes upon the face of the nobles or great lamas.”

Monks of the major sects of Tibetan Buddhism rejected sexual intimacy (or even contact) with women, as part of their plan to be holy. Before the revolution, no woman had ever set foot in most monasteries or the palaces of the Dalai Lama.

There are reports of women being burned for giving birth to twins and for practicing the pre-Buddhist traditional religion (called Bon). Twins were considered proof that a woman had mated with an evil spirit. The rituals and folk medicine of Bon were considered “witchcraft.” Like in other feudal societies, upperclass women were sold into arranged marriages. Custom allowed a husband to cut off the tip of his wife’s nose if he discovered she had slept with someone else. The patriarchal practices included polygyny, where a wealthy man could have many wives; and polyandry, where in land-poor noble families one woman was forced to be wife to several brothers.

Among the lower classes, family life was similar to slavery in the U.S. South. (See The Life of a Tibetan Slave.) Serfs could not marry or leave the estate without the master’s permission. Masters transferred serfs from one estate to another at will, breaking up serf families forever. Rape of women serfs was common–under the ulag system, a lord could demand “temporary wives.”"

Tibet Was No Shangri-La Under The Rule of the Dalai Lamas; It Was ‘Hell On Earth’ Before Revolution | Dailycensored.com
 
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Seeing Harrer spent the war intered in India its a bit hard for him to have been any where near a death camp.

After returning to Europe in 1952 Harrer was cleared of any pre-war crimes and this was later supported by Simon Wiesenthal
 
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yes right too he is so down to earth he is a supporter of the nazi

57231489.jpg


Good friend of Dalai Lama and praised by
the Dalai Lama after giving over a million
dollars to Dalai Lama. Also an admirer of
Adolph Hitler. Convicted of mass murder by
placing poison Sarin gas in the Tokyo
subway.

dl1o.jpg

showing the current
connections between Nazi War
Criminals and the Dalai Lama

proof??
just because he appears in pic with someone who committed crime later does not mean he is criminal..his holyness meets thousands of people everyday.
 
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Richard Gere labels China 'the largest hypocrisy in the world' | Film | guardian.co.uk

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The actor Richard Gere has labelled China the world's "largest hypocrisy" and condemned the communist nation's continuing occupation of Tibet during a television interview at a religious event in India.


Gere, a Buddhist who is a devotee of the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, spoke out during an extensive primetime interview on English-language news channel NDTV 24x7 last night. The actor, who is in India for the 10-day annual Kalachakra Puja Buddhist celebration, said China had failed to gauge the level of cultural idiosyncrasy in Tibet.


"China is a very difficult place to live if you are a free thinker, if you are an artist, if you are a religious person, but especially in Tibet," said Gere. "I think they (China) have so wrongly gauged the Tibetan people, thinking they could subvert the deep, deep, deep religious beliefs and make them true communists. It's never going to happen. Their whole lives have revolved around Buddhism, around their teachers, around their gurus ... the high ideals of Buddhism. They are not going to change that in a hundred years, two hundred years, a thousand years. That will never go away."
 
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Everyone loves the Dalai Lama thats why the dragon is so scared and tried to blacken his name :disagree:

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Prince Charles also met with him, China can't do nothing but cry
 
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Richard Gere labels China 'the largest hypocrisy in the world' | Film | guardian.co.uk

---------- Post added at 07:29 PM ---------- Previous post was at 07:29 PM ----------

The actor Richard Gere has labelled China the world's "largest hypocrisy" and condemned the communist nation's continuing occupation of Tibet during a television interview at a religious event in India.


Gere, a Buddhist who is a devotee of the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, spoke out during an extensive primetime interview on English-language news channel NDTV 24x7 last night. The actor, who is in India for the 10-day annual Kalachakra Puja Buddhist celebration, said China had failed to gauge the level of cultural idiosyncrasy in Tibet.


"China is a very difficult place to live if you are a free thinker, if you are an artist, if you are a religious person, but especially in Tibet," said Gere. "I think they (China) have so wrongly gauged the Tibetan people, thinking they could subvert the deep, deep, deep religious beliefs and make them true communists. It's never going to happen. Their whole lives have revolved around Buddhism, around their teachers, around their gurus ... the high ideals of Buddhism. They are not going to change that in a hundred years, two hundred years, a thousand years. That will never go away."

LOL what a donk using what richard gere said as an arguement:rofl:
 
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