Press Stories
Extract of Karmapa Interview with TIMES OF INDIA
Rashmee Roshan Lall 20 September 2009, 10:00am IST
India is downplaying the Chinese incursions but Beijing remains miffed about the Dalai Lama’s visit in November to a monastery in Arunachal Pradesh.
Meanwhile, the Karmapa Lama, Trinley Dorje, the only senior Buddhist leader recognized by Beijing, the Tibetans and India, picks his way through the diplomatic minefield. On a visit to Delhi from Dharamsala, the 24-year-old leader of one of the major schools of Tibetan Buddhism talks politics, hip-hop and video games with Rashmee Roshan Lall . Excerpts from the interview.
Is India being diplomatic enough to and about China and and vice versa?
Obviously I can’t speak from the perspective of a politician who is active in these communications. Obviously the government of each country has its own interests in the ongoing conversation. They are doing what they can to advance their own interests. I’m not able to comment on what those interests might be. But if I were to make some observations and guesses from my own vantage point, it seems to me that the Chinese government is acting somewhat deliberately in attempts to slightly irritate the government of India.
Because of this the neighbourly relationship has suffered a little bit. India has always been a relatively peaceful country, a country that has always had a reasonably good record of valuing peace, India does not seem interested in pursuing any type of conflict, however, India is on the rise in the world and perhaps the Chinese government feels some type of impulse to blunt this rise somehow. Perhaps that is what is causing some of the things we see today.
You haven’t visited China since your swashbuckling escape to India in January 2000. Have you ever been invited back and what is your relationship with the Chinese authorities?
Relationship! I don’t have a particular relationship at all with the Chinese government. When I lived in Tibet, it is of course controlled by Beijing so there was no choice but to have some form of relationship. However, I have left Tibet and now live in India and so I’m completely removed from any type of control exerted by the Chinese government and so there is no communication to speak of, there is no relationship at all.
But as the only senior Tibetan Buddhist monk to be recognized by both the Chinese and the Dalai Lama, many say you could be the hinge on which relations between Tibetans and China swing in a new direction? But you sound very angry with Beijing?
No, it’s not that I have any anger or aversion to the Chinese whatsoever. Since I am a Dharma practitioner, I try to maintain impartiality and be free from excessive attachment to my own side and aversion to and hatred of others. In terms of where my own interests lie, I’m very passionate about supporting the middle path that has been articulated by His Holiness the Dalai Lama. In His Holiness’s vision of this middle path, there is great benefit for the people of Tibet and also great benefit for the people of China.
If we follow the middle path, both the government of China and the people of Tibet will be benefited. This vision is something that about 90% of Tibetans support – the vast majority of Tibetans. I simply consider myself one of those Tibetans whose responsibility it is to further the cause of the people. Now in terms of specific opportunities that might arise from me to serve this vision, I’m not so sure.
Right now, the government-in-exile of Tibet has been engaging Beijing in dialogue but perhaps the dialogue hasn’t always been fruitful. So, we have to wait and see what kind of opportunities arise.
Do you think those ‘opportunities’ will have arisen by the time you are 50? You’re 24 today and Tibetans have already been in India more than half-a-century? Will Tibetans become totally Indian by the time you’re 50?
Due to the kind support of the Indian government and the Indian people and due to the exemplary leadership of His Holiness the Dalai Lama, we Tibetans have been able to preserve Tibetan culture in the diaspora to some degree. Nevertheless, we would obviously rather be preserving the culture of Tibet inside a Tibet that was amenable to us. Obviously, that’s not the situation now so that means there’s going to be some challenges for us in preserving our culture exactly the way we want to.
Really, if you want to preserve Tibetan culture in the long term, that has to happen inside Tibet. This is why I feel the situation of Tibet is dire and that people in the world need to pay more attention to it. The situation is not one where we can take our time and wait 10, 20, 30 years to see what happens, what conditions might change because the danger is so great that much our culture could be lost and the chances of restoring our culture greatly diminished.
So it’s actually quite a hot potato that we have here. We have to do something quickly. In the language of your question, if we were to wait 50 years, we would be in danger of losing a great chunk of Tibetan culture that could not be recovered.
You are young, so you understandably sound impatient. The Dalai Lama is 73, many say you should succeed him because you embody the story of your people – of oppression, escape and exile – and have been coached by the Dalai Lama?
Well, you made some remarks about people perceiving me to have a special background. I would accept that generally speaking, I do have some special attributes in my background in terms of my life story and this subject of the future of Tibetan leadership and possible successors to the role of leadership that the Dalai Lama plays, has been a popular topic in the general conversation around the Tibet issue.
However as I always say, I am just one of the students, the followers of the Dalai Lama and there are a great many Tibetan people who are doing a wonderful job serving the vision of His Holiness and implementing his vision. I try to do my best too but in terms of future roles that I might assume, I’m already the Karmapa, that’s my role and it’s already one I feel quite weighed down by, it’s heavy responsibilities.
For the future, my view is that I will continue as I am now, serving the vision of His Holiness the Dalai Lama and all of us who are serving this vision together will be successful.
But if you were asked – by popular appeal – to assume leadership of the Tibetan movement, would you accept? Yes or no?
It’s really quite an involved issue. In order for anyone to assume the role of leader of the Tibetan people, it’s important to have historical context or at least an examination of the historical context. For anywhere between 800 and 900 years, the Karmapa has been a very apolitical figure, a person who has concentrated solely on spiritual leadership, not involved in any way with governmental leadership.
So I think it would be very difficult to change that historical pattern overnight and turn the role of the Karmapa into something more than strictly a spiritual teacher. Furthermore, we have to be mindful that the Dalai Lama is enjoying excellent health, he’s very active, he’s still contributing tremendously to the cause of the Tibetan people, he is the strong leader of the Tibetan people and that will continue.
It’s important not to get too far ahead of ourselves. There’s a lot of talk about what an authentic Tibetan democracy will look like in the future, who are the leaders going to be, but that’s all discussion at this point and we shouldn’t try and reach too far into the future.
Moving to other issues, I believe you like to listen to hip-hop on your ipod. Who are your favourite artistes?
I can’t think of any specific artistes right now, I basically listen to what ever comes my way, whatever sounds appealing. It’s important for me to stick to my traditional forms of art because I am a Tibetan Buddhist teacher wearing these robes. It’s important for me to maintain my cultural affiliations.
But from time to time I do enjoy listening to hip-hop because it has a very modern sound to it and even though I’m a Tibetan teacher representing these ancient teachings, I’m also a global citizen in the 21st century. Hip-hop perhaps is one way of me being a 21st-century person.
Is that why you play war games on your play station because many might say it’s inappropriate for a Buddhist monk dedicated to peace to play war games?
Well, I view video games as something of an emotional therapy, a mundane level of emotional therapy for me. We all have emotions whether we’re Buddhist practitioners or not, all of us have emotions, happy emotions, sad emotions, displeased emotions and we need to figure out a way to deal with them when they arise.
So, for me sometimes it can be a relief, a kind of decompression to just play some video games. If I’m having some negative thoughts or negative feelings, video games are one way in which I can release that energy in the context of the illusion of the game. I feel better afterwards.
The aggression that comes out in the video game satiates whatever desire I might have to express that feeling. For me, that’s very skilful because when I do that I don’t have to go and hit anyone over the head.
But shouldn’t meditation take care of that?
No, video games are just a skilful method.
You’ve practically grown up in India, do you speak Hindi, read it, eat Indian food and like it, or do you try and stay away from all that because you want to maintain your Tibetan cultural affiliations?
Thoda thoda . I like Indian food and learnt a little bit of Hindi as well, but beyond that it’s important to recognize for all practitioners of Tibetan Buddhism that now is the time to be more open to all cultures and traditions in the world.
Tibetan Buddhism must interact with a wide cross-section of cultures. We can’t isolate ourselves any longer and say ‘oh, I’m a Tibetan Buddhist practitioner, I have to live up in the mountains and cut all my ties with society’. Now is the time for Buddhists to be engaged with the world and part of that is other languages and cultures and different experiences of people.
Especially with regard to India, the birthplace of Buddhism and in all Buddhist traditions there is very high reverence for the land of India, the country.
I have taken some time to learn Hindi, I know a little bit and if I could practice with someone on a regular basis, I would pick it up more quickly. I didn’t find it too hard, Hindi is also fairly close to Tibetan in language form. In my previous studies, I studied some Sanskrit grammar as well.
I know you’ve been talking to schoolchildren in Delhi about ‘how to be happy’. Can anyone ever be totally happy? Are you? If a free Tibet would make you happier, may be you’re not totally happy like the rest of us lay people?
Whether one’s happy or not really depends on the way one holds one’s mind. With regard to the situation in Tibet, of course many of us hope for things to improve but even if Tibet were to gain autonomy, in harmony with the middle way path, it’s possible you still won’t be content in your mind.
It’s really up to the mind of the individual whether you’re happy or not and one of the main keys to happiness is being content with little. That contentment is the ground for genuine, stable and long-lasting. As to whether anyone can be happy without any suffering whatsoever, happiness and suffering are inter-dependent.
You can’t really speak of happiness if you don’t have a reference point of some suffering. You can’t speak of suffering if you don’t have a reference point of some happiness. You can talk a certain kind of happiness that’s beyond the realm of mundane happiness or mundane suffering, but you’re talking a pretty high-end game at that point.
EXPRESS BUZZ
First Published : 14 Mar 2010 08:06:00 AM IST
Last Updated : 13 Mar 2010 12:58:40 AM IST
Going by his hectic schedule, it would look as if a typical day in the life of Ogyen Trinley Dorje’s spans more than 24 hours. And it’s not just the religious duties that feature in his timetable. At 25, Dorje, more famously the 17th Karmapa Lama, is into linguistics, literature, plastic arts and music. As the rising new face of Tibetan Buddhism, he has to think about the future of his people and that of his homeland, now a Chinese territory.
“I’ve fulfilled only a part of my hopes. I put as much effort as I can in Buddhist study and training. I’m also studying the different spiritual traditions, five languages…also some music, painting, poetry — even photography,” he says through his American interpreter, Peter, a dapper man in shirtsleeves who dares the cloying Kerala’s February heat with a perfectly knotted tie.
The Karmapa, on his first trip south of Bangalore, opened a Buddhist Temple at the Sai Gramam near Thiruvananthapuram a fortnight ago. He visited the beach in Varkala, a one-time Buddhist pocket north of the state capital, and gave spiritual discourses and met people. “The heat is a little bit of a problem,” he says with a solemn nod, gently rubbing his shaven head with his palm. He sits easily on the metal chair, yellow vest hidden beneath reams of maroon monk’s robes, rimless glasses snug on his nose. Occasionally, he lunges forward to press home a point, even poking at the air with an index finger for added emphasis. The boyish smile, which accompanies his replies, is infectious.
Having fled Chinese-controlled Tibet 12 years ago as a boy, the Karmapa today has a tough job: reconciling his spiritual assignments with duties to the Tibetan struggle that the diaspora expects of him. The third highest-ranking Lama, the Gyalwang Karmapa heads one of the four schools of Tibetan Buddhism, the Karma Kagyu. Karmapas have a history of 900 years, predating even the Dalai Lama.
The Karmapas have not wielded political power traditionally. “Nevertheless, given the plight of the Tibetan people now, we will all have to help one another in the spheres of culture, spirituality and even politics. I don’t mean by this that I will become a politician. I will not. But I will necessarily be somebody involved in that realm,” he says. “The resolution of the plight of the Tibetans will require many ways and methods. It will not be through politics alone.”
China’s attitude to Tibet down the ages has hinged on the ‘Big fish eat small fish’ policy. The Dalai Lama’s recent encounter with US President Barack Obama has relit Tibetan hopes, but how far such plaudits by the international community will contribute to a resolution remains to be seen. A China that seeks to consolidate its position in the global arena — politically, economically and militarily — may not bode well for Tibet.
With hope playing truant, Tibetan youth in India and elsewhere are restless, increasingly so. They are quite vocal in expressing their dreams and expectations about an unseen homeland, and discomfort even at the Tibetan Government in Exile. These facts are not lost on the Karmapa. He, in many ways, has a unique place in the struggle. It’s not just that he is of the younger generation; he is the only senior Tibetan leader recognised by China, India and the Dalai Lama.
“From a purely political point of view, it (the Tibetan situation) is very troubling. From an ethical point of view, everyone wants to be happy. Evidently, China now wants to grow and succeed. For some time now, they have recognised the error of the Cultural Revolution, and, among other things, the creation of massive poverty. China is 5000 years old as a culture. China has all the spiritual wisdom, tradition and nobility of character. They should emphasise that along with their pursuit of external affluence so that they do not remain prosperous outside and empty inside,” he says.
Dorje — Apo Gaga was his given name — was identified as the 17th Karmapa Lama at the age of seven. The 16th Karmapa had left instructions for identifying his successor in an amulet in 1981, four years before the boy’s birth. The seven-year-old was plucked from his native plains in eastern Tibet to live a life of austere renouncement and rigorous study of the scriptures; a little Buddha.
Dorje lived in Tibet up to the age of 13 learning to be the Karmapa. In the “dark night” of December 28, 1998, he fled the Tsurphu Monastery, journeying for five arduous days through Tibet and Nepal, finally reaching the Dalai Lama at Dharamsala. Thus began a new life. Had he remained in Tibet, the young monk would have been restricted in his religious duties. He also had been unable to meet with teachers who were in India — two declared reasons why he chose to flee.
As he juggles varied duties and occupations, Dorje also has to deal with a co-claimant to the seat of the Karmapa, an Antipope of sorts. Trinley Thaye Dorje’s claim has been supported by the second-in-command of the Kagyu School. Of late, there have been rumours that the two young Lamas had expressed a desire to meet. “There is some distance between us that would have to be bridged. Personally I have no aversion or discomfort about meeting him,” he says.
Comfortably in sync with his times, the Karmapa acknowledges the necessity of the green movement and the need for harmony with nature. In 2008, he also made a much-publicised visit — his first — to the US. An answer to the Tibetan problem might still be a distant one,
but what its character should be when it eventually
arrives is one all too familiar to him; a freedom that is not merely political, but one that is equally “spiritual and cultural” in its essence.
— tikirajwi@expressbuzz.com
Link to an enlightening past
The Karmapa is the third-ranking Tibetan spiritual leader after the Dalai Lama and the Panchen Lama. Since 1110 CE, there have been 17 Karmapas, or in strictly Buddhist terminology, there have been 17 incarnations of the “embodiment of all the activities of the Buddhas” — one interpretation of the title Karmapa.
Associated with the Kagyu school of Tibetan Buddhism, the Karmapas have down the ages preserved and spread Buddhist teachings. “The Kagyu School,” says its website, “traces its origins back to Buddha Shakyamuni. The Kagyu lineage practices the quintessential points of both sutra and tantra teachings, with special focus on the tantric teachings of the Vajrayana and Mahamudra teachings,” says the website of the Kagyu Office.
A unique attribute of the Karmapa is the Black Crown, which symbolises the direct lineage of the Karmapas. Buddha Shakyamuni and the great tantric master Guru Padmasambhava are said to have predicted the arrival of a leader who would go by the name Karmapa. The Tsurphu Monastery in Tibet has traditionally been the seat of the Karmapas. Since his escape from Tibet, Ogyen Trinley Dorje has been living in Dharamsala.
