No place on world, almost no place, is free from development, from shopping centers, from highways, from convenience stores, from holiday resorts...
I check my whereabouts, let;s all check our whereabouts... Before I can place any judgment on shopping centers and many other infrastructures, let me think: how many times do I go to a shopping center every week, to a super-market, how many times do I take a highway? Pretty much everyday!
Now, many, a great many people do not have access to such infrastructures, and the reason they don;t go to a shopping center is because they CANNOT, they are working fields somewhere, they are too poor, and the 99% of them only dream of one thing: being able to spend in a shopping center, take a plane, check-in into a resort, afford a fancy restaurant...
So I say: if we can't fight this, let's not be over-romantic about it and let's find the best way to still bring Dharma to shopaholics and tourists. More people visit shopping centers these days than a temple or a church, i would guess at least 100,000 times MORE! At least!
When they go to a holy site "shopping center", can this be a bridge for this many people to at least get a seed of a karmic connection with the reality of enlightenment that a Buddha statue can give, that the sight of a monk can give?
Would I prefer to walk a rocky path in a pine tree forest and find an old temple among the trees in a valley? Yes I would prefer, but a 100,000 times more people would prefer to stroll in an air-conditioned shopping center.... So if I care about these people, if I think just for one moment that bringing Dharma to others is the best thing to do, where do I find these people if not in a shopping center, how do I attract these people if not with a shopping center?
I may sound pessimistic? I prefer to think that I am pragmatic.
For those (and it is the minority) that prefers a more romantic and preserved environment to visit holy places, there is still the consciously preserved Bhutan.
For the 99% f the chinese population, there are shopping centers.
Let's hope that in Tibet, they may find Dharma in these shopping centers that are built along sacred temples and monasteries. I really hope they do.