Author Topic: Can You Choose Your Reincarnated Successor?  (Read 5838 times)

DSFriend

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Can You Choose Your Reincarnated Successor?
« on: March 08, 2011, 11:10:45 AM »
By MICHAEL POWELL
Published: January 31, 2009

Source : http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/01/weekinreview/01powell.html

The search for the present Dalai Lama commenced in earnest in 1935 when the embalmed head of his deceased predecessor is said to have wheeled around and pointed toward northeastern Tibet.

Then, the story goes, a giant, star-shaped fungus grew overnight on the east side of the tomb. An auspicious cloud bank formed and a regent saw a vision of letters floating in a mystical lake, one of which — Ah — he took to refer to the northeast province of Amdo.

High lamas set off at a gallop and found a 2-year-old boy in a distant village. This child, they determined after a series of tests, was the reincarnation of the Dalai Lama.

There is little linear about lama succession in Tibet. And now, as the 14th Dalai Lama journeys into his 74th year, the question of how to pick his successor has come to preoccupy both him and his followers, as Tibet stands at an ever more precarious political pass.

Late last year, the Chinese government again rejected the Dalai Lama’s proposal for a rapprochement that would yield greater autonomy for Tibet. In recent days, Chinese troops have raided thousands of homes and detained at least 81 activists ahead of the 50th anniversary in March of the failed uprising that forced the Dalai Lama into exile in India. China seems inclined to tighten its grip and wait out the aging leader, insisting, a bit improbably for a government that is officially atheist, that it has the legal right to designate the Dalai Lama’s next reincarnation.

When Tibetan representatives met last autumn at their Parliament in Dharamsala, in the Indian Himalayas, their worries about the future echoed down the corridors. A few argued for a militant line, insisting on independence. A majority heeded the Dalai Lama’s counsel to find a pacifist middle way. But the unanswered question remains: How much longer will Tibetans be able to rely on their charismatic and learned spiritual leader, whose persona is so entwined with the destiny of Tibet?

The Dalai Lama has openly speculated about his next life, his reincarnation, musing that he might upend historical and cultural practice and choose his reincarnation before his death, the better to safeguard his exiled people.

But doubts creep in.

Can even so highly evolved a Buddhist as the Dalai Lama select his reincarnation? Will upending the old way of searching for the Dalai Lama’s incarnation, in which priests search for omens, portents and meteorological signs, undermine the legitimacy of his successor?


Since he fled Chinese rule by foot and horseback over the Himalayas in 1959, the Dalai Lama has traveled restlessly and spoken passionately about Tibet. The fruits of his labors are many: The world is spotted with Tibetan centers, and prayer flags flap from Delhi to London to Zurich to Todt Hill in Staten Island. Tibetan culture is celebrated in Hollywood and in popular art. (Exiles number about 130,000; about six million Tibetans live in Tibet and China).

But a darker vision of Tibet’s future is easily divined. This Dalai Lama dies and his successor is young and inexperienced and holds no sway in the chambers of the powerful. Slowly, ineluctably, the Tibetans become just another of the globe’s landless peoples lost in the shadow of a rising superpower.

“Definitely when someone as charismatic and popular as the Dalai Lama passes away, the Tibetans will suffer from less outside attention,” says Tenzin Tethong, a fellow in the Tibetan Studies Initiative at Stanford University. “We will lose a strong unifying symbol.”

The Dalai Lama, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, is no theocratic traditionalist. Should his people ever reclaim Tibet, he says an elected parliament and prime minister should rule; the Dalai Lama would occupy a religious station.

“He is thinking outside the box about Dalai Lama rule,” said Robert Thurman, a professor of Indo-Tibetan Buddhist studies at Columbia University and author of “Why the Dalai Lama Matters.” “He’s trying to get it through the Chinese heads that he’s helpful to them. Their waiting for him to die is completely misplaced.”

Tibetan Buddhists believe in reincarnation, although not in the sense of an irreducible self passing from body to body. They describe a dying candle lighting a new one; one’s essence passes on.

Typically, when the Dalai Lama dies, the royal court appoints a regent who rules until the next reincarnation comes of age. Over the centuries some regents grew fond of their power and some Dalai Lamas expired prematurely, not to mention suspiciously. The sense of the regency as a time of peril persists.

It is within this context that the Dalai Lama speculates about how to pull off his next reincarnation. Perhaps the four sects that constitute Tibetan Buddhism might form a Tibetan version of the Roman Catholic College of Cardinals and pick a successor. Perhaps he will return as a girl, or as a non-Tibetan.

Or perhaps he will pick his future self.

Professor Thurman offers his own speculation. The Dalai Lama, he says, might declare that a younger lama is the reincarnation of his own long-dead regent. Then the Dalai Lama could die and reincarnate as a new baby, which would be identified after the usual study of portents and signs. “Maybe the one he names as the reincarnation of the regent would transfer the Dalai Lama title back to him when his next reincarnation comes of age,” Mr. Thurman said.

Who could gainsay that?

Politics might pose a challenge as great as metaphysics. The Chinese insist that their army freed Tibetans from theocratic slavery and that Tibet is inseparable from China. They are not shy about enforcing their writ. In 1995, the Chinese government rejected the Dalai Lama’s choice of a 6-year-old boy as the reincarnation of the Panchen Lama, a spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism’s dominant sect, and then appointed its own. The child chosen by the Dalai Lama vanished into Chinese custody.

“The thinking is a bit odd,” Mr. Thurman said, “as the Chinese Communists don’t believe in former or future lives and it is illegal to propagate religion in China.”

Still, China’s power grows as the Dalai Lama ages. Han Chinese now crowd out ethnic Tibetans in Lhasa, Tibet’s capital, and exiles are uneasy, some taken again to searching for portents of what’s to come. To find themselves without a transcendent leader at this time is, as D. H. Lawrence once wrote of the Brazilian Indians, to risk being consigned “to the dust where we bury the silent races.”

Big Uncle

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Re: Can You Choose Your Reincarnated Successor?
« Reply #1 on: March 09, 2011, 01:02:36 AM »
I think the Dalai Lama has a lot on his plate and at his age, he is already planning or rather planned out his own passing. As a Buddhist practitioner, he knows the impermanence of his body and of his government so I think he is planning something to ease the transition over. Perhaps, he already knows that the end for his government is at hand. He is musing about appointing his reincarnations is nothing new or unusual as his previous incarnations had done the same.

I don't think he is telling the full story or he is telling of possibilities for a specific reason... So the Chinese will take hint and disregard his choice and quickly appoint their own instead. I believe that is what the Dalai Lama did with the Panchen Lama's incarnation. He is merely thinking ahead and of course he plans to have an emanation or his direct incarnation be picked by the Chinese. Imagine a Chinese picked Dalai Lama and he of course practices Dorje Shugden. With that goes the myth that Dorje Shugden practice shortens the Dalai Lama's lifespan.

DSFriend

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Re: Can You Choose Your Reincarnated Successor?
« Reply #2 on: March 09, 2011, 03:47:39 PM »
I think the Dalai Lama has a lot on his plate and at his age, he is already planning or rather planned out his own passing. As a Buddhist practitioner, he knows the impermanence of his body and of his government so I think he is planning something to ease the transition over. Perhaps, he already knows that the end for his government is at hand. He is musing about appointing his reincarnations is nothing new or unusual as his previous incarnations had done the same.


Good point Big Uncle.

From what I understand, the 13th Dalai Lama passed on at a young age...knowing what was coming for Tibet in the 1950s, and that he will need a much stronger and young body to lead his people. I am not surprised that he is working out his plans now which includes his next incarnation.

jessicajameson

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Re: Can You Choose Your Reincarnated Successor?
« Reply #3 on: March 14, 2011, 08:12:40 PM »
The search for the present Dalai Lama commenced in earnest in 1935 when the embalmed head of his deceased predecessor is said to have wheeled around and pointed toward northeastern Tibet.

Then, the story goes, a giant, star-shaped fungus grew overnight on the east side of the tomb. An auspicious cloud bank formed and a regent saw a vision of letters floating in a mystical lake, one of which — Ah — he took to refer to the northeast province of Amdo.

High lamas set off at a gallop and found a 2-year-old boy in a distant village. This child, they determined after a series of tests, was the reincarnation of the Dalai Lama.


Now the method to choose the reincarnation of His Holiness the Dalai Lama is.... the Chinese government.

We clearly don't need auspicious signs or tests - just a signed piece of paper by the Chinese government.

Yes, why don't we just leave it to a few Chinese officials. That seems... credible.

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What remains as one of the most mystical and beautiful parts of Buddhism... the process of choosing reincarnated high lamas is tainted to with stench of politics. How sad.

Big Uncle

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Re: Can You Choose Your Reincarnated Successor?
« Reply #4 on: March 17, 2011, 04:08:27 PM »
The search for the present Dalai Lama commenced in earnest in 1935 when the embalmed head of his deceased predecessor is said to have wheeled around and pointed toward northeastern Tibet.

Then, the story goes, a giant, star-shaped fungus grew overnight on the east side of the tomb. An auspicious cloud bank formed and a regent saw a vision of letters floating in a mystical lake, one of which — Ah — he took to refer to the northeast province of Amdo.

High lamas set off at a gallop and found a 2-year-old boy in a distant village. This child, they determined after a series of tests, was the reincarnation of the Dalai Lama.


Now the method to choose the reincarnation of His Holiness the Dalai Lama is.... the Chinese government.

We clearly don't need auspicious signs or tests - just a signed piece of paper by the Chinese government.

Yes, why don't we just leave it to a few Chinese officials. That seems... credible.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

What remains as one of the most mystical and beautiful parts of Buddhism... the process of choosing reincarnated high lamas is tainted to with stench of politics. How sad.


I recently seen a picture book of the Chinese Panchen Lama and in it, Kyabje Gangchen Rinpoche is holding a bunch of incense to usher him into a temple (I wish I could find the picture online!). That means that Kyabje Gangchen Rinpoche approves and recognizes the Chinese Panchen Lama. That leads me to think that the Chinese government may think they are picking a crony but they are actually picking an emanation or even the direct incarnation. After all, I think they just told the monastic officials of the temples to pick a "good subservient candidate". Never underestimate the clairvoyance of a high Tulku.
 

DSFriend

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Re: Can You Choose Your Reincarnated Successor?
« Reply #5 on: March 17, 2011, 07:46:23 PM »

I recently seen a picture book of the Chinese Panchen Lama and in it, Kyabje Gangchen Rinpoche is holding a bunch of incense to usher him into a temple (I wish I could find the picture online!). That means that Kyabje Gangchen Rinpoche approves and recognizes the Chinese Panchen Lama. That leads me to think that the Chinese government may think they are picking a crony but they are actually picking an emanation or even the direct incarnation. After all, I think they just told the monastic officials of the temples to pick a "good subservient candidate". Never underestimate the clairvoyance of a high Tulku.
 

Doesn't this show the magnificent workings between the Dharma Protectors and the incarnated beings, who return out of bodhichitta?!  One of the activities of the Dharma Protector in the form of Wangtze is to help control beings minds to bring about beneficial results. I see this as the perfect example of the workings of Dharma Protectors in the case of the Panchen Lama, chosen by the Chinese.