British envoy says regrets offence over cleric blog

(Reuters) – Britain’s ambassador to Lebanon said she regretted any offence caused by her blog praising Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah, an early spiritual mentor of Hezbollah who died on Sunday.

Ambassador Frances Guy was criticized by Israel for an article on her Foreign Office blog titled “The passing of decent men,” in which she said she was saddened by the Shi’ite cleric’s death and that the world “needs more men like him willing to reach out across faiths.”

The Foreign Office said on Friday the article had been removed from her website “after mature consideration.”

Fadlallah was revered by many Shi’ite Muslims across the Middle East and Central Asia, and was known in his later years for his moderate social views and for trying to minimize Muslim sectarian differences.

He was designated a terrorist by the United States and Israel because of his links to militant Shi’ite group Hezbollah and his support for suicide attacks against the Jewish state.

In a new entry, dated July 9, Guy said her earlier posting had been an attempt to “acknowledge the spiritual significance to many of Sheikh Fadlallah and the views that he held in the latter part of his life.”

Guy said she had “no truck with terrorism wherever it is committed in whoever’s name,” and that it was possible for Hezbollah “to reject violence and play a constructive, democratic and peaceful role in Lebanese politics.”

The criticism of her blog followed the firing of a senior CNN editor for Middle East news who published a Twitter message expressing her respect for Fadlallah.

Hundreds of thousands of mourners attended Fadlallah’s funeral in Beirut. Iraq’s U.S.-backed Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, and his two predecessors, all flew to Lebanon to pay condolences to the cleric who was born and studied in Iraq and was one of the first backers of Maliki’s Dawa Party.

Fadlallah was also seen as the spiritual leader and mentor of Hezbollah when it was formed after Israel invaded Lebanon in 1982, though he later distanced himself from its ties with Iran.

The Iranian-backed Hezbollah was blamed for abduction of Westerners in the 1980s and suicide attacks on U.S. and French targets in Lebanon.

(Reporting by Dominic Evans; Editing by Jon Hemming)

I forgive the attacker, says Sri Sri Ravishankar

A day after an attempt was made on his life by an unidentified gunman, spiritual guru Sri Sri Ravishankar on Monday said he was happy with the existing security and has forgiven the attacker, whom the police are yet to identify.

Speaking to the press at his ashram this morning, Ravishankar said, “I heard a loud noise. But I was in my usual calm self. My driver had a premonition that there could be some kind of attack on me”.

The spiritual leader on Sunday escaped a bid on his life when an unidentified gunman shot at his car when he was returning after delivering a discourse.

Ravishankar said, “I do not have enemies. However, whoever has done this, I forgive him. I give him amnesty. I invite him to join our satsang course. I will teach him meditation and Sudarshan Kriya”.

The 54-year-old Art of Living founder said he was happy with the existing security cover, which police stepped up after last evening’s incident.

The shell fired by the fire arm has been recovered, police said.

Too premature to comment on attack on Sri Sri: Police

Police have said it is too early to comment on the attack on Art of Living founder Sri Sri Ravishankar and stated they are looking into all aspects of the incident.

“It is too premature to comment right away,” IGP Central Range, Kamal Panth told reporters here.

He said police have begun investigations. A police team and forensic experts are conducting examinations and their reports have to be awaited before arriving at any conclusion, he said.

Spiritual leader Sri Sri Ravishankar yesterday escaped bid on his life when an unidentified gunman shot at his car when he was returning after delivering a discourse, an ashram official said.

“We are looking into all aspects,” Panth said and added that the ashram members had provided information on the incident.

He said security measures have been beefed up. “Yes we have strengthened security”.

Deputy Superintendent of Police (Ramanagaram district) Deveraj said an unidentified person fired a round at the convoy when Sri Sri Ravishankar was leaving after satsang in his ashram last evening. The injured devotee was discharged after first aid at a local hospital, he said.

Deveraj said the whole area has been cordoned off. “We have closed all entry points and have begun combing operation inside the premises. The identity of the person is yet to be ascertained,” he said.

Meanwhile, Karnataka Home Minister V S Acharya confirmed Sri Sri Ravishankar was safe and a thorough investigation would be carried out.

One of his devotees sustained a minor injury on the thigh with the bullet brushing past.

The incident took place around 6.15 PM when Ravishankar was returning to his ‘Kutir’ by car after addressing a gathering at the ‘Satsang’

“I am absolutely safe,” 54-year-old Sri Sri Ravishankar said shortly after the incident.

Sri Sri Ravishankar, who has a wide following all over the country and abroad, where he has set up centres of his organisation, said he had gone ahead with his discourse even after the incident. He said he would convene a press meet today in this regard.

The spiritual guru told a TV channel that he had not received any threat earlier.

Sri Sri Ravishankar has popularised ‘Sudarshan Kriya’, a powerful breathing technique in India and overseas.

Ashram spokesperson Charu said the incident came to light only after the spiritual leader shared it with his followers during a satsang scheduled around 7 PM.

“We were not aware of it (shooting) till he shared it with us,” she said.

There was a huge crowd when the incident occurred and this could possibly be the reason why it was not immediately noticed and the unidentified man remained untraced, she said.

Sri Sri Ravishankar escapes bid on life

Spiritual leader Sri Sri Ravishankar on Sunday escaped bid on his life when an unidentified gunman shot at his car when he was returning after delivering a discourse, an ashram official said.

“I am absolutely safe,” the 54-year-old founder of the Art of Living said shortly after the incident.

One of his devotees sustained a minor injury on the thigh with the bullet brushing past, ashram spokesperson Charu said.

The incident took place around 6.15 PM when Ravishankar was returning to his ‘Kutir’ by car after addressing a gathering at the ‘Satsang’, she said.

“We usually have a satsang from four PM every Sunday till around six where even people from neighbouring villages join us. Sri Sri had addressed those gathered at the Satsang and completed his discourse and was returning to his ‘kutir’ by car when the incident occurred,” she said.

Sri Sri Ravishankar, who has a wide following all over the country and abroad, where he has set up centres of his organisation, said he had gone ahead with his discourse even after the incident.

Karnataka Home Minister V S Acharya said central range IG Kamal Panth has been sent to the ashram to inquire about the incident. “There is no problem… everything is peaceful there,” he said.

The spiritual guru told a TV channel that he had not received any threat earlier.

Sri Sri Ravishankar has popularised ‘Sudarshan Kriya’, a powerful breathing technique in India and overseas. Meanwhile, Sri Sri Ravishankar urged his followers not to panic or be perturbed by the shooting incident.

In his message to the followers, he said, “Ahimsa Pratishthayaam Tat Sanidhav Vaira Taygah” (For one who is established in non-violence, all kinds of hostility ceases”, spokesperson of the ashram Aswin Nandkumar said.

“The guru has asked his followers not to panic or worry”, he said.

On beefing security measures at the ashram, another spokesperson said the spiritual guru generally does not prefer tight security and prefers to mingle and interact with his followers. But after this incident, the issue might have to be looked into, he said.

Tibetan women launch art campaign to mark Panchen Lama”s birthday

Dharamsala, Apr 26 (ANI): The Tibetan Women”s Association launched an art campaign in Dharamsala to mark the birthday of the 11th Panchen Lama.

The 11th Panchen Lama is the second highest-ranking figure in Tibetan Buddhism.

Sunday marked the 21st birthday of Gedhun Choekyi Nyima, named by Tibet”s spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, as the 11th Panchen Lama.

Prayers were held at several places in India including the northern hill station of Dharamsala, home to the Dalai Lama, on Sunday.

More than 20 acclaimed Tibetan artists created a portrait of the imaginary face of the 21-year-old Panchen Lama, during the Panchen Lama Artwork Campaign.

One of the portraits made by the artists would be chosen as an emblem for the campaigns aimed at pressing for the release of Panchen Lama.

“All of us are really saddened by the fact that despite 15 years of his imprisonment and despite 15 years of our consistent call for his release, we have not heard a word about him since his abduction in 1995,” said Dhardon Sharling, spokesperson of Tibetan Women”s Association

“Today, we are all remembering the Panchen Lama, who is the most important spiritual leader for Tibetan Buddhism and for the Tibetan people at large,” he added.

Also, as a part of the awareness campaign, young monks and nuns from the monastic institutes in and around Dharamsala wrote essays expressing their thoughts on the Panchen Lama.

“Today is the 21st birthday of the Panchen Lama. We have come here to share our feelings. We are just writing some poems and whatever we feel about him,” said Tenzin Cheodon, a Tibetan Buddhist nun.

After the 10th Panchen Lama died in 1989, Beijing and the Dalai Lama made rival choices for his successor, and the Dalai Lama”s choice, then aged six, suddenly disappeared from public view. (ANI)

Nominees for Tibetan Parliament in-exile announced at Dharamsala

Dharamsala (Himachal Pradesh), Mar 29 (ANI): The National Democratic Party of Tibet (NDPT), the only political party of Tibetan exiles, on Monday declared three nominees for the post of Kalon Tripa (Tibetan Prime Minister in-exile) and 45 nominees for the Members of Parliament for the 2011 general elections.

The decision was taken at the two-day general body meeting attended by NDPT functionaries at Dharamsala.

“We decided 15 candidates for the Members of the Parliament from each province and three candidates for the Kalon Tripa,” said NDPT President Chime Youngdung.

“The main agenda of the party is to achieve complete independence of Tibet in contrast to the middle way approach proposed by spiritual leader of Tibetans, the Dalai Lama, added Youngdung.

“Actually we are not against the middle way approach, but our stand is complete independence. So these are the two different things. The middle way approach is right now the government”s stand but this is a sort of an NGO,” he said, adding that this is initiated by the Tibetan Youth Congress, and our members.

The three nominees for the PM”s post are Lobsang Sangey, a law researcher at United State”s Harvard University, Tethong Tenzin Namgyal, a former minister in the Tibetan government in-exile and Tashi Wangde, a former Prime Minister, who is currently the Tibetan ambassador to France.

The elections for the Kalon Tripa will be held in September 2011.

The NDPT has a total of 45 nominees for Members of Parliament, fifteen each from the provinces of Dotoe, Domey and U-tsang in Tibet.

Samdhong Rinpoche, elected in 2001, is the current Tibetan PM-in-exile.

Dharamsala is the seat of the Tibetan government in-exile and also the base of their spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, ever since he fled from Lhasa in 1959, after a failed uprising against Chinese rule. (ANI)

Tibetan experts meet to decide strategy on saving Tibet flora

Dharamsala (Himachal Pradesh), Mar 27 (ANI): Representatives of the International Tibet Support Network (ITSN), a consortium of more than 150 Tibet groups have converged at Dharamsala to discuss and evolve further strategy on Tibet in a non-violent manner.

Fifty-two delegates from 11 different countries are participating in the three-day conference that kicked off on Friday.
“ITSN is running an Asia regional meeting and what we do is to gather all of the Tibet support groups who work within Asia, like from India, Bangladesh, South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong,” said Mandie Mcknown, an ITSN activist from England.

“We brought every one together and the idea of the three day meeting is to strategise and plan on how we can coordinate and built the Tibet movement,” Mcknown added.

ITSN was founded in 2000 in an attempt to strengthen individual member organisations campaigning for human rights and self-determination in Tibet.

“The main outcomes we looking for to all groups we have to built their capacity within themselves so they can understand the process of building strategy, how important strategy is and being able to bring themselves together on similar ways of involving each other together to campaign for the better sort of cause for Tibet,” said Mandie Mcknown.

Dharamsala is the seat of the Tibetan government in-exile and also the base of their spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama ever since he fled from Lhasa in his homeland in 1959 after a failed uprising against Chinese rule. (ANI)

Sex video of Swami Nityananda with another Tamil film actress emerges

Kuala Lumpur, Mar 25 (ANI): A new sex video involving spiritual leader Swami Nityananda and another Tamil film actress, Yuvarani, has reportedly surfaced on the Internet.

According to the Tamil Nesan, the spiritual leader is currently missing after his sleazy acts with South Indian actress Ranjitha were televised by a private TV channel about two weeks ago, reports Star Online.

TV channels cannot broadcast the current video owing to a Karnataka High Court order prohibiting the airing of any sleazy video of the swami.

Yuvarani has filed a petition with the Chennai police commissioner requesting that the video be removed from the Internet.

She has denied having any sexual relationship with the swami but admitted to having met him with her two children. (ANI)

Sri Sri Ravi Shankar launches ‘Clean Yamuna’ campaign

New Delhi, March 16 (IANS) Spiritual leader Sri Sri Ravi Shankar announced here Tuesday a seven-month long campaign to clean the Yamuna river and have a clean and green Delhi before the Commonwealth Games.

The campaign — ‘My Yamuna, My Dilli’ – was launched by the spiritual guru here at Purana Qila Tuesday evening.

‘The responsibility for cleaning up the Yamuna lies with us – the people she nurtures,’ Sri Sri Ravi Shankar said.

‘This movement is a call to remind us what this river has given to generations before us, and to allow her to nourish generations after us. It is a platform for our individual voices that will become a collective echo and an unstoppable force,’ the founder of the Art of Living movement told reporters at the launch of the campaign here.

‘I know thousands of crores have been spent over the years but the condition of the Yamuna has not improved…Let us go and clean the banks of the Yamuna from tomorrow (Wednesday),’ he added.

A recent report by the Central Pollution Control Board’s (CPCB) revealed that the faecal content in the water of the Yamuna is so high that the river resembles a drain.

According to the CPCB’s 10-month-long monitoring of the Yamuna river at Nizamuddin, the water is unfit not just for drinking but even for bathing or washing.

According to stipulated standards, water can be made potable with treatment if faecal coliform is less than 500 per 100 ml. It is fit for bathing if the number is less than 5,000 per 100ml. However, the lowest level of faecal coliform in the Yamuna, measured May 4, 2009, was 4.4 lakh per 100ml — almost 100 times above the level considered safe for bathing.

Originating in the lower Himalayas, the Yamuna is 1,376 km long. The 22-km-long stretch that passes through Delhi is one of the most polluted.

Hundreds of NGOs, organisations and corporates are part of the initiative.

Tibetan PM in exile refutes Chinese delegate”s statement on the Dalai Lama

Dharamsala (Himachal Pradesh), Mar 15 (ANI): Tibetan Prime Minister in exile Samdhong Rinpoche has dismissed all reports that confirm Chinese delegates at their annual parliamentary meeting charging spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, who earlier said that unrest in Tibet was caused by resentment over Chinese rule.

Rinpoche”s reaction came in the wake of the statement made by the Chinese delegates on Sunday rejecting as groundless and rumoured, the assertion of the Dalai Lama that the reason for unrest in Tibet was caused by resentment over Chinese rule.

The delegates also claimed that China is very stable and united and that relations between Tibetans and the Han majority are harmonious and the Chinese people are furious with the Dalai Lama.

Sunday marked the two year anniversary of the day protests led by Buddhist monks gave way to torrid violence, with rioters torching shops and turning on residents, especially Han Chinese, who many Tibetans see as intruders threatening their culture.

At least 19 people died in the 2008 unrest, which sparked waves of protests across Tibetan areas.

Pro-Tibet groups overseas say more than 200 people were killed in a subsequent crackdown.

Rinpoche said that what Tibetans are saying is the truth, which the whole world knows and now this is for the world community to see who is speaking the truth.

“I have nothing to say. We have never noticed what they are saying. What we are saying is the truth, which the whole world knows. This is now for the world community who are true and who are false,” said Rinpoche.

China has defended its iron-fisted rule in Tibet, saying not only did it free a million Tibetan serfs but it also poured billions of dollars into the Himalayan region for development.

It blames the region”s problems and the 2008 unrest on exiled spiritual leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner the Dalai Lama, a man reviled by Beijing as a ”separatist” and instigator of anti-Chinese violence. (ANI)

China should allow international agencies to see Panchen Lama: Tibetan parliament

Dharamsala, Mar 8 (ANI): The Speaker of the Tibetan parliament-in-exile, Pempa Tsering, has said that China should allow international agencies to see the Panchen Lama, the successor of their spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama.

Tsering was reacting to a statement made by the new Chinese-appointed governor of Tibet, Padma Choling, an ethnic Tibetan appointed in January on Sunday that the Panchen Lama is safe and is living in Tibet.

“If they (Chinese) are really serious about what they are saying, I think they should allow international agencies, neutral agencies to see how he (Panchen Lama) is staying, what kind of studies he is getting. And, we are for sure that he is not in Tibet, that”s for sure, must be somewhere in China, if he is alive, that we don”t know. So, there”s no evidence and as long (as) there is no evidence we don”t see anything new in what they have stated so far,” Tsering said.

The Dalai Lama”s selection of the Panchen Lama, a six-year-old boy, led to Beijing swiftly picking him up and taking him away.

Human rights groups dubbed the child as “the world”s youngest political prisoner”.
Tsering further said that if such statements about the Panchen Lama are made by China, then they should be supported with evidence.

“We have always been demanding that if they are making such statements it should come up with evidence, it should come with proof, at least have some photographs to say that this is Panchen Lama and he is studying and so. Even if they can”t divulge where he is studying, at least they can say that he is safe and there should be some photograph or evidence or if possible there should be neutral people to go and meet him and his family,” he said.

China has defended its iron-fisted rule in Tibet, saying not only did it free a million Tibetan serfs but it also poured billions of dollars into the Himalayan region for development. (ANI)

The World’s Most Powerful People

Michael Noer and Nicole Perlroth, Forbes.com

“I love power. But it is as an artist that I love it. I love it as a musician loves his violin, to draw out its sounds and chords and harmonies.” –Napoleon Bonaparte

Power has been called many things. The ultimate aphrodisiac. An absolute corrupter. A mistress. A violin. But its true nature remains elusive. After all, a head of state wields a very different sort of power than a religious figure. Can one really compare the influence of a journalist to that of a terrorist? And is power unexercised power at all?

In compiling our first ranking of the World’s Most Powerful People we wrestled with these questions–and many more–before deciding to define power in four dimensions. First, we asked, does the person have influence over lots of other people? Pope Benedict XVI, ranked 11th on our list, is the spiritual leader of more than a billion souls, or about one-sixth of the world’s population, while Wal-Mart CEO Mike Duke (No. 8) is the largest private-sector employer in the United States.

Then we assessed the financial resources controlled by these individuals. Are they relatively large compared with their peers? For heads of state we used GDP, while for CEOs, we looked at a composite ranking of market capitalization, profits, assets and revenues as reflected on our annual ranking of the World’s 2000 Largest Companies. In certain instances, like New York Times Executive Editor Bill Keller (No. 51), we judged the resources at his disposal compared with others in the industry. For billionaires, like Bill Gates (No. 10), net worth was also a factor.

Next we determined if they are powerful in multiple spheres. There are only 67 slots on our list–one for every 100 million people on the planet–so being powerful in just one area is not enough to guarantee a spot. Our picks project their influence in myriad ways. Take Italy’s colorful prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi (No. 12) who is a politician, a media monopolist and owner of soccer powerhouse A.C. Milan, or Oprah Winfrey (No. 45) who can manufacture a best-seller and an American President.

Lastly, we insisted that our choices actively use their power. Ingvar Kamprad, the 83-year-old entrepreneur behind Ikea and the richest man in Europe, was an early candidate for this list, but was excluded because he doesn’t exercise his power. On the other hand, Russian autocrat Vladimir Putin (No. 3) scored points because he likes to throw his weight around by jailing oligarchs, invading neighboring countries and periodically cutting off Western Europe’s supply of natural gas.

To calculate the final rankings, five Forbes senior editors ranked all of our candidates in each of these four dimensions of power. Those individual rankings were averaged into a composite score, which determined who placed above (or below) whom.

U.S. President Barack Obama emerged, unanimously, as the world’s most powerful person, and by a wide margin. But there were a number of surprises. Former President George W. Bush didn’t come close to making the final cut, while his predecessor in the Oval Office, Bill Clinton, ranks 31st, ahead of a number of sitting heads of government. Apple’s Steve Jobs easily made the list, while Arnold Schwarzenegger, the movie star governor of California (alone, the world’s fifth largest economy) did not.

This ranking is intended to be the beginning of a conversation, not the final word. Is the Dalai Lama (No. 39) really more powerful than the president of France (No. 56)? Do despicable criminals like billionaire Mexican drug lord Joaquín Guzmán (No. 41) belong on this list at all? Who did we overlook? What did we get wrong? Join the conversation by commenting now.

Michael Noer and Nicole Perlroth, Forbes.com

Tibetans celebrate Dalai Lama’s 74th birthday in Dharamsala

Dharamsala, July 6 (ANI): Tibetans living in exile in Dharamsala celebrated the 74th birthday of Buddhist spiritual leader Dalai Lama today.

Born in 1935 in Tibet, Lhamo Thondup was recognized as the reincarnation of 13th Dalai Lama, at the age of 2.

Scores of Tibetans gathered at main Buddhist temple, Tsugalgkhang and prayed for the long life and health of their leader.

“He (Dalai Lama) himself is in Delhi to attend another meeting where former President of India Mr. Kalam is the chief guest. Here, it is the official’s celebration of the Tibetan government in exile, and six parliamentarians from Australia are also here as chief guest,” said Lobsang Wangyal, a Tibetan youth.

The Central Tibetan Administration organized the function.

Hoping to celebrate Dalai Lama’s birthday in Lhasa one day, thousands of Buddhist monks, nuns and exiled government officials took part in the celebrations.

“All our effort is based on this firm conviction and hope that we will return to Tibet in circumstances which satisfy the majority of Tibetan people and will celebrate both our Losar and his Holiness’ next birthday in Lhasa,” said Thubten Samphel, Spokesperson Of The Government-In-Exile.

The Dalai Lama was brought to Lhasa in October 1939, and formally installed the head of the state of Tibet on February 22, 1940.

About 134,000 Tibetans live in exile, the vast majority in India or Nepal, and of them less than half were born in their homeland. (ANI)

Tibetans celebrate Karmapa Lama’s 24th birthday in Dharamshala

Dharamshala, June 26 (ANI): Tibetans living in exile in Dharamshala celebrated the 24th birthday of Ogyen Trinley Dorje, the 17th Karmapa on Friday.

Born on June 26, 1985 in Kham region of eastern Tibet, Ogyen Trinley Dorje, is heir to the Tibetan’s spiritual leader the Dalai Lama.

He is considered as the third most important leader after the Dalai Lama, and his authority is recognised by both Beijing and the Dalai Lama.

Buddhist monks and nuns assembled at the Gyuto monastery in Dharamsala to pray for the well-being and long life of the Karmapa.

However, this year, no singing and dancing programmes were organised because of the demise of Penor Rinpoche, head of the Nyingma sect and also due to the mass killings of Tibetans in Tibet last year.

“It is because of the demise of the head of the Nyingma sect, Penor Rinpoche and so many Tibetans have lost their lives in Tibet, so they didn’t perform any sort of cultural events and they don’t have big ceremony. Just to mark the birthday celebration, we have this prayer and puja ceremony only,” said Tashi Wangchuk, a Tibetan youth.

Followers of Karmpa from far-flung places also came to take part in the celebration.

“I heard that the Karmapa’s birthday was around this time so I wanted to see what was involved in that event because I know very little about Buddhism, so while I’m here I’m trying to learn a little bit more about Buddhism and different celebrations that take place throughout the year,” said Michel, a tourist from the US.

The Karmapa Lama, who fled to India in January 2001, following religious suppression and human rights violation by the Chinese, is now settled in Dharamsala.

He is the head of the Karma Kagyu sect of Buddhism, which is headquartered at the Rumtek Monastery in India’s northeast Sikkim. (ANI)

Buddhists pilgrims arrive in Leh after month-long foot march

Sumdha (Leh), June 24 (ANI): Hundreds of Buddhist monks and nuns accompanied by other devotees have arrived in Sumdha village of Kashmir’s Leh region as part of their month-long pilgrimage on foot.

Initiated and headed by the 12th Gyalwang Drukpa Rinpoche, the pilgrimage walk commenced from Manali in Himachal Pradesh on May 23 and will culminate at Hemis Monastery in Ladakh on July 3, coinciding with the popular Hemis Festival.

Incidentally, the 12th Gyalwang Drukpa Rinpoche is the spiritual head of the Drukpa lineage. He is revered as the reincarnation of Drogon Tsangpa Gyare (founder of the Drukpa lineage).

Buddhist monks have undertaken the Padyatra (journey on foot) spanning 400km across the rugged Himalayan Mountains from Manali to Ladakh.

Covering a distance of nearly 400 kilometres, the group will cross five high Himalayan passes, the highest of which, Shikunla and Singgela, both are at an altitude of about 5,200 metres above sea level.

On its way, the group will visit holy sites of Chakrasamvara, Avalokiteshvara, Guru Padmasambhava and one of the sites of the great Drukpa master, Naropa.

Kyabje Khamtrul Rinpoche, a spiritual leader who also participated in the journey, said that the funds raised by the pilgrimage would help fund education in the Himalayan region.

“This Padyatra begin as a part of ‘live to love’. Each mile we are getting sponsors and these sponsors, I think the half we are giving to the Pema Khabu School, which is free for all children, half we are giving to children of Himalayas having kerosene burn problem. This way we feel very happy to do this pilgrimage,” noted Kyabje Khamtrul Rinpoche, a spiritual leader.

Meanwhile, there are hundreds of foreign nationals who are also participating in the procession. And these foreigners reckon themselves as lucky to be a part of this holy procession.

“For us, people from Europe, who come from totally different culture, it’s like really melting into a totally different culture,” said Philip Cronjaeger, a tourist from Germany.

Last year, the 12th Gyalwang Drukpa Rinpoche had organised a similar procession .

The journey is also aimed at helping the local population of Ladakh through humanitarian projects and initiatives in the area of education, medical help, preservation of heritage and environment.

The group will reach its destination at Hemis Monastery in Ladakh on July 3. (ANI)

Warsaw names Dalai Lama honorary citizen

Warsaw – Tibetan leader Dalai Lama was named an honorary citizen of Warsaw after an unanimous vote from local councilors on Thursday.

“As councilors in a city as historically experienced as Warsaw, we have the moral right and responsibility to show respect and honour a person who seeks freedom and sovereignty for his countryman and his country,” the officials said in a statement.

China accuses the Dalai Lama of wanting an independent Tibet, but the exiled leader says he wants autonomy for the region.

The spiritual leader was in Poland in December to attend celebrations marking the 25th anniversary of former Solidarity trade union leader Lech Walesa receiving the Nobel Peace Prize.

Polish President Lech Kaczynski had also met with the spiritual leader, and sparked backlash when China warned Warsaw about creating impediments to Chinese-Polish relations. (dpa)

Dalai Lama visits Frankfurt, 40,000 visitors expected

Frankfurt – The Dalai Lama is to spend four days in the German city of Frankfurt this summer, event organisers announced on Wednesday.

Up to 40,000 people are expected to come for the visit of Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader in late July, at what is being billed as the highlight of this year’s European trip.

The Dalai Lama, considered a personal friend of Hesse State Premier Roland Koch, has been invited by several Buddhist organizations to hold talks and discussions under the headline “Art of Life.”

On the first two days of the visit, which starts July 30, the Dalai Lama is expected to address followers of Buddhism, while podium discussions would take place on the final two days.

Discussion topics are to include human action in science and economics.

The Dalai Lama was scheduled to visit Germany last year, but the trip was postponed over Chinese intervention in Tibet.

The four-day event is expected to cost around 1 million euros (1.4 million dollars). It had been difficult to find sponsors as potential patrons got into “problems with China”, said Abbot Tich Thien Son, of Frankfurt’s Phat Hue Buddist monastery. (dpa)

Paris to award Dalai Lama honorary citizenship

Paris to award Dalai Lama honorary citizenship Paris – Paris will host the Dalai Lama on June 7 for a ceremony in which Mayor Bertrand Delanoe will confer on Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader honorary citizenship of the French capital, RTL radio reported Tuesday.

The Dalai Lama was named an honorary citizen of Paris on April 22, 2008, four months before the Beijing Olympics, a decision that enraged Chinese authorities.

A later meeting in Germany between French President Nicolas Sarkozy and the Dalai Lama created diplomatic tensions between Paris and Beijing that have only recently been resolved.

It is expected that because of pressure exerted on the Paris City Hall by Sarkozy’s office, the ceremony will be more discreet than originally planned. (dpa)

VHP satisfied with BJP’s election manifesto

New Delhi, May 1 (ANI): Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) chief has appreciated the inclusion of suggestions given by Dharma Raksha Manch in the election manifesto of the Bharatiya Janata Party.

“The election manifesto of the Bhartiya Janata Party not only mentions these 11 points but also defines the bases of development in the country keeping Indian values in mind. I think this is an issue to be taken care of. They have clearly mentioned in the 13th para of the manifesto that spirituality should be base of development,” Singhal said, addressing a news conference here.

The 11 points of Dharma Raksha Manch include construction of Lord Ram temple in Ayodhya, saving cows and rivers like Ganga that have religious significance, a common civil code and considering India as a spiritual leader and not a secular one among others.

Criticizing the Congress President Sonia Gandhi for denying existence of Ram Setu, he said the UPA Chairperson was trying to deny the Indian history.

“The government that is headed by Sonia Gandhi said that Ram was not a historical man, he has no existence. He can be a novel or a story. Ram was never there. And if Ram has no existence, he is not a historical man; in that case there was no war between Ram and Ravana, no Ram setu was constructed neither there is a Ram birth place”, said Ashok Singhal. (ANI)

Tibetan exiles stage candlelight vigil in Kolkata

Kolkata, Apr 27 (ANI): Tibetan exiles took out a candlelight vigil here last evening protesting against the alleged atrocities by Chinese authorities in their homeland.

The march was organised by the Students of Free Tibet in memory of the victims of Lhasa riots last year and in support of the missing 11th Panchen Lama, Gendhun Chockyi Nyima.

“The reason behind this candlelight vigil is that we are remembering all those people who lost their lives in Lhasa riots last year and yesterday was Gendhun Chockyi Nyima’s birthday. He has been kidnapped by the Chinese and till now we don’t know about his whereabouts. So, we are demanding his release and simultaneously we want our country to be free,” said Kheysang Choden Bhutia, spokesperson of the Students of Free Tibet.

On Saturday marked the 20th birthday of Gendhun Chockyi Nyima, named by Tibet’s spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, as the 11th Panchen Lama.

Gendhun Chockyi Nyima (11th Panchen Lama) was born in Lhari village inagchu region of Tibetan Autonomous Region (TAR).

After the 10th Panchen Lama died in 1989, Beijing and the Dalai Lama made rival choices for his successor, and the Dalai’s choice for the 11th Panchenama, Gendhun Chockyi Nyima, then aged six, suddenly disappeared from public view.

Tibetans around the world say Chinese authorities kidnapped him and human rights watchdogs have called him the world’s youngest political prisoner.

Denouncing the recognition of Panchen Lama in 1995 Chinese had already installed the other Panchan Lama Gyatsen Norbu. (ANI)