Compassionate visitor
Jerusalem Post, Feb 20, 2006
Tel Aviv, Israel -- The welcome presence in Israel of Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th 
Dalai Lama and leader of the Tibetan people, reminds Israelis that we are not, 
after all, at the center of the universe; that there are political struggles, 
philosophical approaches and spiritual roads that have nothing to do with Jews, 
Israel, or the clash between Islamist medievalism and Western modernity.

 
<< Tibetan leader Dalai Lama in a press conference at Jerusalem's Mishkenot 
Shaananim. Photo: Ariel Jerozolimski

Faced with a newly installed and Hamas-led Palestinian parliament a stone's 
throw from our capital and menacing taunts from a Teheran just over the 
ballistic horizon, we Israelis could, perhaps, be forgiven for focusing mostly 
on our own existential dilemma.

The Tibetan struggle is not for independence from China, but for cultural 
autonomy. A vast, mountainous territory almost six times Israel's size, Tibet 
lies at the crossroads of India, Nepal and China.

It was briefly independent in 1911 as a Buddhist theocracy. But when a Tibetan 
uprising inside China spread to Tibet itself in 1956, Beijing began to reassert 
control over the region. By 1959 China had crushed the Buddhist rebellion and 
occupied Tibet, forcing the young Dalai Lama and tens of thousands of his 
followers to flee to refuge in India, where they now reside. Today, thanks to 
Chinese policies, Tibetans are a minority in their own land.

Jews know something about preserving a unique civilization in exile, and about 
facing down an enemy against overwhelming odds. And Israelis feel a special 
affinity to the Tibetan cause; some are helping to establish The Tibet Museum 
in India.

The mere presence of the cleric here (it was his third visit) made the Chinese 
Embassy in Tel Aviv uncomfortable. Consequently, neither Acting Prime Minister 
Ehud Olmert nor President Moshe Katsav met with the Dalai Lama. This 
sensitivity - though arguably diplomatically prudent - is misplaced given the 
disregard Beijing has shown for Israel's concerns over Iran's quest for nuclear 
weapons; not to mention the support that we, as a democracy and a Jewish state, 
should be showing for the cause of human rights.

Charismatic and self-effacing - followers believe he is the manifestation, or 
"reincarnate," of the Buddha - the Dalai Lama won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989 
for anchoring his cause in non-violence. He argues, pragmatically, that in 
politics reason must triumph over emotion; that there is a distinction between 
an evil act and the one who carries it out; that today's enemy has the 
potential to be tomorrow's friend.

"How do you dialogue with a Hitler or a Stalin?" an Israeli reporter asked.

Replied the sage after a lengthy pause: "It is difficult. But then violent 
methods are even more disastrous."

Yesterday, speaking before a reverent audience at the Hebrew University of 
Jerusalem, the Dalai Lama instructed that compassion does not mean surrender; 
that the talmudic principle "What is hateful to you, do not to your fellow man" 
has parallels in all the great religions; and that at the end of the day, 
non-violence is the only way forward for humanity.

So beyond sympathizing with the decency of a man who abhors harm to his 
adversary, and the apparent justice of Tibet's cause, what can Israelis take 
away from this encounter?

More ancient than Buddhism, the Judaic tradition is remarkably pragmatic. It 
places virtually no stricture above life itself. It is the civilization that 
aspires to the fulfillment of Isaiah's vision that "Nation shall not lift up 
sword against nation; neither shall they learn war any more."

Yet alluring as the Dalai Lama's message is, his is not the Jewish way. Facing 
an enemy that invented the suicide bomber's belt, the response of unilateral 
pacifism would result in our annihilation. In place of an imperfect Israel, a 
violently reactionary Islamist regime would arise.

Still, even though the message of non-violence resonates only as a faint hope 
vis-a-vis the Arab and Muslim world, perhaps the presence of this "simple 
Buddhist monk" will at least remind Israelis of the way we should treat each 
other.

No matter how acrimonious our schisms, no matter how profoundly felt the 
alienation or how painful the hurt after Gaza and Amona, we must abhor 
intra-communal violence. We must invoke the memory of another teacher of 
non-violence, the Rev. Martin Luther King, who, when urged by black militants 
in 1966 to abandon his peaceful path, brushed them off, declaring: "I'm not 
going to use violence, no matter who says it."



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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