Dalai Lama absent as
Vietnam
hosts Buddhist festival
DPA, May
14, 2008
Hanoi, Vietnam
-- Thousands of Buddhist clergy and lay people from over 80 countries opened a
four-day festival in Hanoi
Wednesday celebrating Vesak, an international holiday commemorating the birth of
the Buddha some 2,500 years ago.
The Dalai Lama: Absent from UN sponsored
Vesak gathering in Vietnam
With shaven-headed monks in saffron,
maroon and silver robes filling Hanoi's
National Conference Centre, Vietnamese President Nguyen Minh Triet called the
international Vesak gathering "an opportunity and bridge for all fellow
Buddhists to meet."
But two prominent Buddhist congregations
were absent: the Dalai Lama's Tibetan Buddhist sangha, and the banned Unified
Buddhist Church of Vietnam, or UBCV, which opposes the official
government-affiliated Vietnam Buddhist Sangha.
In an interview in April, the vice head
of the Vietnam Buddhist Sangha, Thich Thanh Tu, said the Dalai Lama had been
invited to attend the Vesak gathering. But a representative of the Dalai Lama,
Tenzin Taklah, said no invitation had been received.
Vietnam
has close relations with China,
which has harshly criticized the Dalai Lama for decades, accusing him of
separatism, terrorism, and of fomenting violent demonstrations in Tibet in March.
The director of China's
State Administration for Religious Affairs, Ye Xiaowen, was among those who
addressed the conference Wednesday morning.
The UBCV is an alternative Buddhist sangha descended from Buddhist
groups that were active in the former South
Vietnam before it was defeated and reunified with North Vietnam
in 1975. The government does not recognize the organization, and has held its
aging leaders, Thich Quang Do and Thich Huyen Quang, under house arrest for
years.
The UBCV says that in the run-up to
Vesak, its monks in several provinces in central Vietnam have been harassed by
police, and that at least one pagoda has been seized by authorities. The US's Committee on International Religious Freedom
cited the reported harassment in its May 2 recommendation that Vietnam be
placed on the list of "countries of particular concern" for religious freedom
issues.
Vietnamese President Triet said the
country's hosting of Vesak "shows that the state of Vietnam always
respects the importance of religious moral values in our life."
Vesak is originally an Indian Buddhist
holiday, not previously celebrated in most other Buddhist traditions. The
international festival, known as the United Nations Day of Vesak, was launched
in 1999 with a vote in the United Nations General Assembly, but is not
organizationally affiliated with the UN.
The theme of this year's conference is
"Buddhist Contributions to Building a Just, Democratic and Civil Society."
Organizers say they plan to set several world records, including records for the
largest vegetarian meal ever, and for the Buddhist flag with the largest number
of signatures.
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