Ogyen Trinley Dorje: the Next Dalai Lama?
By DAVID
VAN BIEMA, Time Magazine, May. 29, 2008
New York,
USA
-- The Lowdown on the new arrival had been that he was brilliant but austere.
"He's not jolly like the Dalai Lama," warned an American devotee. "He's a bit
stiff."
The 17th Karmapa Ogyen Trinley Dorje
Emmanuel Dunand / AFP / Getty
But the baby-faced 22-year-old who may
be Tibet's next great hope seemed perfectly relaxed in his room at New York
City's Waldorf Towers hotel, none the worse for his first intercontinental
flight. Encountering a laptop-bearing reporter, Ogyen Trinley Dorje inquired
eagerly about the computer; like his mentor, he's apparently a Mac fan.
Asked if he'd managed to sleep on the
plane, he replied, "Sleep, but not well. Lot of ..." Then, his maroon robe
dancing, the 17th reincarnated head of Tibetan Buddhism's Kagyu sect offered an
enthusiastic mime of a bumpy transoceanic flight.
It bodes well for Dorje that he is able
to make light of turbulence. As the Karmapa, Tibetan Buddhism's third-ranking
personage, he has carried the immeasurable burden of his people's expectations,
supernatural and worldly, since he was first recognized at age 7 by a religious
search party.
The delegation was following the directions in a "prediction
letter" left in a locket by the previous Karmapa when he died in 1981; it
included Dorje's birth year, parents' names (Dondrub and Loga) and a location.
According to followers of the Kagyu branch of Buddhism, the child persuaded his
nomad parents to break camp early in order to be in the right place when the
searchers arrived. Within months, he was installed in the Karmapa's Tsurphu
Monastery as a near divine bodhisattva--or enlightened being--and, by extension,
a player in the perilous world of Sino-Tibetan politics.
Just how perilous was confirmed in 1995,
when the Chinese government forcibly replaced the second-ranking personage, the
Panchen Lama, with its own nominee. Most Tibetans rejected Beijing's choice, and
many worried that the Karmapa might suffer a similar fate. But in 1999, the
14-year-old, in disguise, clambered out of a monastery window and was spirited
on foot and by horseback and helicopter to India, becoming the Tibetan
diaspora's teen hero in the process. A nervous Indian government refused to let
him travel abroad for eight years.
In that time, the Dalai Lama has
personally prepped the boy for a leadership role far beyond the Karmapa's Kagyu
lineage. Although an active 72, the senior monk knows that after his death it
may be years before his reincarnation is identified and then groomed to
adulthood. Until then, the mantle of leadership could well rest with the Karmapa.
It's easy to see something of the Dalai
Lama in his pupil. The Karmapa is a sturdy young man, spectacles clinging to his
round shaved head, pebbled brown half boots peeking out from beneath the robe.
He actually does smile, and even jokes, impishly describing the stop-start-stop
process of New York traffic. He appears to be that rare combination: a born
listener who speaks with almost utter assurance, even on controversial subjects.
Before his visit, his American retinue stressed that the Kagyu lineage is
historically apolitical, but in person he was less circumspect, telling Time,
"As far as I'm concerned, the situation in Tibet, particularly the political
situation, has reached a level of emergency." As the Dalai Lama's pupil, Dorje
feels he must "continue to support [his mentor's political role] as best I can
in the future."
The U.S. is his natural first
destination; his predecessor, the 16th Karmapa, loved the country and died in a
hospital outside Chicago. But Dorje also seems interested in a political
connection. In a pretrip video, he described his religious goals but also
expressed the hope that "by connecting with a powerful country such as the
United States ... my own abilities to bring peace to the world ... will be
enhanced." He says he'd like to spend two months a year in the U.S.
His religious plans are adventurous,
too. He wants to be a "21st century religious leader," reaching beyond those of
his faith. "My work is not going to be conducted only among other Buddhists," he
said, "but to help everyone." He showcased that accessibility in a teaching to a
packed house at Manhattan's Hammerstein Ballroom on May 17. The speech was
filled with easy-to-grasp metaphors: If the world and its cares are a 200-lb.
weight, he said, the mind can be a mirror reflecting the weight without carrying
the poundage. His audience, Western and Tibetan, was charmed. Said Kunchok Dolma,
25, a student from a New York City Tibetan family: "I feel an elevated sort of
happiness."
Some well-wishers have reservations.
Robert Thurman, an expert in Tibetan Buddhism and a longtime friend of the Dalai
Lama's, says Dorje could indeed become the next "face" of his people. But he
warns against pressuring the young monk into too much travel and teaching too
soon. "He needs a period of practice and study to manifest his full strength,"
says Thurman. "When I met the Dalai Lama when he was 28, he did not have the
level of charismatic power that he does now." Some of his followers worry, too,
that the lure of the road might distract Dorje from his people in China and
India. But as he demonstrated on his first trip to the U.S., the young monk
knows where he wants to go. And he's prepared for some turbulence along the way.
"Quảng Minh chuyển dịch : Có Phải "Dorje" là Vị kế tiếp con đường Đức
Đạt Lai Lạt Ma cho Tây-Tạng và Ấn-Độ ?. Ông Robert Thurman, người bạn lâu năm cua Đức Đạt Lai Lạt Ma và cũng là một
chuyên gia về Phật học Tây-Tạng. Ông Robert Thurman noi, quả thực rằng
"Dorje" là một nhân tài nối tiếp con đường Đức Đạt Lai Lạt Ma. Ông Robert Thurman báo cho biết "Dorje"
còn quá trẻ, nhưng lại xuất hành đi giảng dạy quá sớm, nên dùng
thời gian đó để tu luyện Phật học thì giúp cho "Dorje" sáng suốt dễ dàng trên con đường tu học.
Ông Robert Thurman cũng kể rằng, khi Ông biết Đức Đạt Lai Lạt Ma mới 28 tuổi,
Ông Robert Thurman nhận thấy rằng "Dorje" có sức thuyết phục rất là khác thưừng so với
Đức Đạt Lai Lạt Ma vào thời đó. Bởi vì đó một vài người theo "Dorje" rất là lo buồn, sợ
rằng sự quyến rũ về chuyến xuất hành này, có thể làm sao lãng đi người của ông ta ở Tây-Tạng và Ấn-Độ. Tuy nhiên "Dorje"
lấn đầu tiên xuất hành đến Mỹ, "Dorje" biết chổ náo cần phải đi đến và cũng chuẩn bị trước sự náo động trên chuyến xuất
hành"
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