Progressive Revival

President Hu Jintao's mutual respect for Tibet and the Dalai Lama

Saturday August 2, 2008

This week, after coming under fire for censorship, the Chinese government lifted blocks onPresident Hu with the torch.jpg some websites banned to foreign journalists in Beijing covering the Olympics. As reported in Xinhua, President Hu Jintao participated in a rare joint interview with the foreign press on Friday, offering the following statement: "It is inevitable that people hold divergent views on issues, but politicizing the Olympics will not address those issues," Hu said. "Instead, those issues can be resolved on the basis of mutual respect, by narrowing the differences and expanding common ground." 

Although by making this statement, President Hu is politicizing the Olympics, what is more interesting to note is that he believes politicized issues can be resolved on the basis of mutual respect, narrowing differences and expanding the common ground. We look forward to the time when he will apply this statement to China's policy toward Tibet and the Dalai Lama.

The Dalai Lama is a universally celebrated world leader, yet his closest neighbors, the mainland Chinese people and their current leaders, have never met him. No senior leader of China has met with him since Mao Zedong, Zhou Enlai and Deng Xiaoping spent time with the 19 year-old Lama in 1954. Why is it that the early founders of the Communist Party felt it was important to meet him? What did they recognize about Tibet that China refuses to acknowledge today? Currently, China condemns him, misunderstands him, and obviously fears him. They daily announce their determination to make an enemy out of a man who sincerely and articulately wishes to be their friend and benefactor. 

If China's leaders think a good friend is an archenemy, how do they really regard other world leaders who are actually much less friendly to them, struggling with them in competition for wealth and prestige?
 
It should be a top foreign policy priority for all world leaders to make every effort to introduce China's leaders to the Dalai Lama -- especially since President Hu has openly made this statement -- so they can overcome their fears and work together with the Dalai Lama to accept his gifts and solve the problems of Tibet and China. Then there could be real joy in Beijing and Lhasa. And the whole world will breathe a huge sigh of relief.

Robert Thurman
Jey Tsong Khapa Professor of Buddhist Studies, Columbia University
President, Tibet House US
Author of Why the Dalai Lama Matters

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Comments
Reaganite in NYC
August 2, 2008 6:57 AM

Dear Professor Thurman,

While I sympathize with the plight of the Tibetans and admire the Dalai Lama, I wonder if I should believe in your commitment to truth.

On July 29, you posted an entry on this blog with the misleading headline: "The Dalai Lama connects with Obama and McCain while at the Aspen Institute"

This headline is completely innacurate. Only Senator McCain took the time to visit Colorado and meet with Dalai Lama. Senator Obama was somewhere else. Yes, perhaps Mr. Obama's staff composed and sent a note -- maybe even over his signature -- to explain his absence, but in the natural that can not be construed as suggesting that Dalai Lama "connected" with Mr. Obama "while at the Aspen Institute." To suggest that is factually innacurate and misleading.

Perhaps you did not write the headline yourself. Maybe it was someone else. But would you kindly correct the record and reply to my post? Arranging for beliefnet to change the headline to "The Dalai Lama connects with McCain at the Aspen Institute" would also demonstrate your committment to truth.

Yes, I would very much like to read some of the other things you plan on posting on this blog. But I am reminded of the line attributed to Ralph Waldo Emerson: "What you are speaks so loudly that I can't hear what you say to the contrary."

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About Progressive Revival

Diana Butler Bass and Paul Raushenbush both stand firmly within the Mainline Protestant tradition and, along with guest bloggers of all religious backgrounds are dedicated to the revival of religious progressivism and its influence in American politics.

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Diana Butler Bass
Diana Butler Bass is a commentator and scholar in American religion. She is the author of seven books including A People's History of Christianity: The Other Side of the Story (HarperOne, 2009).
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Paul Raushenbush
Moderator of the Progressive Revival blog and the Associate Dean of Religious Life at Princeton University.
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