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Ten
Thousand Things
Multicultural Webfinds
"Ten
Thousand Things" is a Buddhist expression representing the dynamic
interconnection and simultaneous unity and diversity of everything in
the universe.
The
"Tibet Within" – DALAI LAMA RENAISSANCE – at Global
Peace Film Festival Japan Oct 5-7
DALAI LAMA RENAISSANCE
will be one of the films screened at the Global
Peace Film Festival Japan Oct 5-7 in Koshinomiyako. The
trailer is wonderful to view, if you can't get to one of
the festivals showing this film.
This is a revelatory documentary about the "Everyman" journey
from egocentric consciousness to something more sublime. The film follows
forty global experts in their fields who traveled to Dharamsala to advise
the Dalai Lama. The first scenes reveal a hilariously clashing hootenanny
of mild-mannered Engaged Buddhists, solemn Catholics, gabby physicists
intent on demonstrating the convergence of quantum physics with ultimate
reality, New Agers dressed in purple, social change visionaries, and progressive
economists, all engaged in "synthesizing" and "witnessing"
brain-storming to collect all their brilliant ideas to present to the
fourteenth Dalai Lama. This well-educated and well-mannered group then
revolted against their endlessly patient facilitators, in a gray-haired
inverse variation of the "Lord of the Flies." Throughout the
chaos that ensued, each player was shown as confronting her or his own
ego, as much as they confronted the facilitators and fellow participants.
Their conflicts with each other, and most of all, with their own egos
were actually uplifting, as they struggled to be truthful and respectful
while their "bubbling over" clashed with the facilitators' attempts
to create some order out of the unwieldy explosion of dialogue.
Then something broke open.
Tenzin Gyatso, who kept referred to himself as nothing but a "simple
monk," spoke." And, what he said, and the way he said it sounded
like a clear, clear bell that shattered all the clashing mental abstractions,
and brought attention back to the human level... I thought I was viewing
a shaktipat
moment as I saw the transformations of the participants simply becoming
more of who they really are, as whatever was obscuring their inner radiance
fell away. i actually felt as if I was feeling some of that myself, as
if these wonderful shaktipat energies were emanating from the small movie
screen I was watching, to me, my friend who was watching with me, and
all the people around us.
Compassion. Joy. Happiness. Even while suffering in participation and/or
witness with and struggling to address the world's problems.
This is a beautiful and fresh window on the Dalai Lama, and what we in
the world who care can do for Tibet and Tibetans. Before the film started,
I was apprehensive I would hear all the same-old records about the plight
of Tibetan Buddhists, and although I support the Dalai Lama's and all
Tibetans cause, from the bottom of my heart, I can't help but partly tune
out when I hear the worn-out views. However, this film was startlingly
original. I know so many of Tenzin Gyatso's words by heart by now, but
in this documentary, it all sounded so new to me, as if hearing his wisdom
for the first time.
To share with my media friends, I wrote what the Dalai Lama said media
people ought to aim for in their writing: "to promote clearly
basic human values." He spoke about supporting and loving
Chinese people, at the same time supporters of Tibet encourage the Chinese
government to open to rapprochement towards a win-win solution for Tibetans
and Chinese. It's not either-or, except at the level of egocentricity,
in his view. As Einstein said, we can't solve problems at the same level
of consciousness that created them.
Some of the participants talked about the importance of our getting in
touch with our "Inner Tibets." I disagreed with the view that
we have a choice of addressing either an 'inner" or "outer"
Tibet. I have always believed that profound personal journeys go in both
directions, and I see many "Tibets" throughout the world, as
well as within every person.
My friend Morley Robertson also talks about the 'Tibet Within" in
an original, fresh, and beautiful way at his start-up experimental multiple
media (video, music, and diary) blog on travels through Tibet, TIBETRONICA:
"This web site "Tibetronica" will also be a journey along
the time axis. Various ideas will evolve from scratch and become embodied
through experimentation and research, finally into a complete (or incomplete)
piece. I aim to make the entire process as transparent as I can. Trying
to break away from clichés and my own preconceptions about Tibet,
I will carry on with my experiments.
"The early phase of this project will be an attempt to travel to
the 'Tibet within'. If there is indeed a secret land inside, I would like
to look for it, before I leave home for the Tibet that is far away."
The journey and film also reminded me of Rodger
Kamenetz' The Jew in the Lotus, his allegorical
account of the 1990 pilgrimage that a group of American Jewish leaders
made to Dharamsala to advise the Dalai Lama on how to support the survival
of Tibetans and Tibetan culture in indefinite exile. Their archetypal
journey led to much more than the ostensible goals they were seeking,
as well, for both the Tibetans and the Jewish teachers involved, and for
so many who were touched by the ripple effects of their experience. Kamenetz
himself has morphed from a nervous on-the-sidelines chronicler of the
Tibetan-Jewish pilgrimage to a guide of the inner pilgrimage, in his new
book released this fall, The
History of Last Night's Dream, a luminous book infused
with Tibetan, kabbalistic, and Jungian wisdom, also with fascinating reader
input gleaned from Rodger's wonderful blog, Talking
Dream.
Om mani padme hum.
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