Fujisan's Kyareng

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Avatar's Pandora is Tibet


ཨ་ཝ་ཊར་གློག་བརྙན་ནང་གི་པན་ཌོ་ར་ལུང་པའི་བྱུར་ཉེས་དེ་བོད་ཀྱི་དངོས་ཡོད་གནས་ཚུལ་ཡིན།
Avatar's Pandora is Tibet, once a peaceful nation on the high plateau of Himalayan mountains. It was also destroyed by time and greed.

Seeing Avatar movie, I can't help thinking this is the exact replica of what has happened and is happening in Tibet. Pandora is Tibet, Na'Vi -- Tibetans, and Colonel Quaritch and his team- the People Liberation Army (PLA) of Communist China.

Tibet was a peaceful land situated to the West of China and North of India. A God-king [Dalai Lama] who abides by the Buddhist principle of non-violence and compassion ruled the land. The region was rich in nature, minerals and water resources. These resources were left almost unexploited by the natives because they lived by the needs not by greed. Prosperity and inner joy pervaded the land. When the world was busy with industrial revolutions, World Wars, and external material developments, Tibetan masters were busy studying the inner spiritual essence of all beings, promoting human value, atmosphere of peace and non-violence.

However, in 1950, driven by greed for the high ground of Tibet and its rich natural resources, Communist China invaded Tibet, they massacred some 1.2 million people, razed the Tibetan temples and monasteries, Tibet was thrown into the world of blazing hell. The PLA army did what the Colonel Quadric and his team did to the Navies.

But Tibet is a real life story. Tibetans are still suffering under the oppressive Chinese regime. Their leader, Dalai Lama is in exile, his non-violent and peaceful approach to restore the peaceful glory of Tibet has won him Nobel Peace Prize but not Tibet. He is tirelessly globetrotting appealing the international community to support peace and freedom in Tibet.

Today, with the completion of railway lines into Tibet, China is all out in stripping the mountains and damming the rivers of Tibet with impunity.

I don't know if James Cameron had Tibet in mind while making Avatar, but Pandora and Navi represent the Tibetan situation. Avatar is set as some occurrence in the coming centuries in a small planet called Pandora. We don't need to look far; we have a real Pandora right here in the heart of Asia, Tibet.

If the people who had seen Avatar want to see a real Pandora, they should go to Tibet and save the land.
http://www.tibet.ca/en/newsroom/wtn/8394
Avatar movie review: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/user/802848/reviews/

Saturday, August 11, 2012

བྱང་ཀེ་ལི་ཕོར་ནིཡ་བོད་མི་ཚོས་མར་མེ་ཁྲོམ་སྐོར་བྱས་པ།

Tibetan in North California observes candlelight vigil August 8, 2012 Wednesday Berkeley: Tibetans and Tibet supporters gathered near Berkeley BART Station this evening to observe candlelight vigil to protest the Chinese government for its continued repression in Tibet. Pictures and the profiles of the 46 people who committed self-immolation to protest Chinese occupation of Tibet were displayed at the venue. President of the Tibetan Association of North California briefly spoke on the critical situation in Tibet. He said this gathering is in conjunction with the completion of one-year by the Lobsang Sangay's cabinet in Dharamsala, which is being celebrated and observed throughout the Tibetan community in and outside Tibet.
TANC President Mr. Tsedup briefing the gathering at Berkeley Members of Tibetan Youth Congress and Bay Area Friends of Tibet, and supporters joined to read the profiles of the martyrs, and pay respected to them. People sang Tibetan national anthem, and marched around the Berkeley Shuttuck avenues reciting Jangchub semchok prayer [generation of Boddhisatva's heart] carrying candles, Tibetan flags and slogan banners.

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Tibetans in North California Celebrates His Holiness the Dalai Lama's Birthday

July 7, 2012 Saturday

San Francisco: Tibetans in San Francisco Bay Area gathered in great numbers at Berkeley Marina Park to celebrate the 77th Birth Anniversary of His Holiness the Dalai Lama. Tibetan Association of North California organized the event with three main events. Official function was conducted on the eve of 6th July at John F Kennedy High School Hall in Richmond. The next day, an open picnic and event show was organized at the Marina Park. In the evening, cultural and dance show was conducted at JFK High school hall. Many Tibet supporters and friends had come to show their solidarity and to celebrate the day with the Tibetans. A big Tibetan tent was erected, where people offered traditional Tibetan scarf, Khata, to the portrait of His Holiness the Dalai Lama at the altar. The monks from Nechung, Gyuto, and Bon Gyalshen led the prayers and people prayed fervently for the long life of His Holiness the Dalai Lama.

Traditional Tibetan dances, and purification rite, sangsol was conducted. People came in traditional Tibetan attires, costumes were colorful and impressive. Californians visiting the Park on the day had a very rare glimpse of living and vibrant culture of Tibet. Tibetans also basked in the California sun in typical Tibetan picnic style enjoying the vibrant energy of their identity and culture. Gorshe, a big circular Tibetan dance was performed.

In his speech, Mr. Tsedup, Chairman of the Association reminded the people of the messages of His Holiness the Dalai and urged the people to live by His teaching of peace, non-violence and compassionate society. Remembrance and tribute to the Tibetans martyrs in Tibet was paid, and people prayed and reiterated their firm commitment to the Tibetan struggle for peace and justice. Richmond Mayor and other dignitaries expressed their good wishes to His Holiness the Dalai Lama and showed their support to the Tibetan aspiration for freedom and peace in their homeland Tibet.

According to an early settler, there were only about 40 odd Tibetans in San Francisco Bay Area in early 1990s. The California weather and the friendly environment had the population grow. Many shifted from other areas; new immigrants also tend to prefer the region to start a new life. In this way, today there are around 2000+ Tibetans in San Francisco Bay Area. The Birthday picnic gathering at Marina Park also gave the Tibetans a good opportunity to take some time out of their busy California lives to meet and talk with their fellow countrymen, and rejoice in their culture.   

Monday, June 25, 2012

What to see in a Mandala


བེད་གཤེགས་རིགས་ལྔ་དང་དཀྱིལ་འཁོར་གྱི་གནས།
དཀྱིལ་ལ་སྣང་མཐའ་པདྨ་དཀར། ཆགས་པའི་སྒྲིབ་པ་སེལ་བར་བྱེད།
ཤར་ལ་མི་སྐྱོད་རྡོ་རྗེ་སྔོན། ཞེ་སྡང་སྒྲིབ་པ་སེལ་བར་བྱེད།
ལྷོ་རུ་རིན་འབྱུང་ནོར་བུ་གསེར། ང་རྒྱལ་སྒྲིབ་པ་སེལ་བར་བྱེད།
ནུབ་ཏུ་རྣམ་སྣང་འཁོར་ལོ་དམར། གཏི་མུག་སྒྲིབ་པ་སེལ་བར་བྱེད།
བྱང་ལ་དོན་གྲུབ་རལ་གྲི་ལྗང་། ཕྲག་དོག་སྒྲིབ་པ་སེལ་བར་བྱེད།

Debarshegpa is usually translated as; the one who has gone or arrived at eternal bliss; the enlightenment. Debarshegpa Nga; the five families of Buddhas representing the victorious ones; Vairocana, Akshobhya, Ratnasambhava, Amitabha, and Amoghashiddhi.

In the Mandala of Chenrizig; Avaloketeshvara, we find this Gyalwa-rig-nga, the families of five Buddha in the middle of the Mandala. Above Tibetan verses tells you how these five Buddhas assume their respective place in the Manadala; how they are represented, and power of their blessing.

In the core center is Nangwa-thaye; the Amitabha, represented by a white Lotus, deliverence from the power of attachment. In the East is Mikyopa; the Akshobaya, represented by a blue Vajra, release from the negative power of pride and arrogance. In the South is Rinchen Jungden; the Ratnasambhava represented by a wish-fulfilling jewel in yellow color, eliminating the dark power of hatred and anger. In the west is Nam-nang; the Vairocana, represented by red wheel, deliverence from ignorance. In the north is Dhondup; the Amogasiddhi, represented by green dagger, cutting the root cause of jealousy or envy.

Above is how the Buddhas occupy their respective place in Mandala according to Tibetan Buddhism. In Japan, it is said that the Vairocana occupy the center seating. It may be little different in  other tradition also. The important point is  that the practitioners or devotees need to grasp the essential significance of this seating and the representation, and immerse themselves into deep meditational contemplation to receive the blessing of the Buddhas to cleanse and to eliminate the stain of nyonmong (five mental delusions) from their mind and heart. 
 

©TGARYA

 

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Sakura Festival in San Francisco

San Francisco: [April 22, 2012 Sunday] Japanese Community in Northern California organized "Cherry Blossom Festival" on April 22, in San Francisco downtown city. A grand parade with Japanese and local people in traditional Japanese attire passed the Japan town street dancing and singing. The most captivating of the parade was the group doing the "Taiko" Japanese drum beating. It was a grand show of Japanese presence in the city.
Cherry blossom, Sakura flower is greatly loved and admired in Japanese culture as the harbinger of spring season. Japanese parks, gardens and countryside are full of Sakura flowers at this season. People flock in great numbers; they sit under the sakura trees, and welcome the season enjoying "Hanami" the beauty of the flowers with drinks and songs.
Cherry Blossom Festival Parade in San Francisco drew large spectators, and people enjoyed the festival very much. Japanese shopping and eating malls were full of people. It was a great business day for them. Sakuru flowers in San Francisco, although very few, bloomed in great beauty, and inspired the people to appreciate its beauty and live in close proximity with the nature. Sakarua festival is a great gift from SJapanese community to the world to see and to feel the beauty of flowers.

Friday, March 23, 2012

Tenzin Tsundue in San Francisco Bay area


March 21, 2012 Wednesday

San Francisco: A renowned Tibet activist Tenzin Tsundue gave a talk to the Tibetans in Bay area at the Tibetan community hall in Richmond. He received a Hero's welcome and standing ovation. Wearing his trademark, the red band around his head, the Tibetan activist talked to the fully packed hall, and reminded the fellow Tibetans not to forget the Tibetan struggle for freedom and justice. He said that meaningful result would come only if Tibetans all around the world wholeheartedly take the Tibet issue seriously and contribute accordingly.

"The worlds, especially the developed nations, are only interested in maintaining a good business and economic relation with China for their own national interest. The business and economy of China is in the hand of a few communist leaders. So, these leaders and the Western nations are prospering through their lucrative economic partnership. In this, even the Chinese people are victims. Natural resources of the colonized regions are exploited, and with the cheap labor, Chinese product is invading the world market. The fine copper in used in Chinese goods come from Tibet; uranium is dug from Inner Mongolia. Therefore, we need to create our own environment to resolve the Tibet issue rather than relying fully on the Western support." He said.

On the recent spate of self-immolation taking place in Tibet, Tenzin expressed his solidarity with the people in Tibet, and described the situation as very volatile. He said that the standard of Tibetan resistance movement has achieved high status compared to the early 1950's. He stressed the importance of non-violent nature of Tibetan struggle, and preservation of Tibetan culture and moral ethics, and urged the Tibetans in the region to practice Tibetan language and culture.

On Tibetan Autonomy and Tibetan Independence, he said autonomy is a policy and a method, not the objective. If Tibetan people are to rule and manage Tibet, and prosper in Tibetan way, independence is indispensable. But let us not divide ourselves on these two points, serious and sincere struggle is the need of the time. Arguing over the things that are not under our control is useless. He said.
Tenzin Tsudue replied to the numerous question raised by the audience. He also spoke on his recently published book, "Resistance - Tsengol". A few books that he has brought with him got sold out, many placed order for the book.

Many thanked the Activist for his sacrifice and struggle for the common cause, and expressed support to his activity. Some remarked that the Community hall was bought in 2004, many gatherings were done since then, but the fact that the gathering on the day was largest shows the popularity of Tenzin Tsundue, and Bay area Tibetan people's respect to the Activist. The magnitude of the gathering and the people's attentive listening followed by questions from every corner confirmed the heroic status of Tenzin Tsundue in Tibetan people's heart for his selfless determined struggle for Tibetan freedom and justice.


Tibetan Association of Northern California (TANC) and Regional Tibetan Youth Congress organized the talk event. Tenzin Tsundue was on the last leg of his one month tour in Taiwan and the United States.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Demonstrations Overshadowed Xi Jinping's Visit to Los Angeles



San Francisco, November, 17, 2012: Tibetans in North and South California gathered in Los Angeles city to draw the attention of the visiting Vice President of China, Xi Jinping, to the on-going crackdown and repression in Tibet. The Chinese leader, leading a delegation of more than hundred officials landed in the city on February 16, and stayed at 54-storeyed JW Marriott in LA downtown. His visit and the schedules in the city for two days were hotly pursued by the Tibetans, and the Chinese activists. Tibetan Snow-lion flags, and placards and slogans demanding the end of brutal communist regime in Tibet filled the Los Angles streets.


More than two hundreds Tibetans and supporters from San Francisco took buses and vans to L.A. and joined the fellow Tibetans and supporters in the city. On the morning of November 16, demonstration was done before the China Mart USA building. China Mart is a registered entity created to support Chinese companies to move into the US market and sell their products. The Chinese delegates attended a grand business meeting with the US counterparts in the Mart.

Tibetans and their supporters stood around the building throughout the meeting and shouted slogans to draw the attention of the delegates on the current situation in Tibet. A Tibet supporter sneaked into the meeting, he raised Tibetan national flag and shouted "Human rights is more important than business". He was soon arrested and taken away. Some American delegates when coming out of the meeting raised hand to the demonstration to show their support. One of them even joined the demonstration.
The main demonstration was done at JW Marriott, a luxury hotel in the town, where the Chinese leader stayed and attended official luncheon and dinner party.


Representatives of Tibetan community in Southern and Northern California addressed the gathering about the purpose of the demonstration, and urged the international community to pressure the Chinese leader to stop repression and persecution in Tibet. A Chinese lady spoke for freedom and justice in Tibet and China. Mr. Tenzin Choden, a former Tibetan legislative member spoke about the on-going repression and brutal policy of Communist government in Tibet.


A large banner reading "Xi Jinping, Tibet will be Free" lifted by two large balloons stood hanging in the sky before the JW Marriot Hotel.

Since March, 2010, more than 24 monks, nuns and laypeople sacrificed their lives through self-immolation to protest the brutal Chinese rule in Tibet, and called for the return of His Holiness the Dalai Lama in Tibet. Experts and Tibet analysts have said that this continuous spate of self-immolation by the Tibetans is indicative of the growing repression in Tibet, and the desperate attempt by the Tibetans to draw the attention of the international communities.

The protest and demonstration continued the next day before the Hotel. Around hundred Falung Gong Practitioners sat at the designated place and observed silent meditation throughout the day. Chinese supporters came with large Chinese flags and staged lion-dances, with the beating of drums and cymbals. They were there to welcome the Chinese leader and the delegations, and to perform at the Hotel. One interesting aspect of the demonstration was that the Tibetans, Chinese and the Falung gong practitioners all shared the same pavement before the Hotel, and no major clashes or untoward incidents was registered.

In fact, many Tibetans and Chinese got good opportunity to talk face to face and exchange their respective ideas. When the discussion became too hot, a security officer would come and say "no fighting and abusive language", and the situation got restored. Some Tibetans who could speak Chinese language did good talking with the Chinese people and conveyed the Tibetan stand-point. Some Chinese secretly reported that they were paid US$ 200/- to attend the gathering. Some Tibetan remarked that it was good to talk with the Chinese at individual level, "they were more receptive and open".


Chinese delegates before the Hotel taking pictures of the demonstration.

Although, Xi Jinping managed to avoid direct confrontation with the demonstration, his delegations saw and heard what the demonstrators wanted to convey. But on the 17th evening, when Xi Jinping left the Basketball hall behind the Hotel, he could not avoid the demonstrators. Through the black-window of his car, he saw and felt the heat of Tibetan demonstrators, and he read the Tibetan message loud and clear, "Free Tibet Now".

The demonstration at L.A. by the Tibetans conveyed clearly to the Chinese leaders and the delegates that the world is watching China and that they must stop the repressive policy in Tibet. It conveyed to the Tibetan brothers and sisters in Tibet that they are not alone, that the Tibetans outside Tibet are always with them. The demonstration also established the fact and confirmed to the international media and supporters that the Tibetans across the world will continue to protest until the dawn of real freedom in Tibet.