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Dalai’s Chinese Shill – No Head Of Tibetans He Wasn’t, In Tibet.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013 17:10
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(Before It's News)

People in the West think the Dalai lama’s the head, i.e. the “king” of Tibet. This is not correct.

The Dalai Lamas controlled part only of the Lhassa Valley but shared power with the three big monasteries of the Gelug School – but fought often with them. The example of this was the Regent Reting who espoused the cause of the present Dalai Lama’s enthroning but was assassinated by rival clans within the same sect as the Dalai Lama but who opposed his choice.

Barely a century ago a regent confessed to three murders and similar events have occurred in later years. The Eleventh Dalai Lama met with sudden unexplained death in Potala Palace at the age of eighteen, the Twelfth died suddenly at the age of twenty. As late as 1947 the father of the present Dalai Lama was poisoned and his first regent strangled in prison in the struggle for power. Much murder has occurred in the high circles around the Dalai Lama as it did in Rome of the Borgia’s day.”

Tibetan Interviews
Anna Louise Strong

 

As for outside Lhassa, the Dalai Lama didn’t rule that. In Shigatse, the Panchen Lama was the king. In Sakya, Sakya Trizin was the king. In Eastern Tibet’s Kham Province, there were 33 independant kings.
 

To llustrate this, if one looked at the city of Yushu, Kyegu (or Jyekundo)in Wikipediait says it wasn’t even under the rule of Tibet and Lhassa –indeed it was under Chinese rule i.e. for taxation. (Wiki excerpt: Being a constituent of the former Nangchen kingdom, the area was, for most of the time, not under domination by the Dalai Lama’s Gelugpaorder in Lhasa.) The eastern parts were called Ja De as opposed to Po De meaning “Chinese Part” instead of “Tibetan Part”….

Photo: Only the people of East Tibet stood up to China and fought the battle for freedom while the rest caved in to the Dalai Lama who was wishing to relent to China and start negociations. (which he messed up being  a failure at politics.)

….Well, the Dalai Lama came from Takster which is even further towards China and further eastward than Yushu. So the Dalai lama’s home was not under Lhassa’s rule itself; so the Dalai Lama doesn’t have the title of King of Tibet and his friendship with China is explained by these divided friendships of these Eastern provinces of Tibet. To illustrate this further, in the East, they don’t even call it “Tibet” but Kham or Amdo instead. And they call Central Tibetans by the generic word of “Tibetan”. They say “We are Khampas and they, in the Center, are Tibetans”.

The importance of Eastern Tibet is immense because all the great lamas come from there: for example, the Dalai Lama himself comes from Eastern Tibet. Likewise the former Panchen Lama was from Amdo. Others lamas of great importance are, for example, the former Karmapa (was from Derge), Deshung Rimpoche (from Gawa or Gaba) was the teacher and uncle of Sakya Dachen, Tibet’s second lama during the 50s.

Countless high lamas are from Kham.

Sakya Dachen and Sakya Trizin, who are Tibet’s second highest lamas, during the 50s and until now, both married Khampa women of prominence (from Gawa for the former and a Derge princess for the latter.)”

So seeing the Dalai doesn’t represent the head of Tibet, why is the West so humiliated in their unashamed reverence to the Dalai Lama? Why do people bow down to anyone? Why do people act like slaves?

The Dalai lama’s name of Kundun for example is mad. It means “In the Presence of..”. Ku means the holy body of Buddha. So it means the Dalai Lama is ‘in presence of the Buddha’, as if to say he were the Buddha’s constant personal friend.

This is humilitating and ridiculous. It’s as if one were treating someone as practically the Buddha Himself. This is as idiotic as the French name Dieudonné or other bigotted names.

Why did the Norwegians give the Dalai Lama the Nobel Peace Prize when any instant check of his record would prove he’d been indirectly involved with the Chinese Secret Services?

The Dalai’s father was murdered because of supporting the Chinese. (see reference above) The Dalai Lama’s brother Gyalo Thondup is wanted by police in Nepal and Bhutan, for the murder of Freedom Fighter Gongthang Tsultrim, in Clement Town, U.P. when Gongtang wanted to oppose the Dalai Lama’s clan’s try to suppress all religious groups except for the Gelugpas.

Dalai brother Gyalo Thondup has houses in India and Beijing and works for the Chinese as a double-spy interacting back and forth and killing people. He terrorizes the Tibetans in India and forces them to attend the Dalai Lama’s Kalachakra ceremonies or else they’re assassinated.

The Tibetans are used by the Dalai like donkeys. This can be read in the famous Mongoose Canine Letter addressed to the Dalai Lama to express the frustration and exasperation of the Tibetan community in India, felt to be under a Mafia rule like that of the Dalai lama.

Excerpt from the Letter: “It is very sad. Nowadays you have given the Kalachakra initiation so many times you have made the Tibetan people into donkeys. You can force them to go here and there as you like.” 

I think Westerners should not meddle in Tibetan business of which they know nothing at all and should not treat the Dalai like some guru of a sect and follow him without checking who he is and what his actions are. He poisoned the Tibetans life for fifty years, by forcing them to go to Kalachakra ceremonies; and now he forces them to make protests against China worldwide. But it’s useless beause Tibet has now been taken by the Chinese and totally swallowed. But the Dalai is using the frustration to force his feudal power over Tibetans by playing on the devotion to him as if ti was still medieval Tibet. And the West is blindly helping this Mafiosi Dalai. The self-immolations in Tibet are said by the Chinese to be ordered by the Dalai Lama too.

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Total 6 comments
  • Ed Rowan

    @ Centaur Smith KOS

    Now Mr. Smith, if you’re going to present topics like this, I think more people will respect where the origins of your belief stem from.

    I, like probably most BIN users, are unfamiliar with this faith. We only know generalities. It’s much more appealing when you post an article like this, instead of insulting those of us who are beginning our journey of knowledge in our vast, diverse planet.

  • Ed Rowan

    @ Centaur Smith KOS

    I thought perhaps you’d get more response on this one. I’ve tried to explain before about burning bridges. You have misrepresented an honorable faith one too many times, and when you try to explain it semi-rationally .. no takers. No clue .. and no surprises. Guess this one’s, like you say “a topic with no value on BIN” .. and the cycle continues …

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