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BY
MICK BROWN
FEARS
for the Karmapa's safety since his flight
from Tibet to India, can make meeting him
a daunting experience. On the three occasions
I have met him since his arrival in India
16 months ago, the procedure has always
been the same.
First one must negotiate the armed police
who prowl the steps leading to the Gyuto
monastery where he lives. At the door, one
is searched and one's name and passport
number logged, before being led up the four
flights of narrow stairs to the audience
room, where yet another screen of security
men stand.
Then
there is the imponderable weight of his
spiritual ancestry to consider. The present
Karmapa - the 17th of his line - is believed
to be the repository of an unbroken line
of teachings going back 2,500 years to the
time of the Buddha himself, and the Karmapas
are the oldest line of identifiable reincarnates
in Tibetan Buddhism. The first Karmapa was
recognised about 900 years ago - 400 years
before the first Dalai Lama.
Regarded
as the great miracle-workers of Tibetan
Buddhism, they are unique in leaving instructions
at their deaths about where their next incarnation
will be found. The 16th Karmapa who died
in 1981, was believed to have the ability
to control the weather, talk to birds and
leave imprints of his hand and feet in solid
rock. His letter of prediction was found
eight years after his death, leading to
the discovery of the present Karmapa, living
in a nomad family in eastern Tibet.
Enthroned
at the ancestral seat of Tsurphu monastery
in 1992 with the permission of the Chinese,
the Karmapa remained in Tibet until last
year, when he fled to India to join the
Dalai Lama in exile.
Since
arriving in India, he has been confined
in the small Gyuto monastery in Dharamsala.
Last month, after finally being formally
granted refugee status, he was allowed to
make a pilgrimage to Buddhist sites in India;
but he is still forbidden to travel to his
seat of Rumtek monastery, in Sikkim, which
was established by his predecessor the 16th
Karmapa after his flight from Tibet in 1959.
His
court at Gyuto is a miniature of the system
that has served successive Karmapas for
centuries. His inner circle is made up of
his monk tutors and personal attendants,
including members of the party who escaped
with him from Tibet. Among these are one
of the lamas who planned the escape (another
remained behind), and the Karmapa's elderly
chamberlain, who serves his meals, prepares
his clothes and ministers to his daily needs,
and who fulfilled the same functions for
his predecessor.
His
closest confidants are two middle-aged lamas,
one of whom he refers to as "uncle",
both highly educated in Buddhist philosophy,
fluent in English, well-travelled and politically
astute. Then there is the outer circle,
or labrang, made up of a handful of lay
people who administer the Karmapa's affairs.
In
the 16 months that his entourage has been
confined in Gyuto, the small, cramped warren
of rooms of the monastery have come to resemble
a refugee camp. Monks sleep on camp-beds,
dormitory style, and administrators have
been working amidst a tangle of papers,
cardboard boxes and piles of clothes. Adding
to this disarray is the daily avalanche
of offerings from devotees who arrive at
the monastery to receive his blessing.
While
only 15, the Karmapa is a tall, powerfully
built figure, whose presence seems to fill
the room. His smile can change in an instant
to an expression of fierce intensity which
devotees call "wrathful". Even
his closest attendants confess that they
feel uncomfortable holding his gaze for
too long.
Conversing
with him, one is left in no doubt that he
has a strong mind of his own; his comments
yesterday about China's President Jiang
suggest he also possesses sharply ironic
sense of humour.
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