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U.S: Tibetan Buddhists move towards vegetarianism

April 26, 2007 : 12:00 AM
The Dalai Lama to visit San Francisco April 27-29

By Sharon St. Joan

There is a movement afoot among American Buddhists to encourage
Tibetan Buddhists to become vegetarians. We learn this from Jordan Rothstein, who plans to be leafleting on behalf of the vegetarian cause during the visit of the Dalai Lama in San Francisco this coming Friday through Sunday, April 27-29.

The leaflets he hands out will invite Tibetan Buddhists to become vegetarian, a move it is said that the Dalai Lama supports.

At the Dalai Lama's traditional celebration last year, the Kalachakra, he spoke out, in Tibetan, in favor of a vegetarian diet. He also forcefully spoke against the trade in wild animal skins and fur.

The food served at the celebration last year was vegetarian.
It is reported that, at the Dalai Lama's residence in Dharamsala in the northern mountains of India, no meat is served. The Dalai Lama does, however, depart from a strictly vegetarian diet while traveling. His doctors have recommended this for health reasons.

The Dalai Lama has, over the past several years, requested that his followers become vegetarian. This has met with some resistance.

Traditionally, Tibetans are not vegetarians. A vegetarian diet can be more difficult in cold climates, where there is only a short growing season for vegetables, and where it is often believed that meat is essential for keeping warm.

There is a plan for each Tibetan monastery in India and Nepal to have a tofu machine. Each of these would be able to provide tofu, a source of protein, fresh daily to 3,000 monks and nuns.

A number of influential Buddhist teachers and followers of the Dalai Lama are advocating becoming vegetarian.

Among them is the Karmapa, a young Buddhist leader now in his early twenties, believed to be the latest in a long line incarnate monks, stretching back for around one thousand years. This Karmapa, discovered as a little boy, was the son of nomads in Eastern Tibet. It is said that he used to cry when he saw other children harming animals. He is now an outspoken advocate of vegetarianism, requiring all the monasteries that follow him to refrain from serving meat.

A growing movement among young Tibetans in the refugee communities of India and Nepal is starting groups to promote animal rights, animal welfare, and not eating meat.

The quickly growing organization, Tibetan Volunteers for Animals works among Tibetan communities in India, opening vegetarian restaurants and converting thousands of Tibetans to vegetarianism.

The Dalai Lama seems to have always been fond of animals. He wrote in his autobiography that he believed he had personally saved 10,000 yaks (yak pictured) by buying them, over a number of years, as they were on their way to be slaughtered and then sending them off to sanctuaries.

Jordan Rothstein who covers this information on his website
http://rawveg.info/buddhistveg.html includes a poem said to be a quote from Ancient Chinese verse.

For hundreds of thousands of years the stew in the pot
Has brewed hatred and resentment that is difficult to stop.
If you wish to know why there are disasters of armies and weapons in the world,
Listen to the piteous cries from the slaughter house at midnight.

- Ancient Chinese verse


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Comments
  
May 13, 2007 at 8:46 AM
posted by: sherylcatmom
The Dalai Lama is not a vegetarian, nor are many Tibetan Buddhists. I read the Dalai Lama's autobiography last year and he wrote that he and other Tibetan Buddhists had tried unsuccessfully to live as vegetarians in India, where the diet is typically full of dairy products.

Here is a quote from the International Vegetarian Union's website that reflects what I read in the Dalai Lama's autobiography:

"In the mid 1960s the Dalai Lama was in Kerala, Southern India, where a high proportion of the local population have always been vegetarian. Their tradition, as with other parts of India, is of lacto-vegetarianism, using a modest amount of milk products (but not eggs). Whilst there the Dalai Lama decided to become vegetarian but then proceeded to live on a bizarre diet consisting entirely of milk and nuts. If this is true, and it seems to be well documented, it would have been an extremely high fat and very unhealthy diet by any standards. After 18 months he became very ill and his doctors, unsurprisingly, blamed it on the lack of meat rather than advising a better balanced vegetarian diet. He was persuaded to return to meat-eating and has done so ever since."

From the Dalai Lama's website:

"His Holiness’ kitchen in Dharamsala is vegetarian. However, during visits outside of Dharamsala, His Holiness is not necessarily vegetarian."
  
May 13, 2007 at 2:51 AM
posted by: selkie
Not a thing mentioned in the local papers about the Dalai Lama being, or promoting vegetarianism. This happens every single time a humanitarian who is VEG is honored for his or her work. They will mention all else about the person's life, but not this.
Maybe all of you have noticed this, too.
Whether it's Cesar Chavez, who was vegan, or the late Coretta Scott King, or U 2's Bono, or Daryl Hannah and so on.
  
April 26, 2007 at 9:03 PM
posted by: sherylcatmom
I love the VegEat Community!

I also love being vegan. I experience a world of flavors and health that I didn't even know I was missing before. The most satisfying part is knowing I am helping animals just that much more.
  
April 26, 2007 at 1:19 PM
posted by: auroraborialice
Thanks to all for sharing such good news!!

May we live in a world where we don't eat animals or have any more suffering.

Here is a great website to check out along the lines of all of this, it is the Animal Liberation Sanctuary @ www.fpmt.org this is very worthwhile to look into.

Much Health & Happiness to all & May all beings be free of suffering!
  
April 26, 2007 at 11:23 AM
posted by: MagsFarm
This is very interesting. There are other sources of complete protein, such as blue-green algae, which are great for vegetarians. There is a non-profit organization which has been sending the blue-green algae to a Tibetan nunnery for many years. It is also sent to a school in Nicaragua where it is helping the children become the top school in the country.
John Robbins ("Diet for a New America") is a big proponent of eating the algae, as it is a wild food source for all the daily nutrients required.
  
April 26, 2007 at 11:03 AM
posted by: PamelaB
A wonderful and rich story in a number of ways, with kindness--as the Chinese verse suggests--at the bottom of it all.

And remember, whatever form your spiritual journey takes: More vegetables mean fewer factory farms and less global warming!
  
April 26, 2007 at 10:36 AM
posted by: michelle
Please visit VegEat community on the network and see related story.
http://network.bestfriends.org/vegeat/news/
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