The Chinese Communists Find Religion: The Struggle for the Selection of the Next Dalai Lama
Creator
Thurston, Anne
Contributor
Georgetown University. School of Foreign Service
Abstract
Lhamo Thondup was just two years old when he was recognized as the reincarnation of the Thirteenth Dalai Lama. The Great Thirteenth, as he is popularly known, had died in Lhasa in 1933 at the age of fifty-eight. The team charged with finding his new incarnation was composed of leading lamas from monasteries in Tibet, and some were eminent reincarnations themselves. Clues and omens unique to Tibetan Buddhism— some provided by the Thirteenth Dalai Lama himself—guided their search. The Dalai Lama had intimated that his reincarnation would be found in the east. Thus, when the head of the embalmed Great Thirteenth was discovered to have turned overnight from facing south to pointing northeast, the search team was certain which direction their journey should take. When the regent in charge of the search visited the sacred Lhamo Lhatso Lake and gazed into its deep blue waters, the characters for “Ah,” “Ka,” and “Ma” appeared, and he saw a hilltop monastery with a golden roof and an ordinary farmer’s house with strangely configured gutters.
Permanent Link
http://hdl.handle.net/10822/1053239Date Published
2018Subject
Type
Location
Asia
Publisher
Georgetown University. School of Foreign Service. Asian Studies Program.
Extent
volumes
Collections
Metadata
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Georgetown Journal of Asian Affairs Vol. 4 No. 1
Fahy, Sandra; Milly, Deborah; Baird, Ian; Thurston, Anne; Hayton, Bill (Georgetown University. School of Foreign Service. Asian Studies Program., 2018)