Monday, September 21, 2020

Buddhism/What remains of us. Tibet 2004 and a lost messiah rant

tibetans and chinese are polarized, despite all they in common, suitable as a way to dialogue and experiment themselves to a syncretism ... which would become waaaaaaay easier to achieve by adding a rather obvious factor, the best and most loved of the Vedas. I'll give you an anecdotal clue to  what found doing exactly that [quite nonchalantly and my pr, tec support, etc aren't  getting thru at all]:
the dutch: obsessed with proud of and IDtied to draining, but feeding fish, plant and mammal in return? Not so much. On top of that they swallow almost every tox from their wayward stray betraytours cross the pond, a metastatization of and by the worst of them. And they seem to have no talent for defence, let alone hatch a kind of reversal scheme.
There's a residue / sediment / digest of 40 straggly struggly years here: https://ia802804.us.archive.org/33/items/piety-Piet-mid-80s-to-2005/cernunnos-deviltry-thru-the-millenia.htm

https://ia802804.us.archive.org/33/items/piety-Piet-mid-80s-to-2005/ZioSemRus-13-16-Cernunnos.html



here's a few related sighthings from the around the web:

Tibet: Beyond Fear (FULL MOVIE)
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With an opening by Richard Gere and featuring the Dalai Lama, the official Artist For Amnesty award winning Tibet: Beyond Fear, hailed by the New York Times as emotional, riveting and compelling, documents a remarkable story of courage and the power of positive thinking. This film, which has been broadcast around the world on television follows Ngwang, a Buddhist Nun and Bagdro, a Buddhist Monk, at the ages of 13 and 20 years old.  They led freedom demonstrations against the Chinese repression in Tibet and were arrested, imprisoned and endured years of horrific torture. Through the power of the positive mind and inspired by the Dalai Lama, they find a way beyond fear and even forgive their former torturers.

The Sun Behind the Clouds
Synopsis: A provocative and potent look at the Dalai Lama’s ceaseless struggle for justice and recognition for the Tibetan people, The Sun Behind the Clouds focuses on the pivotal and particularly tumultuous events of 2008. From the four-month march of exiled Tibetans to the Indo-Tibet border and Buddhist monks’ protests in Lhasa, to the Beijing Olympics and the contentious talks between the Chinese government and the Dalai Lama’s emissaries, the film uncovers the growing rifts between younger Tibetans and their most respected spiritual leader.

https://youtu.be/322SFh6d3iA?t=1413
What Remains of Us - 1:16:48 ---
seccesionist youth
 Buddhism/What remains of us. Tibet 2004.
Ven. AbhayaRatana -- 46K views 8 years ago
This bold documentary follows a young Tibetan refugee in Quebec as she returns to her native land carrying a video message by ..
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 Buddhism -What remains of us (Tibet 2004)
Documentary 2 -- 797 views 5 years ago


U o Rhode Isle
https://web.uri.edu/nonviolence/documentaries-showcase-the-plight-of-tibet/
Documentaries Showcase the Plight of Tibet
Controversial Highway
The Chinese occupation of Tibet has done much to shatter the culture of the Tibetan people. Any who dared speak against their oppressors were imprisoned, tortured, or killed. Monasteries were brutally attacked, and the attempt to even ban their very language was almost put into place. For so many years, the people of Tibet have lived without any form of human rights, religious freedom, or liberties that we in the United States have and exercise generously. But despite the great hardships, much of Tibet has persevered.

A Level 2 nonviolence trainer at the Center and a strong advocate of the liberation of Tibet, Geshe Thupten Tendhar has presented two documentaries that show the hardships Tibetan culture has taken as a result of Chinese occupation. The first documentary, Controversial Highway, begins with the film team on a small truck, packed with essentials that they’ll need for the journey towards the Tibetan border. The pass between Nepal and China is close to perilous, and not just in terrain. While the land is rife with hard to cross rivers and rough, muddy ground, Chinese border patrol scout the area for anything they find warranting of suspicion. The Nepalese guide was luckily able to talk a patrol that stopped them into letting them on their way. The team then takes breathtaking shots of the mountains of Tibet which they see from just beyond the border. The mounds of land touch the sky, the very tips just covered by clouds riding the winds. Upon looking at the sight, one would think that nature itself gifted the land with beauty to match the culture of its people.

The documentary tells the tale of Tenzin Choegyal, an Australian musician who was born in Tibet before the Chinese occupation forced his parents to take him with them as they fled their homeland. After so many years, Tenzin, well into adulthood and with a family of his own, has taken the chance to reunite with his birthplace. Although it was obvious that Tibet has long changed since Tenzin left, it is shown that its culture has survived, against all odds.


Tibet Within by Ali Amani ...... focused on the Tibetan struggle for independence. It takes us through how the current citizens of Tibet suffer from the Chinese occupation and how Tibetans forced into exile has been working to keep their culture alive. So many have been forced to flee Tibet to escape persecution, and struggle with their new lives outside their homeland while holding onto their language, culture, and identity. From art so beautiful and intricate you wouldn’t believe is handmade, to institutions dedicated to preserving and promoting their culture, the people of Tibet who are forced to live in exile find ways to speak for and support their homeland.

their yt channel has 75 vids from the last 3 years and none hit triple digits with a different person on every one, all under one minute. 28 subbers .. and still not desperate and flex enough to find, grasp and defend or try make 'light' of my take on their no doubt creepily scriptie and doxpliant pabulum regarding their focus: nonviolence. Born in the wrong millenium .... again ....



anyway, this is a good intro



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