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DISTINGUISHED PROFESSORSHIP EMORY UNIVERSITYDalai Lama becomes |
The Dalai Lama gestures on the West Steps of the Capitol in Washington, October 17, following a ceremony where he received the Congressional Gold Medal. AP |
The exiled Tibetan Buddhist spiritual leader, whose face is recognized around the world, now is the bearer of a faculty ID card.
"I suspect you will not need to carry this with you for identification, but in any case, we wanted you to know you are welcome," student Emily Allen said as she handed him the card, a present from the students.
In his first speech as a faculty member, the Dalai Lama encouraged his audience of thousands of people to look beyond money and fame for happiness and to use their education for the greater good.
"As a professor of this university, I think you should listen to me," the 72-year-old monk and Nobel Peace Prize laureate said with a laugh.
Later, in an address to a crowd of thousands at Centennial Olympic Park in downtown Atlanta, the Dalai Lama called the US the world's "greatest, most powerful" democracy and said it should send more members of the Peace Corps, instead of soldiers, to other countries to spread democracy peacefully.
"The concept of war is outdated," he said. "Through war, through violence, you cannot achieve what you want."
During the weekend, he delivered a lecture on the basics of Buddhism to thousands and participated in a conference on depression. He also joined with spiritual leaders from the world's major religions - including Rajmohan Gandhi, a grandson of India's Mohandas Gandhi - to discuss peaceful resolution of military conflicts.
As Presidential Distinguished Professor, the Dalai Lama will provide private teaching sessions with students and faculty during Emory's study-abroad program in Dharamsala, India, and will periodically visit Emory.
The Dalai Lama fled the Himalayan region in 1959 during a failed uprising against Chinese rule. He remains highly popular among Tibetans and is lauded in much of the world as a figure of moral authority, but China reviles him as a Tibetan separatist.
Chinese officials lashed out angrily at the United States after he received Congress' highest civilian honor last month. The Dalai Lama brushed aside the furious reaction, saying he supports "genuine autonomy," not independence for Tibet. AP
Editor's note: For further reading on His Holiness, visit Emory-Tibet Partnership at http://tibet.emory.edu/ or Dalai Lama's visit at http://dalailama.emory.edu/ .