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- <text id=94TT0519>
- <title>
- May 02, 1994: Battle of the Future Buddhas
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 02, 1994 Last Testament of Richard Nixon
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RELIGION, Page 64
- BATTLE OF THE FUTURE BUDDHAS
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Two different boys claim to be the reincarnated master of a
- popular school of Buddhism
- </p>
- <p>BY DAVID VAN BIEMA
- </p>
- <p>Reported by Patrick E. Cole/Los Angeles and Jefferson Penberthy/New
- Delhi
- </p>
- <p> The prize is a crown, about eight inches high, said to be woven
- from the hair of holy women. The stakes: assets worth $1.2 billion
- and the reverence of up to a million followers. The alleged
- weapons: forgery, lies and murder. The contenders? Two little
- boys, 8 and 10.
- </p>
- <p>To many Westerners, the most familiar figure in contemporary
- Buddhism is the Dalai Lama, the point man for Tibet's aspirations
- to escape Chinese control. But among American Buddhists, his
- Gelugpa teachings are equaled in popularity by those of the
- related Kagyu Karma, or Black Hat, sect. Hence the consternation--"a lot of confusion and pain," says Terry Sullivan, spokeswoman
- for Karma Triyana Dharma Chakra Monastery in Woodstock, New
- York--that is spreading in American Buddhist circles over
- an ugly and odd battle for the Black Hat leadership.
- </p>
- <p>The oldest of Tibetan Buddhism's four allied schools, Kagyu
- Karma was the first to adopt reincarnation as a means of choosing
- its leader, called the Karmapa. The process is not always peaceful;
- over the centuries, warring factions have sponsored dueling
- candidates, igniting bloody battles.
- </p>
- <p>The current feud began in a Chicago cancer ward, with the 1981
- death of a man named Ranjung Rigpe Dorje. After the 1950 occupation
- of Tibet by the People's Republic of China, Rigpe, the 16th
- Karmapa, had established a thriving exile community and engineered
- the school's current Western popularity. Yet he appeared to
- have left one task undone: the penning of the traditional poem
- that would help his followers find his reincarnated self--and thus the next Karmapa.
- </p>
- <p>For eight years, followers fruitlessly scoured the sect's treasure
- house and monastery in Rumtek, India, for clues; pressure mounted
- on the four high lamas acting as interim regents. Finally, a
- regent named Tai Situ had a brainstorm. For 13 years, he had
- worn a prayer amulet given to him by the late leader, which
- he had never opened. Now, he says, "it suddenly struck me, the
- message could be here!" And lo, it was; and conveniently specific
- too: the child would be found "to the north in the east of a
- land of snow ((Tibet))/ A country where divine thunder spontaneously
- blazes ((wordplay indicating a town))/ In a beautiful nomad's
- place with the sign of a cow./ The method ((father)) is Dondrub
- and the wisdom ((mother)) is Lolaga."
- </p>
- <p>A group formed to find the child was delayed when its leader,
- another regent, died in the crash of his new BMW in East Bengal.
- But in 1992 emissaries to the Tibetan district of Lhathok located
- an apple-cheeked, appropriately aged boy named Ugen Thinley,
- son of a shepherd named Dondup and his wife Lolaga. Local lamas
- reported that at his birth rainbows had appeared and conch shells
- sounded, and a bird alighted on his father's tent and "sang
- a beautiful song." The joyous news was faxed to the Dalai Lama,
- who affirmed the choice with his own prophetic dreams.
- </p>
- <p>But there were other, darker omens. A 15th century Black Hat
- prediction warned of a time of troubles between Karmapas Nos.
- 16 and 17; and that too came to pass. The nephew of the late
- leader, regent Kunzig Shamar, had long jousted for power with
- his colleagues. Shamar announced that the letter from his uncle
- was a forgery. At a meeting in Rumtek to resolve the matter,
- he arrived accompanied by a squadron of Indian guards in military
- array. Several people were injured in the ensuing riot.
- </p>
- <p>In September 1992 Ugen Thinley was officially enthroned as the
- 17th Karmapa in Tibet's Tsurphu Monastery. But in New Delhi
- in March a defiant Shamar unveiled his own choice for the job:
- a bespectacled 10-year-old named Tenzin Chentse, whose parents
- he said were Tibetan refugees. His enthronement, Shamar announced,
- would take place by year's end.
- </p>
- <p>His welcoming ceremony for the new contender, however, turned
- into a melee, and the boy spent the next few weeks under the
- guard of 300 monks and 400 combat-ready Europeans from a militant
- Buddhist school run by a Danish ex-boxer. Meanwhile, each side
- has hinted darkly that the other may have engineered the fatal
- 1992 car crash; each claims that the other may be a pawn of
- the Chinese. Shamar says of his rival regent, "Tai Situ is degenerate,
- and the people around him are like, why...like gangsters."
- Members of the opposing camp like to point out that the name
- of the troublemaking demon behind the mayhem in the old prediction
- can be read as the word "nephew."
- </p>
- <p>Shamar plans to press his protege's claim under India's constitutional
- guarantee of religious freedom; he predicted last week, "The
- outcome of this issue will be two branches of Black Hat Buddhism."
- That may leave many believers feeling a little like Shamar's
- young candidate when he received visitors at the fortress-like
- New Delhi Karmapa Buddhist Institute two weeks ago. Throughout
- the meeting, the would-be spiritual leader said nothing. But
- his eyes darted about nervously; he occasionally gulped deep
- breaths; and his hands were constantly wringing in his lap.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-