 | | The Dalai Lama answers a reporter's question upon arriving at his hotel in downtown Seattle Thursday, April 10, 2008.
(AP Photo/Stephen Brashear) |
Seattle, WA, USA, 11 April 2008 (A.P.) - The Dalai Lama arrived in the United States on Thursday for the
first time since the recent turmoil in Tibet, serenaded by fellow
Tibetans as he prepared to anchor an ambitious conference on compassion.
The
exiled Tibetan spiritual leader came here a day after demonstrators
disrupted the Olympic torch run in San Francisco in a protest of
China's treatment of his people. The Dalai Lama will be attending a
five-day conference that begins Friday.
With the Dalai Lama in town, some community leaders said they expected counter-demonstrations from pro-China groups.
But
all was peaceful when he arrived at a downtown hotel Thursday, telling
local Tibetans who sang to him that he supports nonviolent
demonstrations but was saddened by the protests in San Francisco.
In
Tibet, the recent protests against five decades of Chinese rule have
been the largest and most sustained in almost two decades. China has
accused the Dalai Lama of being involved in the uprising. The Tibetan
leader has said that he wants greater autonomy for the remote mountain
region but is not seeking independence.
Earlier Thursday, during
a stopover in Japan, the Dalai Lama said he has always supported
China's hosting of the Olympic Games this summer, but said Beijing
cannot suppress protests in Tibet with violence or tell those calling
for more freedom in his homeland "to shut up."
He strongly denied Chinese allegations he and his followers have used the run-up to the Olympics to foment unrest.
"Right
from the beginning, we supported the Olympic Games," he told reporters
near the airport outside Tokyo. "I really feel very sad the government
demonizes me. I am just a human; I am not a demon."
Organizers
of the five-day Seeds of Compassion conference in Seattle say the Dalai
Lama's visit is expected to draw more than 150,000 people.
The
Chinese community in Seattle has been split by the Tibetan situation,
said Assunta Ng, publisher of the Northwest Asian Weekly, a local
Asian-American community newspaper. Ng said she wouldn't be surprised
if pro-China demonstrators show up at some of the events, and added
that some Chinese students plan to protest the politicization of the
Olympics.
The conference will feature dozens of workshops on
various subjects, beginning with a panel discussion Friday with the
Dalai Lama on "The Scientific Basis for Compassion: What We Know Now."
Tickets for events involving the Dalai Lama have already sold out, according to the conference Web site.
Seattle
Mayor Greg Nickels will present the key to the city to the Tibetan
leader and the University of Washington will present him an honorary
degree.
The Dalai Lama fled to India after a failed uprising in
1959 in Tibet, but remains the religious and cultural leader of many
Tibetans. He was awarded the Nobel Peace prize in 1989.
He was determined to attend the Seattle conference because of his commitment to global peace, organizers said.
"He
wants compassion for both sides, for the Tibetans, for the Chinese
brothers," said Lama Tenzin Dhonden, a Tibetan monk who spearheaded the
development of the conference.
After Seattle, the Dalai Lama is
scheduled to speak at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor on April
19 and 20, then at Colgate University in Hamilton, N.Y., on April 22. |