Vancouver, Canada 11 September 2006 (CP) -- A group of politicians, athletes, CEOs and social activists put their differences aside and joined together in one room on Sunday to pose questions and gain insight from the Dalai Lama.
The gathering was the last event in the Buddhist leader's three-day visit to Vancouver, which was primarily to open an education centre in his name.
More than 100 people from around the world attended Sunday's conference, titled Connection for Change, including former prime minister Kim Campbell and Olympic rower Silken Laumann.
The meeting was intended to spark dialogue from leaders in the community.
Each person in attendance was paired with someone else, usually from a drastically different place in society, and many of those involved called the experience productive.
Calgary-based Jim Gray, co-founder of the Canadian Hunter Exploration, one of Canada's largest natural gas companies, was teamed up with Ken Lyotier, a former drug addict and CEO of United We Can, a non-profit organization that buys recycled cans and bottles from street people in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.
Lyotier left the conference's first meeting after feeling out of place amongst the neatly dressed professionals. So Gray ventured to the bottle depot in Vancouver's poorest neighbourhood. They ended up talking for more than two hours.
'Only by conversation can we establish that trust,' Gray said. He added that he intends to visit the area in October with his daughter to learn more about addiction.
Another successful pairing brought together George Weyerhaeuser, former senior vice-president of Weyerhaeuser Canada, the international forest products company, with former B.C. premier and social activist Mike Harcourt.
Weyerhaeuser recently took on responsibility for the topic of mobility with the World Business Council for Substantiality Development. Harcourt has spent several years looking at the issue of mobility from an activist's perspective.
'I suddenly had access to someone who'd been doing leading-edge thinking from the point of view of the social sector and the human side,' Weyerhaeuser said.
Selected attendees had the opportunity to ask the Dalai Lama questions. One question was regarding how people could take responsibility in a society that focuses on the individual.
'Taking care of one's self or looking after one's self is justified,' the Dalai Lama said. 'But if you look more deeper than one individual, no matter how able or strong the person, without society he or she cannot manage.'