Google – AFP, 13 June 2013
![]() |
Tibetan
spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, pictured in College Park, Maryland,
on May 7,
2013 (AFP/File, Nicholas Kamm)
|
SYDNEY —
The Dalai Lama waded into Australia's bitter gender war on Thursday, saying his
successor as the spiritual leader of the Tibetans could be a woman.
"If
the circumstances are such that a female Dalai Lama is more useful, then
automatically a female Dalai Lama will come," he told a press conference
in Sydney to launch a 10-day tour of Australia.
The exiled
77-year-old was questioned about the gender conflict reignited by Australian
Prime Minister Julia Gillard this week. He replied that the world faces a
"moral crisis" of inequality and suffering and needs leaders with
compassion.
"In
that respect, biologically, females have more potential," the Dalai Lama
said. "Females have more sensitivity about others' well-being.
"In my
own case, my father, very short temper. On a few occasions I also got some
beatings. But my mother was so wonderfully compassionate."
Labor
leader Gillard claimed on Tuesday that the conservatives would marginalise
women and set back abortion laws if they win national elections in September.
On Wednesday
she accused opposition leader Tony Abbott of a pattern of misogynist behaviour,
sparking angry recriminations.
The Dalai
Lama, a winner of the Nobel Peace Prize who fled the Chinese rule over Tibet in
1959 for the safety of India, is due to speak in Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide
and Darwin.
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