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| The Dalai Lama is the universally recognised face of the movement for Tibetan autonomy (AFP Photo/STR) |
The Dalai Lama on Saturday marked the 80th anniversary of his enthronement as the spiritual leader of Tibet, a position held almost entirely in exile and as a target of constant vilification by the Chinese state.
Hundreds of
miles from Lhasa's imposing 1,000-room Potala Palace, the sandal-wearing monk
now ministers to his fellow Tibetan exiles from Dharamsala in the foothills of
the Indian Himalaya.
He remains
the universally recognised face of the movement for Tibetan autonomy, but the
global spotlight he enjoyed after winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989 has
dimmed and the deluge of invitations to hobnob with world leaders and Hollywood
stars has slowed.
Partly
because the ageing leader has cut back on his punishing travel schedule, but
also due to China's growing economic and political clout.
Beijing
accuses the 84-year-old Dalai Lama of wanting to split China, and regularly
refers to him as a "wolf in a monk's robe".
His office
said there would be no commemoration of the anniversary and a teaching event
scheduled for March -- that usually would attract devotees from across the
world -- has been cancelled over coronavirus fears.
Born into a
peasant family in the Tibetan village of Taksar on July 6, 1935, he was
identified as the incarnation of Tibetan Buddhism's supreme religious leader at
the age of two after picking out objects that belonged to his predecessor.
He was
given the name Jetsun Jamphel Ngawang Lobsang Yeshe Tenzin Gyatso -- Holy Lord,
Gentle Glory, Compassionate Defender of the Faith and Ocean of Wisdom -- and
two years later arrived in Lhasa where he was formally enthroned as the 14th
Dalai Lama.
In 1950,
aged 15, he was hastily enthroned as head of state after the Chinese army
invaded Tibet.
For the
next nine years he tried to keep Tibetans out of harm's way. But the effort failed
in 1959 when China crushed a popular uprising.
Fearing for
his life, the young monk trekked through the Himalayas accompanied by a
37-strong entourage, and crossed into exile in India.
There he
set up a government-in-exile and launched a campaign to reclaim Tibet that
gradually evolved into an appeal for greater autonomy -- the so-called
"middle way" approach.
Successor?
It is
unclear how, or even whether, the current Dalai Lama's successor will be named,
but few religious leaders have had to give the matter as much thought.
The
centuries-old practice requires senior monks to interview sometimes hundreds of
young boys to see whether they recognise items that belonged to the Dalai Lama
and pick one as a reincarnation.
But the
14th Dalai Lama announced in 2011 that he may be the last, seeking to preempt
any attempt by China to name its own successor.
Formal
negotiations with Beijing broke down in 2010 after making no headway.
The
following year the Dalai Lama announced he was retiring from politics, ending
centuries of Tibetan tradition to make way for a new leader elected by exiled
Tibetans around the world.
In his
India exile he has been treated as an honoured guest -- an official policy
stance that has been a source of tension with Beijing.

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