Address to Tibetan-Chinese Conference
Posted on May 31st, 2010 by admin
His Holiness the Dalai Lama addresses participants of the Tibetan-Chhinese Conference held in Geneva, Switzerland on August 6th, 2009. (www.dalailama.com)
Duration : 0:22:31
His Holiness the Dalai Lama addresses participants of the Tibetan-Chhinese Conference held in Geneva, Switzerland on August 6th, 2009. (www.dalailama.com)
Duration : 0:22:31
I want a Tibetan Terrier. I will be able to pay for shipping if it is in another state of the united states. I want one for 200$ or less but i will pay for shipping too. Im not looking fr a specific gender so it doesnt matter. Im looking for 1 year or less of age. If anyone can help me at all please respond.
Thank you.
have you checked out your local shelters (yes shelters they are runing over with rare purebreed dogs)
check online shelter pages as well, some times these dogs can be shiped to where you live
and you may end up paying less, + they will be able to tell you which health it has
at that price you can forget geting a puppy from a quality breeder, and anyone telling you differently is lying (it cost to breed and raise quality puppies)
so your best chanse of geting a healthy dog is through the shelters or breed rescues (call the breed club in your area, they can put you in contact with a rescue for the breed)
I’m putting together a presentation on Tibetan Meditation and have no information on how it was first introduced to America. I have tidbits like: "there was a movement in the 1970’s" or "such and such was the first Theravada monastery in the United States." What I need is a link to hard evidence of the origins of Tibetan Meditation practice in the United States.
Rather than attempting to write an explanation of the movement of Tibetan Buddhism into the West, I thought it best to give you a URL to an excellent article on the topic. Visit http://www.karmapa.org.nz/symposium/history/keithdowman.html . Initially it deals with the history involving the Chinese incursion into Tibet but toward the end the author addresses the issue of Tibetan Buddhism’s migration to Western society. Hope this provides some of the information you’re seeking.
May all be at peace.
John
youtube.com/jigdo
another song of Lhundup http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cMNe8rbKSHE
another song:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H4foWR95_vM
Duration : 0:4:13
My friend who is a citizen and want to sponse her Tibetan Guru come to Canada, but don’t know how. Can anyone gives some ideas?
Can he apply for a visitor visa? She could send him an invitation letter if it’s a problem. He will not need a work permit to be a monk and a guru, see http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/work/apply-who-nopermit.asp#clergy
Tibetan director Pema Tseden (The Search 2009, The Silent Holy Stones 2007) reveals how he draws on traditional Tibetan aesthetics to tell stories of his people, interviewed by La Frances Hui, Asia Society.
For more info: http://www.asiasociety.org/arts-culture/film/pema-tseden-tibetan-films-tibetan-people
Duration : 0:10:2
Why has the Tibetan population increased in India? Is it high birth rate too, or just the unflus of refugees?
high birth rate is also a major reason
I live in both the Philippines and the island nation of Guam. How can I help support the Tibetan struggle to be free from Chinese repression?
Tell Bush and other tiger happy Americans to follow DEMOCRACY and respect human rights. Oh, make sure terrorist state Israel follow the same medicine too.
The female is the Chihuahua and the male is the tibetan terrier if that helps. I was just wondering
Very bad idea, when a female breeds with a larger male, often it can cause serious complications at birth. Who ever has this *itch, get her checked by a vet. It can result in a c section or even death as the pups can be too large for the birth canal.
I think it would not be an attractive combination, but each to their own.