Thousands gathered in Centennial Olympic Park on an overcast, damp Monday afternoon for a speech by Emory Universityâs newest big-name guest professor, the Dalai Lama. It was the culmination of a weekend of Dalai Lama-themed activities, portentously dubbed âThe Visitâ by the university.
After gushing introductions by, among others, U.S. Rep. John Lewis, the D.L. took the mic. The first thing he did was tell the truth. Heâs going to be a pretty lousy Emory presidential distinguished professor, he explained, because heâs lazy and busy with other stuff. Points for honesty.
He then proceeded with a rambling speech in halting English about the nature of human behavior resembling the first verse of âEbony & Ivory.â There are constructive and destructive emotions in all of us, he explained. âWe have to make efforts to decrease destructive emotion and increase constructive emotions.â He also emphasized the importance of respecting religions that are not your own, even if you donât have faith in them.
The most interesting and thought-provoking part of his speech was his assertion that war is an outdated concept. There was a time, he explained, when societies were so isolated from one another that it was indeed possible to win a war. Now, he asserted, societies are so interdependent that to wound your enemy is to wound yourself. I wish heâd spent more time on that.
Showing 1-1 of 1
see if Dalai wants to invest his stipend in the Telegraph, or else we could probably scrape this much change up off of ATL sidewalks or sell Macon water to underwrite the deal. http://chronicle.augusta.com/stories/102407/bus_148994.shtml 115/14 = 8.2 million per paper