By WILLIAM KATES
Associated Press Writer
5:40 PM EDT, October 9, 2007
ITHACA, N.Y.
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Achieving global peace must begin with each person attaining an inner
peace first, the Dalai Lama told a capacity audience Tuesday at
Cornell University.
"It is impossible to achieve inner peace when you are full of hate,
suspicion and fear," the Buddhist spiritual leader told 5,500 people
who packed Barton Hall for the first of his three public appearances
during a two-day visit to Ithaca.
"Taking care of others is the best guarantee for your own happy
future," said the 72-year-old exiled Tibetan leader and Nobel laureate.
The visit to the Ivy League school in upstate New York was organized
by Namgyal Monastery Institute of Buddhist Studies. The Dalai Lama
came to Ithaca to visit and bless the site of the new Namgyal temple,
which is the home of the Namgyal branch in North America.
As part of his visit, the Dalai Lama had a sold-out appearance
scheduled Wednesday at Ithaca College, where he was to lecture on
"Eight Verses for Training the Mind."
Also Wednesday, he was scheduled to lead an interfaith session,
"Prayers for World Peace," at the State Theater in downtown Ithaca.
The Dalai Lama told listeners that his talk would be informal _
"sometimes formality itself creates bad air," he said. At times, he
emitted a deep, booming laugh as he reacted to his own quips; other
times his voice rose to a high pitch as he sought to emphasize his
words.
People lined up two hours before the speech to get inside Barton
Hall. Another 2,000 students and faculty packed into Bailey and
Kennedy halls to watch a telecast of the speech. Countless more in
the community watched on cable television and the Internet.
The Dalai Lama told his audience _ a mix of young and old _ that the
responsibility for achieving global peace lied not with the leaders
of countries but with the people instead.
"Genuine peace must come through inner peace ..." he said.
"Many unnecessary problems we are facing today are because of my
generation's mistakes and negligence."
"You are the people who have the opportunity to make a new ship of
this planet," he said, singling out the college students in the crowd.
Nature has already equipped each individual with the potential to
achieve inner peace, the Dalai Lama said, describing the human body
as the ideal vessel for compassion because humans have "arms for
hugging and teeth for smiling."
In another light moment, the Dalai Lama said he learned compassion
through his mother's affections.
"Unless you are born from the lotus ... all humans have the same
potential for compassion and love," he said.
Through reasoning and training, each person can "grow infinite,
unbiased compassion," he said.
The Dalai Lama has led Tibet's government in exile in India since
1959. He has spent the last half-century as an international
political leader, advocating for freedom of the people of Tibet,
opposing violence and calling for respect of human rights worldwide.
He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989.
Copyright (c) 2007, The Associated Press