Bethania Palma Markus 17 Nov 2015 at 10:39 ET
The Dalai Lama offered unusually sage advice for dealing with the terrorist attack on Paris on Friday.
Don't pray for Paris — work for peace, he told Deutsche Welle, a German broadcasting company.
"We cannot solve this problem only through prayers," the spiritual leader said. "I am a Buddhist and I believe in praying. But humans have created this problem, and now we are asking God to solve it. It is illogical. God would say, solve it yourself because you created it in the first place."
He added his hopes that the record violence of the 20th Century doesn't continue to bleed into the current one.
"We need a systematic approach to foster humanistic values, of oneness and harmony," he said. "If we start doing it now, there is hope that this century will be different from the previous one. It is in everybody's interest. So let us work for peace within our families and society, and not expect help from God, Buddha or the governments."
In what the Friendly Atheist described as sounding like Humanism, the Dalai Lama also said that much of the violence is over superficial matters.
"Furthermore, the problems that we are facing today are the result of superficial differences over religious faiths and nationalities," he told DW. "We are one people."
He also said he was leaving it up to the people of Tibet whether they wanted to continue having Dalai Lamas serve as leaders in the future.
"If the people think that this institution is no longer relevant, it should be abolished. I am no more involved in political matters," he said. "I am only concerned about Tibet's well-being."
The Dalai Lama offered unusually sage advice for dealing with the terrorist attack on Paris on Friday.
Don't pray for Paris — work for peace, he told Deutsche Welle, a German broadcasting company.
"We cannot solve this problem only through prayers," the spiritual leader said. "I am a Buddhist and I believe in praying. But humans have created this problem, and now we are asking God to solve it. It is illogical. God would say, solve it yourself because you created it in the first place."
He added his hopes that the record violence of the 20th Century doesn't continue to bleed into the current one.
"We need a systematic approach to foster humanistic values, of oneness and harmony," he said. "If we start doing it now, there is hope that this century will be different from the previous one. It is in everybody's interest. So let us work for peace within our families and society, and not expect help from God, Buddha or the governments."
In what the Friendly Atheist described as sounding like Humanism, the Dalai Lama also said that much of the violence is over superficial matters.
"Furthermore, the problems that we are facing today are the result of superficial differences over religious faiths and nationalities," he told DW. "We are one people."
He also said he was leaving it up to the people of Tibet whether they wanted to continue having Dalai Lamas serve as leaders in the future.
"If the people think that this institution is no longer relevant, it should be abolished. I am no more involved in political matters," he said. "I am only concerned about Tibet's well-being."
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