Buddhist monk entrusted with protecting the Dalai Lama and foretelling his people's future is concerned.
The Dalai Lama turns 89 on Saturday and China insists it will choose his successor as Tibet's chief spiritual leader. That has the Medium of Tibet's Chief State Oracle contemplating what might come next.
«His Holiness is the fourteenth Dalai Lama, then there will be a fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth,» the medium, known as the Nechung, said. «In countries, leaders change, and then that story is over. But in Tibet it works differently.»
Tibetan Buddhists believe that learned monastics are reincarnated after death as newborns. The Dalai Lama, who is currently recuperating in the United States from a medical procedure, has said he will clarify questions about succession — including if and where he will be reincarnated — around his ninetieth birthday. As part of a reincarnation identification process, the medium will enter a trance to consult the oracle.
The incumbent Dalai Lama is a charismatic figure who popularised Buddhism internationally and won a Nobel Peace Prize in 1989 for keeping alive the Tibetan cause in exile. Beijing sees him as a dangerous separatist, though he has embraced what he calls a «Middle Way» of peacefully seeking genuine autonomy and religious freedom within China.
Any successor will be inexperienced and unknown on the global stage. That has sparked concerns about whether the movement will lose momentum or grow more radical amid heightened tensions between Beijing and Washington, long