< %=imgalt%>
Panchang ~ Manmohan Singh ~ Sonia Gandhi ~ Stock Markets ~ Gossip
Home / India News / 2008 / January 2008 / January 23, 2008
Tibetan kids in Dharamshala attend special classes on Buddhism
Dalai Lama Tenzin Gyatso

Tibetans pray for long life of Dalai Lama

Dalai Lamas condition stable, to be discharged by Tuesday

Dalai Lama undergoes successful gallstone removal surgery

Dalai Lama in New Delhi for medical check-up

More on Dalai Lama Tenzin Gyatso

Top News

Praja Rajyam Party tour programme announced

Canadian education fair woos Punjabi students

Tourism Australias new campaign under fire for white-collar bias

Restaurateur slams Sylvester Stallone for ordering what he could not afford

Cranes software announces release of the NISA/CIVIL Version 16

Imran says foreign cricketers safe in Pak because terrorists will never target cricket

Worlds tiniest walking robot unveiled in Japan

Momail and JAJAH Introduce Innovative Calling Option

Tibetan kids in Dharamshala attend special classes on Buddhism

Teaching classes are being organised for Tibetan kids in Dharamshala with an aim to inculcate values of Buddhism.

Dharamshala, Jan 23 : Teaching classes are being organised for Tibetan kids in Dharamshala with an aim to inculcate values of Buddhism.

Volunteers in the hilly Buddhist town have taken it on them to revive the Tibetan Buddhist values, traditions and culture that seem to be fading away.

Regular teaching classes are held in religious organizations, monasteries to inspire the children to follow the footsteps of their spiritual leader Dalai Lama.

Tenzin Dawa, by delivering these spiritual lectures is trying to bring out the Buddhism from seclusion to every day life.

"It is very important that you should become a good seichi (holy) being (meaning a good human being) or should have a very warm heart," said Tenzin Dawa, a Tibetan teacher.

According to religious heads, in the existing educational curriculum, there is hardly any place for spiritual teachings, which are necessary to influence the thought process of children.

During the winter vacations, 40 to 50 children from different schools of North India are attending the lectures on Buddhism.

Lectures will be delivered for a month and half most of the students attending the lectures are in the age group of 9 to 13 years.

"This is our tradition to study Tibetan Buddhism philosophy. Since we are Tibetan, it is very important to know these things," said Jamyang, a student.

Till date, the Dalai Lama has set up over 200 monasteries in 54 different settlements in India and other parts of the world.

More than 20,000 monks study Buddhism in these monasteries every year.

An estimated 134,000 Tibetans live in exile, a majority of them in India and Nepal.

ANI

October 13, 2008

October 12, 2008

October 11, 2008

October 10, 2008

October 9, 2008

October 8, 2008