The Dalai Lama: Helping Us Be Who We Are IRVING GREENBERG Special to The Jewish Times IV hen the invitation came to join a group of Jewish scholars in a dialogue with the Dalai Lama and Tibetan Buddhist monks, I asked only one question: Was this a missionary group seeking legitimation (as the Unification Church and Jews for Jesus do) to gain access to go after more Jews? The answer was no. The Dalai Lama has encouraged Jews who approach him to deepen their Jewishness. "The task of a true teacher," he has said, "is to help people become what they are." Ever since 1959 when the Chinese in- vaded Tibet, I had felt an instinctive sym- pathy for the Tibetans. The invaders crushed Tibet's monastic orders and destroyed its temples. Over one million people were killed in the course of the con- quest; the Dalai Lama and 150,000 others went into exile near Dharmasala, India. This is what the destruction of the Thmple must have been like in Jewish history. In 1959, the Dalai Lama was a young man being raised as a sheltered and studious God-king. Now, he was a mature scholar, the focus of the religious and political hopes of his people yearning to be free. He had become a seasoned dip- lomat, traveling the world, pleading the case for Tibetan survival with heads of government. The Dalai Lama's career summoned up a strong Zionist association — Theodor Herzl must have lived his life the same way. Without an army, without official standing or governmental recognition, Herzl had pursued heads of state seeking the right for his people to go back. All he asked was to give his people a chance to restore their own culture in their own homeland. How often had his requests been ignored by those who respect only entrenched power? How many times had the founder of my national liberation movement been dismissed? , Rabbi Irving Yitz Greenberg is president and co-founder of CLAL - The National Jewish Center for Learning and Leader- ship, an organization dedicated to educa- tion for Jewish leadership and to the building of a strong community based on the spirit of Clal Yisrael. showed us an extraordinary model of humanness. Neither bitter nor shattered by the extended grief of exile, he radiates an inner serenity and kindness. He is a man of peace who calls on all religions to express themselves and to find common ground in helping fellow human beings and serving as agents of healing — without denying their distinctive value and teachings. About Judaism: As we reflected on Tibet's agony and struggle for survival, we also appreciated the wisdom of Jewish covenantal ethics. Judaism also dreams of a Messianic age when life and peace will triumph, when "they shall beat their swords into plowshares . . . and shall not learn war anymore" (Isaiah 2:4). But the Halachah insists that until the Messiah comes, it is an ethical necessity to have an army. There are wars of self-defense which are a mitzvah to fight, others which are per- mitted, and yet others which are wrong and forbidden: As long as the world is unredeemed, one is required to meet its strategic and security challenges. Jewry must become involved in the morally equivocal tasks of government and warfare, of political ac- tion and economic life. Good people must act until the final perfection — lest they escape to spirituality now, but hand over the world to the forces of evil, poverty and degradation. We came to see that the Tibetans had taken a spiritually heroic step in becom- ing pacifists but they had been guilty of premature Messianism. During our meeting with the Dalai Lama, as we struggled to explain and he to understand, I was moved by the lesson that the Dalai Lama was teaching us. Imagine if the spiritually seeking Jews who came to him — both those at the re- cent meeting and those actively involved with Buddhism — had hidden their Jewishness out of ignorance and aliena- tion. He and his people would have been denied the Jewish witness which they needed in order to live. The deeper lesson was that whenever the Jewish people is faithful to its own religion, whenever it shares its experience fully with others, it is truly "a light unto the nations." In exile and in weakness, in Israel and with power, that is our calling In the words of the an- cient promise to Abraham, the first Jew: "Through you all the families of the earth Encountering the Dalai Lama "opened us to the other will be blessed." (Genesis 12, 3). faith's integrity." Honestly, increased understanding be- tween Tibetan Buddhism and Judaism was very low on my priorities. I am preoc- cupied by the escalating surliness be- tween traditional and liberal Judaism and the appalling ignorance among Jews about each other's lives and teachings. Nor did I expect to learn that much religiously. But how could anyone with a Jewish memory ignore the Tibetans? I was wrong about the learning. The Dalai Lama taught us a lot about Buddhism, even more about menschlich- keit, and most of all about Judaism. As all true dialogue accomplishes, this encounter with the Dalai Lama opened us to the other faith's integrity. Equally valuable, the encounter reminded us of neglected aspects of ourselves, of ele- ments in Judaism that are overlooked un- til they are reflected back to us in the mirror of the Other. We need this instruction. To be faithful to its role as an agent of universal redemption, Judaism must synthesize and unify East and West, not join one or the other tradition in parochial fashion. Only in this way can Judaism avoid the 19th-century Christian missionary error of serving as the agent of modern Western culture at the cost of religious in- tegrity and the Biblical message. About menschlichkeit: Paradoxically enough, for someone who is revered as divine by his own people, the Dalai Lama THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 27