
-
Surging tourism is polluting Antarctica, scientists warn
-
Ten Hag hoping for fresh start at rebuilding Leverkusen
-
Five players to watch at the Women's Rugby World Cup
-
Suarez fills Messi void as Inter Miami beat Tigres 2-1
-
Asian markets creep up as investors await key speech
-
New Zealand spy service warns of China interference
-
Brazil police accuse Bolsonaro and son of obstructing coup trial
-
Israel approves major West Bank settlement project
-
North Carolina braces for flooding from Hurricane Erin
-
Pensioners on the frontline of Argentina's fiery politics
-
'Curly is beautiful': Tunisian women embrace natural hair
-
Sudanese lay first bricks to rebuild war-torn Khartoum
-
Newcastle host Liverpool amid Isak stand-off, Spurs test new-look Man City
-
Texas Republicans advance map that reignited US redistricting wars
-
South Africa spinner Subrayen cited for suspect action
-
Meme-lord Newsom riles Republicans with Trump-trolling posts
-
Messi ruled out of Miami's Leagues Cup quarter-final v Tigres
-
Trump raises pressure on Fed with call for governor to resign
-
Trump flirts with Ukraine security, with narrow margins
-
US sends three warships near Venezuela coast
-
Celtic held by Kairat Almaty in Champions League play-off
-
North Carolina braces for flooding from 'Enormous' Erin
-
Arsenal could hijack Spurs' bid for Palace star Eze - reports
-
Namibian Shalulile equals South African scoring record
-
PlayStation prices rise as US tariffs bite
-
Games publisher kepler on cloud nine after smash hits
-
Thirteen arrested over murders of Mexico City officials
-
Seville storms past Lyles for Lausanne 100m win
-
India test-fires nuclear-capable ballistic missile
-
Google unveils latest Pixel phones packed with AI
-
Brazil records 65 percent drop in Amazon area burned by fire
-
Threat from massive western Canada wildfire eases
-
England women's rugby coach Mitchell says World Cup favourites' tag 'irrelevant'
-
US ramps up attack on international court over Israel
-
Palace transfer targets Eze and Guehi to start in European tie
-
North Carolina coasts prepare for flooding as Erin churns offshore
-
India test-fires ballistic missile ahead of US tariff hike
-
Antarctic climate shifts threaten 'catastrophic' impacts globally
-
Tall ships sail into Amsterdam for giant maritime festival
-
Trump raises pressure on central bank, calls for Fed governor to resign
-
Woods to head PGA Tour committee to overhaul golf
-
Google packs new Pixel phones with AI
-
How Europe tried to speak Trump
-
Stock markets diverge awaiting Fed signals as tech sell-off deepens
-
Ombudsman gives Gosden another International, Derby hero Lambourn loses
-
Eurovision returns to Vienna, 11 years after Conchita Wurst triumph
-
England expects at Women's Rugby World Cup as hosts name strong side for opener
-
Marseille's Rabiot, Rowe up for sale after 'extremely violent' bust-up: club president
-
Shearer accuses Isak of pouring 'flames on fire' of Newcastle row
-
French champagne harvest begins with 'promising' outlook

'Simple monk': the Dalai Lama, in his translator's words
With his flowing red monk's robes, beaming smile and contagious laugh, the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, has been the charismatic global face of his people's cause for decades.
The Nobel Peace Prize-winning monk, Tenzin Gyatso, is expected to celebrate his 90th birthday on July 6 with huge crowds in northern India, his base since leaving his homeland fleeing Chinese troops in 1959.
While China condemns him as a rebel and separatist, the internationally recognised Dalai Lama describes himself as a "simple Buddhist monk".
Thupten Jinpa, his translator of nearly four decades, described a man who uses humour to calm, fierce intellect to debate, and combines self-discipline with tolerance of others.
"He's never deluded by being extraordinary," said Jinpa, an eminent Buddhist scholar born in Tibet.
The Dalai Lama treats those he meets in the same manner whether they are a president or a peasant, world leader or Hollywood star.
"When he's getting ready to go and see a president or a prime minister, everybody around him is all getting nervous he's just completely relaxed," said Jinpa, who is now a professor at Montreal's McGill University.
"Once I asked him how is it that he's not nervous, and he said, basically, 'the person I'm meeting is just another human being, just like me!'"
- 'Self-confidence and humility' -
Despite being revered as the 14th reincarnation of the Dalai Lama, a role stretching back more than 600 years, he does not act with a sense of superiority.
"He is one of the most self-confident people I've ever met in my life," Jinpa said.
"Self-confidence and humility generally don't go together that well, but in him, they sit beautifully."
Jinpa highlighted the Dalai Lama's ability to bring people together through his "contagious" sense of humour and famous giggling "individual laugh".
"He uses humour immediately, so he has this ability to make you feel at ease."
But the translator also described a man who applied the rigorous education and skills of philosophical debate learned as a monk to address the challenges of a complex world.
"He's gone through a formal academic training," said Jinpa, who himself studied as a monk and holds a doctorate from the University of Cambridge.
"So when he's sitting down with scientists and philosophers and thinkers in deep conversation, his ability to get to the gist, and ask the question that points towards the next challenge, is an amazing display of his focus."
Jinpa described a man who pursues an austere monastic life with "very high discipline".
"He gets up at 3:30 am and has meditation. He doesn't eat after lunch, which is one of the precepts of monastic ethics," he said. "He has always maintained this strictly."
While he was born to a farming family, the Dalai Lama grew up in Lhasa's Potala Palace, a vast building reputed to have 1,000 rooms.
Since then he has spent much of his life in a hilltop monastic complex in India's town of McLeod Ganj.
"His bedroom is actually a small corridor between two large rooms, doors on the two sides, and a three-by-six single bed attached to the wall, and next to it is a shower cubicle -- and that's it," Jinpa said.
"He has got his photographs of his gurus, teachers, above his bed -- very simple."
- 'Non-judgement' -
But the Dalai Lama balances that toughness towards himself with softness for those he meets.
"Generally when people are more pious, more disciplined, more pure, they also tend to be less tolerant," Jinpa said.
"A lot of the intolerance really comes from puritanism in the world, whether it's religious or ideology," he added.
"But again, in him, this understanding and non-judgement towards others -- and expectation of a high standard for himself -- it sits beautifully."
Jinpa added that as the holder of a centuries-old institution, the Dalai Lama places his people before himself.
"In all the negotiations that he has had with China, he has constantly made the point that the issue is not about his return, or his status," he said.
"The issue is about the Tibetan people -- there are over six million of us," said Jinpa.
"Their ability to be self-governing on the Tibetan plateau, which is their historical home, and their ability to exist with dignity as a distinct people within the People's Republic of China."
E.AbuRizq--SF-PST