Dalai Lama Schedule, Tickets & Teachings - Long Angeles & Long Beach, CA - Special Events
Khashyar | August 31, 2009
Dalai Lama’s Teachings and Speaking Schedule - Long Beach, CA - September 25 and 26
His Holiness will give teachings on The Four Noble Truths and confer the Amitabha Permission Initiation (opakmei jenang) and Medicine Buddha Initiation
Friday Sept 25, 2009:
9:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. - Teaching
2 p.m. - 4 p.m. - Teaching
Saturday Sept 26, 2009:
9:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. - Teaching
Tibetan Association of Southern California Celebrates His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s Visit to Southern California
Dates: Friday Sep. 25 & Saturday Sep.26, 2009
Location Address: Scottish Rite Cathedral
Scottish Rite - 855 Elm Ave, Long Beach, CA 90813
Website: lbscottishrite.org
Directions from teaching (LBCC): East on Ocean Blvd. Left on Elm Ave for 6 blocks.
Venue: At the beautiful Scottish Rite Cathedral in Long Beach, CA designated a historical landmark by the City of Long Beach. Less than 10 mins walk, 6 blocks from Long Beach Convention Center. FREE SHUTTLE from there to Scottish Rite Cathedral every 10 minutes provided by Long Beach Transit.
Food, Movie, Cultural Show, Dance Night, Art & Crafts Booths, Donation Raffle
Events on Fri Sept 25:
11:30 am to 2 pm: Veg or Non-Veg Lunch and Bottled Water for $8
6 pm: Movie “Dalai Lama Renaissance.” Q & A session with the Film Director, Khashyar Darvich after the movie.
Website: dalailamafilm.com
Ticket Price: $10
Presale of Movie Tickets - Buy online at Tibetan Association of Southern California’s website at socaltibs.org
Dance/Social Night: 8pm to Midnight
Ticket Price: $20
Events on Sat Sept 26:
11 am onwards: Veg or Non-Veg Lunch and Bottled Water for $8
Afternoon: Tibetan Arts and Crafts Booths
3 pm: Cultural Show featuring Special Guest Nawang Khechog - Grammy Nominee (Website: nawangkhechog.com) and hosts of local Tibetan Artists and Performers
Ticket Price: $20
Dance/Social Night: 8pm to Midnight
Ticket Price: $20
Raffle Tickets at $10 each
1st Prize: 52-inch flat screen TV
2nd Prize: Apple MACbook
3rd Prize: Apple iTouch
Winners need not be present to win. Raffle Results will be drawn on Sep 26th and uploaded to Youtube LIVE on socaltibs.org
Organized by Tibetan Association of Southern California www.socaltibs.org

Dalai Lama Visit and Screening of ‘Dalai Lama Renaissance’ Film in Taiwan Angers Chinese
Khashyar | August 31, 2009
The Chinese government wasted no time in denouncing the visit by the Dalai Lama to Taiwan this week. Their strong words and denunciation of the Nobel Prize winner and exiled leader comes on the heels of another very public and intense reaction from Chinese officials after a documentary film about the Dalai Lama entitled “Dalai Lama Renaissance,” narrated by Harrison Ford (www.DalaiLamaFilm.com), was released in theaters in Taiwan this summer, and received front page press in the Chinese language Taiwanese newspapers. The response, in both cases, indicates that China is taking a very hard stance on the issue of the Dalai Lama and Tibet and in fact may even be intensifying its response.
According to a published report on CNN, “Beijing opposes the visit in whatever form and capacity,” a spokesman for the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office said, according to Xinhua, which did not name the spokesman. “Under the pretext of religion, (the Dalai Lama) has all along been engaged in separatist activities,” he said.
China’s stance on both Taiwan and Tibet are subjects of international controversy as the Chinese government considers both countries to be a part of China despite what residents of those countries feel. And it feels the Dalai Lama is a symbol and instigator of international opinion against China as relates to Tibet. So it did not hesitate in what it sees as interference by the Dalai Lama in another of its concerns. Apparently, even a film about the Dalai Lama is not welcome in Taiwan, at least to the Chinese government.
After an overwhelmingly positive response from audiences at screenings in Taiwan, The People’s Daily, a daily newspaper and media arm of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China sharply criticized “Dalai Lama Renaissance” in an article in its online edition.
In the article posted July 14th in the People’s Daily Online entitled “Western Movies Build Grand and Perfect Image of Dalai Lama,” The People’s Daily writes: “In recent years, a wave of ‘Dalai Lama fever’ has appeared in the Western movie industry… describing the Chinese government’s peaceful liberation of Tibet as ‘cruel oppression,’ and depicting the Dalai Lama’s life in India as difficult.”
Referring to “Dalai Lama Renaissance,” the article states “The part of the movie related to the peaceful liberation of Tibet was filled with political bias, reflecting the director’s ignorance and misunderstanding of Tibet’s history… The movie transforms the Dalai Lama into an omniscient sage, reflecting a “misunderstanding” of the Dalai Lama’s image in the West…In fact, what these movies depict is just the ‘anesthesia’ given by the Dalai Lama to the West…”
Although the title of the article refers to “movies,” the article exclusively focuses on “Dalai Lama Renaissance” and tries to discredit the Producer-Director of the film, Khashyar Darvich. The writer claims that the director is a devotee of the Dalai Lama. “Director Khashyar Darvich has long boasted that he is a follower of the Dalai Lama,” he writes . He supports this assertion by referring to an interview where Darvich mentioned that he shot the film to be able to spend time with the Dalai Lama.
“It’s interesting that the Chinese Communist Party refers to me as a follower of the Dalai Lama,” Darvich responded. “Although I respect the Dalai Lama as a man of peace, just as the Nobel Peace Prize Committee did by awarding him the Nobel Peace prize, and as do most governments around the world, I am not a Dalai Lama groupie. When I began the film, I was not very familiar with the Dalai Lama. I think that his actions, and the respect that he garners around the world, speaks for itself.”
The fact that the Chinese Communist Party’s main media organization has chosen to criticize the film may be a reaction to the very positive press the “Dalai Lama Renaissance” received in the Chinese language press in Taiwan, where it premiered in front of sold-out audiences in Taipei on June 1. And it may be an attempt to counteract any effect on readers in mainland China, who often have access to Chinese language news from Taiwan, particularly since the reviews and articles in major Chinese language newspapers in Taiwan have been very positive.
Taiwan’s best-selling weekly newspaper, E Weekly, gave the film a rating of 82, which is the highest rating a film has received in the past year from its Taiwanese theatrical distributor, Blockbuster of Taiwan (no relation to Blockbuster video stores in the U.S). According to Bockbuster of Taiwan, E Weekly regularly gives films far lower ratings. FTV, a television station in Taiwan, also reported that that the premiere of the film in Taiwan was very successful, with not an empty seat in the cinema. Taipei Time wrote of the documentary, “the film rapidly grabs hold of you… an insightful documentary…”
So the reaction by the Chinese government to the planned visit by the Dalai Lama to Taiwan seems to be an extension of this anti-Dali Lama bias. Of course, Taiwan and spokespeople for the Dalai Lama make it clear that his visit to Taiwan is only to show support for victims of the recent Typhoon Morakot which hit Taiwan on August 8th and unleashed floods and mudslides. More than 400 people were killed.
This latest response has not stopped Producer-Director Darvich from working to get a screening of the film in mainland China itself. It will be interesting to see how the Chinese respond to that if they do not even want the Dali Lama himself, or his words and image on a film, seen in the nation of Taiwan.
There will also be a special screening of “Dalai Lama Renaissance” during the Dalai Lama’s visit to Long Beach, CA on September 25.
For more information on the film, go to www.DalaiLamaFilm.com.

Dalai Lama Renaissance Film chosen for special screening during the Dalai Lama’s Sept 25-26 visit to the Los Angeles area/ Long Beach
Khashyar | August 23, 2009
‘Dalai Lama Renaissance,’ the award-winning documentary film narrated by Harrison Ford, has been chosen for a special screening during the Dalai Lama’s Sept 25-26 visit to the Los Angeles area, by one of the coordinators of the Dalai Lama’s visit.
The Tibetan Association of Southern California will screen ‘Dalai Lama Renaissance’ on the first night of the Dalai Lama’s public talk and teachings in Long Beach, CA on Friday September 25, at the Scottish Rite Cathedral in Long Beach.
Producer-Director Khashyar Darvich, as well as Tibetan special guests, will appear after the screening for a Q&A with the audience.
The screening of the documentary film, which Darvich has offered as a fundraiser for the Tibetan Association of Southern California, follows criticism of the film by the Chinese Communist Party, after ‘Dalai Lama Renaissance’ received front page press in Taiwan after it opened theatrically in that Chinese-speaking country.
In July, the People’s Daily, a daily newspaper and media arm of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, quickly and sharply criticized ‘Dalai Lama Renaissance’ in an article in its online edition.
Darvich has offered to travel to Mainland China and screen ‘Dalai Lama Renaissance,’ with the intention of listening to the views of the Chinese People and Government, and to foster a constructive dialogue.
For more information about the Long Beach, CA screening of ‘Dalai Lama Renaissance,” please visit www.DalaiLamaFilm.com

Recent reviews and press for the Dalai Lama Renaissance Documentary Film
Khashyar | August 2, 2009
Recent press review quotes for “Dalai Lama Renaissance”:
“Dalai Lama Renaissance is an interesting portrayal of human ego pitted against compassion and altruism, exemplifying the very essence of the issues facing the world today.” - Todd Mayville, Elephant Journal
“Fire up this DVD and prepare to be amazed… The film has a certain persuasive power… Hilarious.” - Ross Robertson, EnlightenNext Magazine
“A powerful cinematic documentary… A very moving documentary… unexpected and powerful… Long after it ends, the totality of the documentary lingers, as one contemplates the fact that, if every human being decides to act in the best interest of human kind, we can change the world.” -Stan Robinson, Screen Scene/Arizona Weekly
“The film rapidly grabs hold of you… There is plenty of humor… [a] top-notch comedy… A journey of self-discovery… The lessons of Dalai Lama Renaissance apply just as much to the audience watching this insightful documentary” - Ian Bartholomew, Taipei Times
“Saw a great documentary on dvd the other night, ‘Dalai Lama Renaissance.’ If you haven’t seen it, you should.’ - SeriousChedder.com
“A memorable gathering of elites… an inspiring documentary which depicts the Dalai Lama philosophy of peace… Full of meaning… Powerful.” Li Zhao Yang, Pots Newspaper - Taiwan
“A big spiritual harvest for everyone…” - Qiu Zu, China Times, Taiwan
“No empty seat at the premiere of the documentary ‘Dalai Lama Renaissance… The Taipei premiere has attracted a full house and many people were touched after watching the film.” - FTV Television, Taiwan
“Dalai Lama Renaissance is full of historical significance… [Harrison] Ford’s strong, deep voice adds much color to the documentary” - Zou Nian Zu , Liberty Times Newspaper, Taiwan
“HARRISON FORD SKIS WITH THE DALAI LAMA: Harrison Ford, Jackson Hole’s favorite ski son, is riding the chairlift with the Dalai Lama as Harrison is narrating the new film ‘Dalai Lama Renaissance.’ The film premiered in Taiwan and got rave reviews from the Taiwanese Press. China was immediately critical of the film and of the West’s depiction of what has been going on in Tibet. The producer/director Khashyar Darvich has offered to do a screening of the film in China with a question and answer session afterwards. No word on when China offered Khashyar to ski off of steep cliff or to go shush himself in response.” - The Ski Channel Television Network














































