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  • Chance Meeting

    http://www.fresnobee.com/221/story/572315.html

    Ch ance meeting
    A Freeno State professor recalls his long-ago visit with the Dalai Lama.
    By Doug Hoagland / The Fresno Bee
    05/02/08 16:59:26
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    Retiring professor Dickran Kouymjian met the Dalai Lama almost
    50 years ago, when both men were in their 20s.


    Fresno State professor Dickran Kouymjian met with the exiled Dalai
    Lama of Tibet long before the famous spiritual leader rocketed into
    the news on the shouts of protestors worldwide.

    Thousands of angry people, including many in San Francisco last month,
    have railed against China's crackdown in Tibet.

    These events stirred memories for Kouymjian, whose trek across the
    Middle East in green Bermuda shorts brought him face to face with the
    Dalai Lama nearly 50 years ago. The young Armenian-American carried in
    his rucksack a blue-and-white seersucker suit that he would wear
    during their brief meeting in 1959 in India. The Dalai Lama, a
    Buddhist monk who is both the exiled political and spiritual leader of
    Tibet, wore burgundy robes.

    Both men were in their 20s. "It was an adventure, and yes, yes, yes, I
    wanted it," Kouymjian said of his trip. "I wanted to see things. I
    wanted to be in the action."

    The Dalai Lama, who fled Tibet a few months before Kouymjian met him,
    had taken up exile in India, where he lives today. He had yet to
    become a figure who regularly confers with popes and presidents and a
    Nobel Peace Prize winner.

    But even in 1959, the Dalai Lama emanated a peace and tranquillity
    that today is associated with his public persona, Kouymjian said. "I
    thought to myself, 'This is what they mean when they say
    idealist. This man is either a true spiritualist or terribly nalai
    Lama's Web site. Tibetans believe the Dalai Lamas are "enlightened
    beings" who choose reincarnation to serve humanity, according to the
    Web site. Dalai means "ocean" in Mongolian, and lama in Tibetan often
    is translated as "spiritual teacher." The title means a teacher who is
    as spiritually deep as an ocean.

    After China's invasion of Tibet in 1949, the current Dalai Lama
    assumed political power and negotiated with Chinese leaders, but fled
    to India in 1959 when China put down a Tibetan uprising, the Web site
    says.

    Chinese authorities blame the Dalai Lama for recent protests in
    Tibet. He says a "cultural genocide" is occurring in his homeland.

    The Dalai Lama's nonviolent philosophy is at odds with some youthful
    followers, Kouymjian said. "He's trying to control all these young
    Tibetans who expect him to be as militant as they are. They're not
    talking about peace and Buddhist messages of love and
    brotherhood. They want action."

    Protests in San Francisco -- and London and Paris, before that, which
    were tied to the upcoming Olympics in China -- have helped focus world
    attention on the plight of the Tibetans, Kouymjian said: "It is
    important for Western leaders to know people are concerned about
    this."

    Kouymjian, who grew up in the Midwest, was working as a freelance
    journalist when he met the Dalai Lama. After graduating from college,
    he had gone to Europe in 1958 to report on the World's Fair in
    Belgium. Next stop: Lebanon, where he worked on a master's degree. He
    later earned a doctorate. While living in Lebanon, he and his friend
    Andre Dirlik, now a retired professor from Canada's Royal Military
    College, made an overland trip to India.

    The two men hitchhiked and rode buses and trains from Lebanon across
    Syria, Turkey, Iran, Pakistan and India. Officials in the Indian
    capital of Delhi didn't give Kouymjian much hope of meeting with the
    Dalai Lama, but he persisted.

    Kouymjian said he called the Dalai Lama's representative and was
    granted an appointment after saying he had a friend who knew the Dalai
    Lama's childhood tutor -- an Austrian.

    The Dalai Lama told Kouymjian that despite China's occupation of
    Tibet, he could not hate the Chinese because he needed to love his
    fellow man: "The long and short of it, he was trying to give me a
    moral lesson about love."

    Kouymjian's traveling companion remembers the meeting with the Dalai
    Lama less significantly, calling it a lark.

    "You just try your luck, and it worked," Dirlik said. The Dalai Lama
    was courteous but not terribly charismatic, and the conversation
    wasn't profound, Dirlik said from his Montreal home. The meeting
    lasted about an hour. Dirlik said he took a photo of Kouymjian and the
    Dalai Lama.

    Kouymjian, 73, found a copy of that photo as he recently packed up his
    office. Thirty-two years after starting the Armenian Studies Program
    at California State University, Fresno, Kouymjian is retiring and
    returning to Paris, where he has lived part time since the mid-1970s.

    He savors his memory of the Dalai Lama.

    "I thought it was a great privilege to see him," Kouymjian said, "and
    he let us believe he had passed a very pleasant hour with us."

    Behind Kouymjian is a sample of the documents, books, and
    artwork the Armenian studies department has acquired.

    Kouymjian's traveling companion took a photo of Kouymjian and
    the Dalai Lama during the 1959 meeting that took place in
    India.

    The reporter can be reached at [email protected] or (559) 441-6354.
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