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  • 7 months ago
Tenzin Gyatso has said on multiple occasions that he may be the “last” Dalai Lama.

But as thousands of Tibetan Buddhists gather in the northern Indian town of Dharamsala to celebrate his 90th birthday on July 6, spilling out of temples into nearby parking lots and courtyards in the Himalayan foothills, the spiritual leader of a religion whose future has been mired in uncertainty offered a more affirming message.

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00:00...
00:12...
00:17...
00:22I'm sorry, because I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
00:25But there's a lot of people that will be in the right direction.
00:30I'm sorry, but there are no more people like that.
00:33I'm sorry, but I don't think I can change the direction.
00:38I'm sorry.
00:42I have to define myself as a person.
00:48She said,
00:50She said,
00:52I love you.
00:55She said,
00:57I have to be.
01:00She's a little girl.
01:02She's a little girl.
01:04She said,
01:06I'm gonna do it.
01:08I'm gonna do it.
01:10She said,
01:12I'm gonna do it.
01:14She's a little girl.
01:16The city is a city of New York City, and the city is a city of New York City.
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