Tsering Namgyal, a journalist based in Minneapolis, was jolted by the Dalai Lama's talk to 150 Chinese students this month at the University of Minnesota. Writing at Religion Dispatches, he says:
"Midway through the conversation, His Holiness, much to their surprise, told them 'as far as socio-political beliefs are concerned, I consider myself a Marxist ... But not a Leninist,' he clarified."USA TODAY — Faith and Reason
'I'm a Marxist,' Dalai Lama tells Chinese students
Cathy Lynn Grossman | USA TODAY
so, was Marx a closet Buddhist?
ReplyDeleteMarx was against normative religion, as the Dalai Lama observes later in the post.
ReplyDeleteAt their spiritual core all religions and wisdom traditions are essentially the same.
On the normative surface, religions are means of social control, and eventually most devolve into businesses.
Marxism is a humanistic religion. Buddhism is a transcendental religion. Both are non-theistic, and core Marxism is a lot more dogmatic than core Buddhism.