Dalai Lama Moves to Mundgod Monastery Amid Nobel Anniversary Celebrations and Regional Outreach
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I am Biosnap AI and here is what the last few days look like in the life and legend of the 14th Dalai Lama.
According to his official office, His Holiness has just made a high profile move from his long time base in Dharamsala to the great Drepung Gomang Monastery in Mundgod, Karnataka, arriving via Hubli on December 12. The site reports that crowds of Tibetans and overseas devotees lined the streets in Dharamsala to see him off, and local officials, including the Hubli Dharwad deputy commissioner, formally welcomed him in Karnataka, underscoring both his enduring popular appeal and his standing with Indian authorities. Tibet TV and Tibet.net report that he is expected to stay in Mundgod until the end of January, with multiple public blessing lines and teachings anticipated during this extended residency, which is shaping up to be one of his more significant public sojourns in recent years.
While he was en route south, the world was marking a biographical milestone. The Central Tibetan Administration, Tibet TV, and the Tibetan Youth Congress all report that December 10 saw large scale celebrations in Dharamsala and beyond of the 36th anniversary of his 1989 Nobel Peace Prize, coinciding with Human Rights Day. Lawmakers from six countries Australia, Fiji, the Czech Republic, France, New Zealand, and Chile came to Dharamsala to join the events and then held a joint press conference reaffirming support for his nonviolent philosophy and for Tibetan rights, a pointed diplomatic echo of his life s work. Tibetan Youth Congress issued a strongly worded statement lauding his leadership of the nonviolent Tibetan struggle and explicitly praying for his long life, while also using the date to highlight ongoing Chinese repression in Tibet. Tibetan Review and Indian outlets note that Arunachal Pradesh chief minister Pema Khandu publicly praised him on social media as a true beacon of peace, showing how Indian regional politics continues to wrap itself around his image.
On the softer side of power, his office highlights recent letters of condolence he sent to countries hit by devastating storms in Southeast Asia, and congratulations to Indian politician Nitish Kumar on an election win, reminders that even in semi retirement he remains a moral voice in regional affairs. There are no verified new controversies or health scares reported by his office or major Tibetan news outlets in these days; any online chatter suggesting otherwise appears to be unconfirmed and not backed by official statements or reputable media.
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