The Dalai Lama Foundation

May 2009 News from
The Dalai Lama Foundation

Women of Tibet: A Quiet Revolution, wins 2009 Emmy® Award

Events and Happenings

Join us in conversation online

You may also read this newsletter online, or download a copy in PDF format.

To terminate your subscription, just reply to this email message putting the word UNSUBSCRIBE in the subject line of your response. See more details at the end of this newsletter.

Women of Tibet: A Quiet Revolution, wins 2009 Emmy® Award

Emmy statuette
June Zandona, Rosemary Rawcliffe, Miriam Telles, Tsering Dorjee Bawa, Peter McCandless

Outstanding achievement in television

An Emmy statuette was presented by The National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences on Saturday, May 16, 2009 at an Emmy Black Tie Gala at the Palace Hotel — San Francisco, California.

The Women Of Tibet Film Project

The Women of Tibet film project consists of three one-hour documentary films revealing potent historical moments of past and contemporary Tibet. The films touch on themes of women’s endurance and their struggle for freedom, social justice, and human rights.  Set against the stunning backdrop of the Himalayas, the trilogy displays the strength and perseverance of a people dedicated to the principles of peace, non-violence, and compassion.

Women of Tibet: Gyalyum Chemo - The Great Mother and Women of Tibet: A Quiet Revolution are broadcast on national PBS television, and after garnering seven 2008 Silver and Bronze TELLY awards and the Insight Award for Excellence are now available on DVD.

Women of Tibet: A Quiet Revolution is a 2009 EMMY® winner!

Filmmaker Rosemary Rawcliffe is a founding member of The Dalai Lama Foundation and we are happy to be counted among the supporters of this important work.

The Films

Emmy statuetteGyalyum Chemo, The Great Mother, explores the life of Dekyi Tsering, the mother of His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama and the Great Mother Archetype.  The film interweaves the story of two Mothers - a Universal Great Mother that lives within each of us and Dekyi Tsering, an ordinary village woman who became known as Gyalyum Chemo, the Great Mother of the Tibetan nation. Dekyi Tsering's story is uniquely Tibetan, yet it shares the same core qualities of all universal Great Mother stories: loss and resurrection, love and sacrifice, and the courage to survive.

Emmy statuetteA Quiet Revolution chronicles the story of one of the great movements of nonviolent resistance in modern history. In March 1959, an estimated 15,000 unarmed Tibetan women took to the streets of Lhasa, the capital of Tibet, to oppose the violent occupation of their country by the Communist Chinese.  The surviving exiled elders are the last generation of women left to tell the story and to transmit the cultural legacy they carry.  These women, having survived decades in prison and perilous escapes across the Himalayas, along with their daughters and granddaughters, today have become the architects and builders of a new Tibet in exile. 

Women of Tibet: The Sacred Marriage (formerly called Women, Wisdom & Spirit) is currently in production and actively seeking completion funding.

Emmy statuetteThe Sacred Marriage explores the radical changes women and men experience on the quest to become fully realized human beings.  Forced by the demands of modern living we delve into what it means to follow a spiritual path while reexamining traditional roles.  This film seeks to shed light on what happens when two primal forces begin to work together to create a more harmonious and peaceful world for all in the face of 21st century challenges.

“Peace starts within each one of us.  When we have inner peace we can be at peace with those around us.”   - His Holiness the Dalai Lama

To learn more about the films, and about His Holiness the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan people’s tireless pursuit of cultural survival and self-determination, visit the Women of Tibet website. 

Jim “Sky” Schuyler the Foundation’s Chief Technology Officer recently had the opportunity to interview Rosemary Rawcliffe and discuss her films in detail — listen to the full interview in Sky’s blog.


The Dalai Lama Foundation was formed with the goal of exploring and presenting a secular approach to peace and ethics, meaning an approach not grounded in any specific religion or ethnicity. The Dalai Lama specifically emphasized this as we were formulating our first programs. Of course we support a number of projects related to Tibet, but we try to approach them from the secular standpoint. Women of Tibet illustrates many principles that are applicable regardless of where you may be located in the world. The universal principles of human rights are applicable everywhere. Think about how this may apply in your own country or community.

Top


Events and Happenings

Wanting to keep up with current events? Don’t forget to check the foundation's Events page to find events and happenings throughout the world.

From there you could keep up with the travels and exhibit openings of The Missing Peace Project which will be opening October 9, 2009 – January 12, 2010 in Miami, Florida at the Frost Art Museum.

If you are in the New York City area before June 19th, 2009 be sure to visit the Tibet House to see the exhibition Delhi to Manhattan, Photographs by Paul Blackthorne.

Top


Join us in conversation online

We’re on Facebook: Visit our Facebook fan page
The Missing Peace also has a Facebook fan page
Or follow us on Twitter @DLFOUND

Top

You may change your newsletter subscription selections at the newsletter page on the website - feel free to forward this newsletter to others - your friends can also subscribe at the website.

This email was sent to you at .
You can reach us by email at info@dlfound.org.
The newsletter editor can be reached at neditor@dlfound.org

The Dalai Lama Foundation is on the web at www.dalailamafoundation.org

To terminate your subscription, just reply to this email message putting the word UNSUBSCRIBE in the subject line of your response. You must send your reply from the email account that you wish to remove from our mailing list.