Dalai Lama
His Holiness the
14th Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, has been selected as the first recipient of
Hofstra's international Guru Nanak Interfaith Prize, Hofstra President
Stuart Rabinowitz announced today.
The $50,000 prize, which recognizes efforts at interfaith dialogue,
will be presented to His Holiness on November 18, 2008 in India by a
delegation including Hofstra officials, the family of Sardar Ishar Singh
Bindra, which established the prize at Hofstra, and former Indian Prime
Minister I.K. Gujral, a member of the Guru Nanak Interfaith Prize Honorary
Committee. The Dalai Lama has agreed to visit Hofstra in the near future.
"There are few missions as important for a university as the
advancement of understanding among all peoples," said Hofstra University
President Stuart Rabinowitz. "Awarding this prize allows us to recognize
those who bring together people of all faiths, which now, more than ever,
is important for the peace and prosperity of our world. We are pleased to
bestow Hofstra's inaugural Guru Nanak Interfaith Prize on a person as
worthy and renowned as His Holiness the Dalai Lama."
Tashi Wangdi, the Dalai Lama's U.S. representative, accepted the prize
today via telephone on behalf of His Holiness during a news conference at
Hofstra. "We are very happy that this award has been given to His Holiness
in recognition of his many years of promoting interfaith dialogue and
understanding," he said.
T.J. Bindra, son of Ishar Bindra, said, "We are immensely pleased with
the selection. There could be no more deserving candidate than His
Holiness, and to me what stands out most is that Guru Nanak stood for
brotherhood, peace and wonderful relations between communities, and I think
His Holiness personifies that the best."
The prize, to be awarded every other year, was established in 2006
through an endowment from the family of Ishar Singh Bindra to be given by
Hofstra University to individuals or organizations that have worked to
facilitate the religious dialogue that is indispensable to reducing
religious conflict. The prize was named for the founder of the Sikh
religion and was meant to encourage understanding of various religions and
to build bridges between faith communities. Guru Nanak believed that all
humans were born equal regardless of skin color, ethnicity, nationality and
gender.
There were 75 individuals and groups nominated for the first prize,
representing interfaith efforts in Africa, Asia, Europe and the Middle
East, as well as throughout the United States and Canada.
The establishment of the prize by Mr. Bindra's family followed the
creation of Hofstra's Department of Religion in 2005 and the endowment of
chairs in Sikh, Catholic and Jewish studies. The Sikh chair -- the Sardarni
Kuljit Kaur Bindra Chair in Sikh Studies, named for the family matriarch --
was also established through an endowment from Mr. Bindra's family. Both
gifts are intended to increase understanding of different religions,
including Sikhism, a world religion with more than 20 million adherents.
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SOURCE Hofstra University