In a message dated 10/22/01 6:43:14 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


> LOL, so what did richard say, paul?
>
> Admittedly this is secondhand, but he apparently appealed to those in the
crowd to embrace bin Laden and to forgive him and his band of terrorists. We
should reach out with kindness to this killers of civilians and invite them
to join us at our table.

This is from a Richard Gere website:
New York (ABCNEWS.com) b Richard Gere, who is deeply devoted to the
teachings
of the Dalai Lama, says the best way for Americans to deal with the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks is with "the medicine of love and compassion.""In a
situation like this, of course you identify with everyone who's suffering,"
the actor told ABCNEWS Radio in an exclusive interview. But, he said, we must
also think about "the terrorists who are creating such horrible future lives
for themselves because of the negativity of this karma. If you see it from a
much wider point of view, we're all in this together. We're all intimately
interconnected in all of these actions." Gere was in New York on Tuesday to
help celebrate the release of Good Life, Good Death, a book by Rinpoche
Nawang Gehlek, a Buddhist lama, or teacher. The event was planned before the
Sept. 11 terror attacks, and included performances from Paul Simon, his wife
Edie Brickell, and composer Philip Glass.Love as Medicine
One of Hollywood's most vocal advocates of Buddhism, Gere stressed the
importance of compassion for everyone b even terrorists. "It's all of our
jobs to keep our minds as expansive as possible," said Gere, star of such
movies as Runaway Bride, Pretty Woman, and Primal Fear. "If you can see them
[the terrorists] as a relative who's dangerously sick and we have to give
them medicine, and the medicine is love and compassion. There's nothing
better." Gere said he was on his way to a Buddhist retreat in Massachusetts
on the day of the attacks, and arrived just after the attack on the World
Trade Center began. "I got there about 10 o'clock, and when I arrived there,
everyone was in a state because the first tower had been hit," he said.
"Within a few minutes, the second tower had been hit and it was, um,
extraordinary chaos. An enormous amount of tears and a lot of compassion and
suffering was being generated there in this retreat." This isn't the first
time Gere has publicly advocated using love to deal with international
incidents. At the 1993 Oscars, he asked the audience and the millions
watching the awards ceremony on television to send "love and truth" to
then-Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping to persuade him to pull Chinese troops from
Tibet.

bDavid Blaustein

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