Face TV screening exclusive interview with Dalai Lama
Face TV screening exclusive interview with Dalai Lama
When the Dalai Lama, the spiritual head of Tibetan Buddhism, visited New Zealand recently he granted one formal television interview – to Face TV.
The resulting 45 minute special, “The Meeting of the Minds” will screen on Face TV (Sky channel 83 and UHF41 in Auckland) on July 24 at 8.30pm.
There were three reasons – noted New Zealand theologian Sir Lloyd Geering, programme maker and interviewer Noel Cheer and the diversity and public broadcasting nature of Face TV.
Face TV CEO Jim Blackman says the combination of the Dalai Lama and Sir Lloyd as his interviewer, proved to be a real match.
Sir Lloyd, now 95 and Professor Emeritus of religious studies at Victoria University in Wellington, has embraced controversy in his time even being charged with heresy in the late 1960s for his views. The Dalai Lama showed a matching sharp wit and sense of humour during their meeting.
“I am only sorry that I didn’t have my camera on me when, after the recording was over, the Dalai Lama and Sir Lloyd walked off the set hand in hand,” Blackman says.
When His Holiness, as the Dalai Lama is known, visited Dunedin, Christchurch and Auckland on a three day tour] his three public talks and one Buddhist teaching were sold out.
Face TV interviewer
Noel Cheer, renowned for his longer format interviews with
some of New Zealand’s biggest names, had heard the Dalai
Lama was heading to New Zealand to pay respects to an old
friend in Dunedin and suggested to his Face TV colleagues
that they pitch to do the interview.
The University of
Otago chipped in with a venue and its facilities, following
His Holiness holding the Dunedin meeting there.
For a while it was on again and off again, but the combination of Sir Lloyd and Face TV’s reputation for reaching out to the many nationalities that make up New Zealand society and giving the often marginalised a voice, won through.
The result is a unique, in depth conversation with the man who has dedicated his life to the promotion of basic human values or secular ethics in the interest of human happiness, the fostering of inter-religious harmony and the preservation of Tibet's Buddhist culture - a culture of peace and non-violence.
Face is available for viewing by all domestic SKY subscribers on channel 083 & UHF 41 in Auckland
Face TV- Bringing you the best in public service broadcasting
ENDS