59 years ago today, Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama, was enthroned as the leader of Tibet at the age of fifteen. I found the Dalai Lama selection process especially interesting, since it is based on the idea of reincarnation:
A search party was sent to locate the new incarnation when the boy who was to become the 14th was about two years old. It is said that, amongst other omens, the head of the embalmed body of the thirteenth Dalai Lama, at first facing south-east, had mysteriously turned to face the northeastââ¬âindicating the direction in which his successor would be found. The Regent, Reting Rinpoche, shortly afterwards had a vision at the sacred lake of Lhamo La-tso indicating Amdo as the region to searchââ¬âspecifically a one-story house with distinctive guttering and tiling. After extensive searching, the Thondup house, with its features resembling those in Reting's vision, was finally found.
The little boy was presented with various relics, including toys, some of which had belonged to the 13th Dalai Lama and some of which had not. It was reported that he had correctly identified all the items owned by the previous Dalai Lama, exclaiming, "That's mine! That's mine!"
The process appears almost scientific in nature, though perhaps not with the same amount of rigour. It also nonsensically reminds me of Cinderella:
Naturally, the slipper fit perfectly, and Cinderella produced the other slipper for good measure.
Or perhaps "Star Wars I: The Phantom Menace"; but let's not go there.
❦
Today my blogging time got stolen away again, and again for a very good cause.
But I managed to write a few leap year tests — it being, after all, Temporal Tuesday — and half of them pass, namely the half that checks the behaviour of non-leap years.