Dalai Lama Marks 85th Birthday With Album of Mantras

Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama talks with journalists in Geneva, Switzerland March 11, 2016. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama talks with journalists in Geneva, Switzerland March 11, 2016. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
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Dalai Lama Marks 85th Birthday With Album of Mantras

Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama talks with journalists in Geneva, Switzerland March 11, 2016. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama talks with journalists in Geneva, Switzerland March 11, 2016. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo

The Dalai Lama made a bid for music chart stardom on Monday, his 85th birthday, with the release of an album of mantras and teachings.

"Inner World" kicks off with the track "One Of My Favourite Prayers" and continues with the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader reciting meditations and sayings with accompanying music.

The record came about when musician Junelle Kunin, a student of the Dalai Lama from New Zealand, contacted him in 2015 with the idea - and much to her surprise he said yes.

"I thought I'd have to try and convince him," she told Reuters in an interview from her home in Auckland.

"That moment of recording him, my goodness I was shaking like a leaf before I went in there," she said.

Kunin did the initial recordings at the Dalai Lama's residence in Dharamsala in India.

Once back home, she worked with her husband Abraham and other musicians to produce music for the tracks.

"It's an incredible honor. But it was unbelievably, daunting like the trust and responsibility. It's immense," Abraham Kunin said.

On a promotional video for the album, when asked why he had agreed to take part, the Dalai Lama answers: "The very purpose of my life is to serve as much as I can."

The release comes five years after Patti Smith led the crowd at Britain's Glastonbury Festival singing Happy Birthday to him for his 80th.



Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve Welcomes Fifth Ranger Corps

 The new recruits, 40 women and 26 men, all from local communities within the reserve, join the existing ranger team of 180  - SPA
The new recruits, 40 women and 26 men, all from local communities within the reserve, join the existing ranger team of 180 - SPA
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Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve Welcomes Fifth Ranger Corps

 The new recruits, 40 women and 26 men, all from local communities within the reserve, join the existing ranger team of 180  - SPA
The new recruits, 40 women and 26 men, all from local communities within the reserve, join the existing ranger team of 180 - SPA

On World Wildlife Day, observed annually on March 3, the Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve officially welcomed its fifth ranger corps after their successful graduation from the reserve’s nine-week training program. The new recruits, 40 women and 26 men, all from local communities within the reserve, join the existing ranger team of 180 to further the reserve’s conservation work.
Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve is home to the Middle East’s first, and largest, female ranger corps. Of the 246 rangers at the reserve, 34% are women, well above the global average of 11%, SPA reported.
Reserve CEO Andrew Zaloumis said, "Our rangers at Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve are pivotal to us achieving the reserve’s vision and mission. These local people, from across the reserve, know its land, its flora and fauna, and its communities. They are the natural guardians of the Kingdom’s rich natural and cultural heritage."
Over 18,000 applications were received. Candidates underwent written and physical tests and multiple interviews to win a coveted place on the reserve’s ranger training program. Run by Ali Albalawi, the reserve’s capacity building and sustainable natural resource use supervisor, the nine-week program provides the essential skills required to join the ranger corps. Modules include conservation management, data collection, patrolling, cultural heritage management, tracking, fitness, self-defense, first aid and 4x4 driving.
Albalawi commented: "I take great pride in training rangers from the local community in Prince Mohammad bin Salman Reserve. When the protector comes from the same place, there is a profound sense of responsibility towards the nature they know and cherish, making them more capable of protecting and conserving it. These rangers are not just trained to perform specific tasks — they are true ambassadors of nature, and I am honored to be part of fostering this spirit that connects people to their land and their role in conserving it for future generations."
The 66 new rangers will join the 180-strong ranger force, working alongside Special Forces for Environmental Security and the Border Guard to safeguard the natural and cultural assets of the Reserve, both on land and at sea. Their duties include ecological monitoring to inform conservation strategies, supporting animal reintroductions, managing wildlife populations, and overseeing development projects to ensure compliance with environmental and social impact assessments.
The reserve invests in its people long-term, with ongoing training and career development opportunities. Rangers can rise throug