about
Victoria Ewart
The Maitreya Loving Kindness Tour
Victoria Ewart
Director, 2001–2015
The Maitreya Loving Kindness Tour – which became known simply as the Relic Tour – travelled the world between 2001 and 2015, displaying a collection of the relics of enlightened Buddhist practitioners, including the historical Buddha of our time, Shakyamuni. When it began, it was the only touring collection of its kind.
The relics were displayed almost every weekend of those fifteen years at 868 public events in cities in sixty-eight countries on six continents, from Australia to Argentina, from Kalmykia to Kenya from Iceland to Zimbabwe.
We estimate that some two and a half million visitors were blessed by the relics – as well as the millions more who saw them on TV, on social media, and in newspapers and magazines.
The tour was held under the auspices of Lama Zopa Rinpoche, the spiritual director of the worldwide Tibetan Buddhist organisation the Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition.
The tour was an offshoot of a heart project of Rinpoche’s to build monumental statues of Maitreya Buddha in Bodhgaya and Kushinagar, in India. Maitreya – from the Sanskrit, maitri, which means “loving kindness” – is the next buddha to appear in this aeon of one thousand buddhas. This follows the Tibetan tradition of building statues of the future buddha, thus creating the cause to hasten his appearance in the world.
The relics will be enshrined at the heart of these statues.
THE BOOK
A few years after the Relic Tour began and its popularity was evident, Rinpoche asked me to compile a book about it. He said to ask Tibetan lamas to explain the meaning and benefit of relics and to collect personal stories from both the visitors and the relic managers – I worked with over thirty of them throughout the tour – showing how they’d been affected by the relics.
The stories speak for themselves.
THE DISPLAY OF RELICS
The touring collections consisted of 7,458 individual relics from seventy-one Buddhist masters (as well as unidentified holy beings) including four of Shakyamuni Buddha offered by His Holiness the Dalai Lama, and even some of the previous Buddha, Kasyapa. The Buddhist traditions of India, Nepal, China, Korea, Thailand, and Tibet were represented.
There were relics of great Indians such as Ananda, Nagarjuna, Padmasambhava, and Yeshe Tsogyal; Tibetans such as Marpa, Milarepa, and Tsong Khapa; and contemporary masters such as the Sixteenth Karmapa, Dudjom Rinpoche, Kalu Rinpoche, the Lawudo Lama (Kunsang Yeshe, the previous incarnation of Lama Zopa Rinpoche), Lama Thubten Yeshe, and Geshe Lama Konchog. During the events, we played video footage from Geshe-la’s cremation in 2001 at Kopan Monastery in Kathmandu, Nepal, that showed small pearls of many colours being collected from among the ashes.
BEYOND ORDINARY
Although the display of relics was overtly Buddhist, the events seemed to transcend religion. They attracted all kinds of people, from many different backgrounds and beliefs – it seemed to me that the majority of the two and a half million visitors worldwide were not Buddhist.
I was astonished by what I witnessed during the fifteen years of the tour. Initially sceptical of the power of relics, I developed genuine faith by observing people respond to the relics with humility and openness, no matter what they believed in, their open minds allowed them to receive blessings.
Buddhists, non-Buddhists, sceptics, Christians, Hindus, scientists – all have been touched by these manifestions of enlightened mind.
The power of the relics was accessible by anyone. It was universal. For me, this was the true miracle of the tour.
All profits from book sales will be donated to
Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s charitable projects.