BC woman alleges Kamrapa Lama sexually assaulted, made her pregnant

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Richmond BC woman Vikki Hui Xin Han alleges in her petition in the BC Supreme Court that the Karmapa Lama, who is the second highest Buddhist monk after the Dalai Lama, sexually assaulted her in 2017 at a New York monastery where she was meditating to become a nun

The Canadian Bazaar

VANCOUVER: Claiming that she was in a `marriage-like’ relationship with the Karmapa Lama and got pregnant when he sexually assaulted her in 2017, a Canadian woman is suing the second highest-ranking Buddhist monk for spousal support.

The British Columbian Supreme Court in Vancouver on Tuesday admitted a petition by Vikki Hui Xin Han – a former Tibetan Buddhist nun – of Richmond city near here against the Karmapa Lama.

The Karmapa Lama, whose real name is Ogyen Trinley Dorje and who fled to India from Tibet in 1999, ranks second in spiritual hierarchy among Tibetan Buddhists.

The monk has denied romantic links with the woman, but acknowledged having provided her  “emotional and financial support for the benefit of the child the claimant told him was his daughter,’’ according to court documents.

The woman says she met the Karmapa Lama in person only “four times: twice very briefly in a public setting; a third time in private, when she alleges the respondent sexually assaulted her; and a fourth and final occasion, when she informed the respondent she was pregnant with his child.”

The two first met at a large puja in 2014. The experience of puja convinced the woman to become a Buddhist nun and she met the Karmapa Lama after the ceremony to seek approval to become a nun, say the court documents.

In October 2016, the woman says, she began a three-year, three-month meditation retreat at a New York State monastery where the Karmapa Lama came twice during her stay.

She alleges that on October 14, 2017, the Karmapa Lama sexually assaulted her in her monastery room.

When she came to know that she is pregnant, she says she met him in the presence of his bodyguards and told him that she was pregnant with his child. Initially, he denied responsibility, but gave her his email address and a cellphone number, also promising to “prepare some money” for her.

Abandoning her plan to become a nun when she returned to Canada, “the parties wrote in a private shorthand, sharing jokes, emojis, cartoon portraits and ‘hugs’ or ‘kisses,” say the court documents.

Before the birth of her daughter on June 19, 2018, the Karmapa Lama allegedly sent her 420,000 US dollars and 350,000 Canadian dollars to buy a home, wedding ring, etc.

Before the two stopped communicating in January 2019, he wrote to her on September 17, 2018: “Taking care of her and you are my duty for life,” say the court documents.

The case will go to trial in April next year.

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