The Dalai Lama & The Death Penalty: Engaging Buddhist Ethics

The Dalai Lama & The Death Penalty: Engaging Buddhist Ethics 2025-09-07T19:37:46-06:00

The Dalai Lama
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The Dalai Lama & the Death Penalty: Compassion & Liberation

“The death penalty is pure violence, a barbaric and useless violence. Dangerous even…because it can only lead to other acts of violence…as all violence does.” – The Dalai Lama

The Dalai Lama’s Opposition to the Death Penalty

The Dalai Lama’s opposition to the death penalty is not casual opinion. It is the consistent fruit of a life rooted in compassion (karuṇā), nonviolence (ahimsa) and the deep well of Tibetan Buddhist tradition. Central to his thought is the Dharma…the Buddha’s teaching and the truth it expresses. The Dharma is not merely a collection of doctrines but a living path intended to guide beings to liberation from suffering. It is a description of the way things are…the moral and spiritual law that underlies reality itself. In this sense, the Dharma can be compared to Western concepts such as natural law in the tradition of St. Thomas Aquinas (Thomism), which understands moral truth as rooted in the very order of creation. Just as Aquinas argued that human law must be measured against natural law to ensure justice (Summa Theologiae, I–II, Q.91), the Dalai Lama insists that human systems of punishment must be measured against the Dharma’s central truth…that violence breeds suffering…while compassion and restraint lead to peace. Modern human rights traditions…from the Enlightenment to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to the International Criminal Court…also echo this recognition that human dignity is not granted by governments but inherent to human existence. For the Dalai Lama, rejecting the death penalty is not only a Buddhist teaching but a universal ethical imperative.

The Dalai Lama, The

Dharma & Buddhist Ethics

The Kangyur…the canonical scriptures of Tibetan Buddhism…grounds his vision. In the Vinaya texts, the Buddha commands disciples to abstain from killing…“A disciple of the Buddha must not intentionally deprive a living being of life, even an ant”  The Dalai Lama often appeals to this principle…arguing that respect for life cannot be selectively applied. If compassion is only extended to the innocent, it is not truly compassion. The Buddha’s prohibition reminds us that even those who have committed grave wrongs still possess life worthy of protection. To execute under the cover of law is still to kill, and to kill is to break with the Dharma (the path of liberation).

He presses this conviction:

“The death penalty fulfills a preventive function, but it is also very clearly a form of revenge. It is an especially severe form of punishment because it is so final. The human life is ended and the executed person is deprived of the opportunity to change.”

Echoes of this logic can be found in words that have been repeated across centuries of Buddhist practice…“Hatred does not cease through hatred; hatred ceases only through love. This is an eternal law.”  State executions may feel like justice, but they are ultimately the institutionalization of hatred…the belief that killing will solve killing.

Violence, Revenge & the Cycle of Suffering

The Dalai Lama’s vision rests on the conviction that people can change.

“My overriding belief is that it is always possible for criminals to improve and that by its very finality the death penalty contradicts this.”

This conviction is not misplaced optimism but a deliberate ethical stance…to deny the possibility of change is to deny human dignity itself. A society that embraces execution embraces vengeance over justice.

The Dalai Lama has carried this message into public life, writing to leaders such as the President of Mongolia:

“I have supported the abolition of the death penalty for many years and have written on many occasions to world leaders appealing to them to waive the death sentence in their countries…To take the life of a human being, which provides the precious opportunity for the being to change and develop is especially grave… does not solve the problem of crime…”

Even when asked about the execution of Saddam Hussein, he did not soften his stance:

“The death penalty may help in preventing further crimes but it is an act carried out with a revengeful motive.”

His words return to the same conclusion…executions satisfy revenge, not justice. They close the door on repentance and leave only suffering behind.

Compassion, Rehabilitation & Transformation

The Dalai Lama’s opposition is both deeply Buddhist and universally human. It grows from the Dharma but speaks across traditions. The Dharma…the Buddha’s teaching and the path it points toward…is not simply a code of belief but a way of life that rejects killing and honors compassion. At its heart is the conviction that violence, hatred and killing only deepen the cycle of suffering…while compassion, wisdom and restraint open the way to liberation and peace.

The Buddha’s prohibition against killing and his teaching that hatred cannot end hatred find practical expression in the Dalai Lama’s call to replace execution with compassion, rehabilitation and transformation.

The Dalai Lama’s witness leaves no ambiguity. The death penalty is not justice. It’s violence. It destroys lives that could be transformed. It feeds cycles of revenge instead of breaking them. His call is clear…abandon execution, embrace compassion and conform all ideas of justice to the way of liberation.

About The Rev. Dr. Jeff Hood
The Rev. Dr. Jeff Hood is a theologian, writer, and activist who has spent years ministering to people on death row. As a spiritual advisor and witness to executions, he speaks out against state violence and calls for a society rooted in justice, mercy, and the sacredness of life. You can read more about the author here.
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