Pace University DigitalCommons@Pace Honors College Theses Pforzheimer Honors College 8-1-2006 The Khampa Uprising: Tibetan Resistance Against the Chinese Invasion Yuliya Babayeva Pace University Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.pace.edu/honorscollege_theses Part of the Asian History Commons Recommended Citation Babayeva, Yuliya, "The Khampa Uprising: Tibetan Resistance Against the Chinese Invasion" (2006). Honors College Theses. Paper 31. http://digitalcommons.pace.edu/honorscollege_theses/31 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Pforzheimer Honors College at DigitalCommons@Pace. It has been accepted for inclusion in Honors College Theses by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@Pace. For more information, please contact
[email protected]. The Khampa Uprising: Tibetan Resistance against the Chinese Invasion Yuliya Babayeva History 499 Dr. Reagin May 8, 2006 Babayeva 1 To impose revolution on a functioning society is like burying a man alive. In such a case one man’s conception of revol ution inevitably becomes another man’s destruction. -- Dawa Norbu Dawa Norbu’s remark is the perfect way of explaining the revolution that occurred in Tibet in the 1950s. It is the objective of this paper to recount the particulars of an event sparsel y written about and not widely -known: The Khampa uprising in Tibet. The following is a study of the mobilization of a lower class peasant and farmer population into a tactical guerilla army, which stood up to a much more powerful nation without reservation , due to their fervent religious beliefs and intense sense of nationalism. This study also aims to identify the historical and political claims both China and Tibet presented to the region in question, as well as the foreign nations’ reactions to the strug gle that ensued from this heated debate.