Protests in Tibet and Separatism
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Is the Free Tibet Movement a Lost Cause?
City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works Capstones Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism Fall 12-15-2017 Is the Free Tibet movement a lost cause? Tsering D. Gurung Cuny Graduate School of Journalism How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gj_etds/236 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] Is the Free Tibet movement a lost cause? China’s growing economic influence, internecine rivalries, and over-reliance on the West have hurt the decades-old movement In mid-October, on the day before the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China opened in Beijing, some 60 Tibetans gathered in front of the steel-gray facade of the Chinese Consulate in Midtown Manhattan. Waving the blue-and-yellow striped flag of Tibet, which is banned in China, they chanted for Tibet to be freed from nearly 70 years of Chinese rule. “We are here to voice our opinions, to express our concerns, not that they are going to listen, but we have to keep trying,” said Sonam Wangdu,75, a leading activist. Tibetans have been mounting such protests around the world since China first occupied Tibet in 1950. After a failed uprising in 1959, the Dalai Lama, leader of the Tibetan people, fled to India, where he has been based since. Tens of thousands of Tibetans followed him into exile, slowly spreading around the world and starting a movement that gradually soared to global prominence. -
Tibet Under Chinese Communist Rule
TIBET UNDER CHINESE COMMUNIST RULE A COMPILATION OF REFUGEE STATEMENTS 1958-1975 A SERIES OF “EXPERT ON TIBET” PROGRAMS ON RADIO FREE ASIA TIBETAN SERVICE BY WARREN W. SMITH 1 TIBET UNDER CHINESE COMMUNIST RULE A Compilation of Refugee Statements 1958-1975 Tibet Under Chinese Communist Rule is a collection of twenty-seven Tibetan refugee statements published by the Information and Publicity Office of His Holiness the Dalai Lama in 1976. At that time Tibet was closed to the outside world and Chinese propaganda was mostly unchallenged in portraying Tibet as having abolished the former system of feudal serfdom and having achieved democratic reforms and socialist transformation as well as self-rule within the Tibet Autonomous Region. Tibetans were portrayed as happy with the results of their liberation by the Chinese Communist Party and satisfied with their lives under Chinese rule. The contrary accounts of the few Tibetan refugees who managed to escape at that time were generally dismissed as most likely exaggerated due to an assumed bias and their extreme contrast with the version of reality presented by the Chinese and their Tibetan spokespersons. The publication of these very credible Tibetan refugee statements challenged the Chinese version of reality within Tibet and began the shift in international opinion away from the claims of Chinese propaganda and toward the facts as revealed by Tibetan eyewitnesses. As such, the publication of this collection of refugee accounts was an important event in the history of Tibetan exile politics and the international perception of the Tibet issue. The following is a short synopsis of the accounts. -
White Paper on Tibetan Culture
http://english.people.com.cn/features/tibetpaper/tibeta.html White Paper on Tibetan Culture Following is the full text of the white paper on "The Development of Tibetan Culture" released by the Information Office of the State Council of the People's Republic of China June 22: Foreword I. The Spoken and Written Tibetan Language Is Widely Studied and Used, and Being Developed II. Cultural Relics and Ancient Books and Records Are Well Preserved and Utilized III. Folk Customs and Freedom of Religious Belief Are Respected and Protected IV. Culture and Art Are Being Inherited and Developed in an All- Round Way V. Tibetan Studies Are Flourishing, and Tibetan Medicine and Pharmacology Have Taken On a New Lease of Life VI. Popular Education Makes a Historic Leap VII. The News and Publishing, Broadcasting, Film and Television Industries Are Developing Rapidly Conclusion Foreword China is a united multi-ethnic country. As a member of the big family of the Chinese nation, the Tibetan people have created and developed their brilliant and distinctive culture during a long history of continuous exchanges and contacts with other ethnic groups, all of whom have assimilated and promoted each other's cultures. Tibetan culture has all along been a dazzling pearl in the treasure- house of Chinese culture as well as that of the world as a whole. The gradual merger of the Tubo culture of the Yalong Valley in the middle part of the basin of the Yarlung Zangbo River, and the ancient Shang-Shung culture of the western part of the Qinghai- Tibet Plateau formed the native Tibetan culture. -
THE SECURITISATION of TIBETAN BUDDHISM in COMMUNIST CHINA Abstract
ПОЛИТИКОЛОГИЈА РЕЛИГИЈЕ бр. 2/2012 год VI • POLITICS AND RELIGION • POLITOLOGIE DES RELIGIONS • Nº 2/2012 Vol. VI ___________________________________________________________________________ Tsering Topgyal 1 Прегледни рад Royal Holloway University of London UDK: 243.4:323(510)”1949/...” United Kingdom THE SECURITISATION OF TIBETAN BUDDHISM IN COMMUNIST CHINA Abstract This article examines the troubled relationship between Tibetan Buddhism and the Chinese state since 1949. In the history of this relationship, a cyclical pattern of Chinese attempts, both violently assimilative and subtly corrosive, to control Tibetan Buddhism and a multifaceted Tibetan resistance to defend their religious heritage, will be revealed. This article will develop a security-based logic for that cyclical dynamic. For these purposes, a two-level analytical framework will be applied. First, the framework of the insecurity dilemma will be used to draw the broad outlines of the historical cycles of repression and resistance. However, the insecurity dilemma does not look inside the concept of security and it is not helpful to establish how Tibetan Buddhism became a security issue in the first place and continues to retain that status. The theory of securitisation is best suited to perform this analytical task. As such, the cycles of Chinese repression and Tibetan resistance fundamentally originate from the incessant securitisation of Tibetan Buddhism by the Chinese state and its apparatchiks. The paper also considers the why, how, and who of this securitisation, setting the stage for a future research project taking up the analytical effort to study the why, how and who of a potential desecuritisation of all things Tibetan, including Tibetan Buddhism, and its benefits for resolving the protracted Sino- Tibetan conflict. -
SYMPOSIUM Moving Borders: Tibet in Interaction with Its Neighbors
SYMPOSIUM Moving Borders: Tibet in Interaction with Its Neighbors Symposium participants and abstracts: Karl Debreczeny is Senior Curator of Collections and Research at the Rubin Museum of Art. He completed his PhD in Art History at the University of Chicago in 2007. He was a Fulbright‐Hays Fellow (2003–2004) and a National Gallery of Art CASVA Ittleson Fellow (2004–2006). His research focuses on exchanges between Tibetan and Chinese artistic traditions. His publications include The Tenth Karmapa and Tibet’s Turbulent Seventeenth Century (ed. with Tuttle, 2016); The All‐Knowing Buddha: A Secret Guide (with Pakhoutova, Luczanits, and van Alphen, 2014); Situ Panchen: Creation and Cultural Engagement in Eighteenth‐Century Tibet (ed., 2013); The Black Hat Eccentric: Artistic Visions of the Tenth Karmapa (2012); and Wutaishan: Pilgrimage to Five Peak Mountain (2011). His current projects include an exhibition which explores the intersection of politics, religion, and art in Tibetan Buddhism across ethnicities and empires from the seventh to nineteenth century. Art, Politics, and Tibet’s Eastern Neighbors Tibetan Buddhism’s dynamic political role was a major catalyst in moving the religion beyond Tibet’s borders east to its Tangut, Mongol, Chinese, and Manchu neighbors. Tibetan Buddhism was especially attractive to conquest dynasties as it offered both a legitimizing model of universal sacral kingship that transcended ethnic and clan divisions—which could unite disparate people—and also promised esoteric means to physical power (ritual magic) that could be harnessed to expand empires. By the twelfth century Tibetan masters became renowned across northern Asia as bestowers of this anointed rule and occult power. -
Trials of a Tibetan Monk: the Case of Tenzin Delek
Human Rights Watch February 2004, Vol. 16, No. 1 (C) Trials of a Tibetan Monk: The Case of Tenzin Delek Map 1: Provinces and Autonomous Regions of the People’s Republic of China..............................1 Map2: Sichuan Province and Surrounding Areas....................................................................................2 Map 3: Southeastern Section of Kardze/Ganzi Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture............................3 I. Summary ....................................................................................................................................................5 Recommendations ...................................................................................................................................7 A Note on Methodology.........................................................................................................................8 II. Introduction...........................................................................................................................................10 Tenzin Delek ..........................................................................................................................................12 Lobsang Dondrup..................................................................................................................................14 Bombs......................................................................................................................................................15 III. Arrests...................................................................................................................................................17 -
The Tibetan Translation of the Indian Buddhist Epistemological Corpus
187 The Tibetan Translation of the Indian Buddhist Epistemological Corpus Pascale Hugon* As Buddhism was transmitted to Tibet, a huge number of texts were translated from Sanskrit, Chinese and other Asian languages into Tibetan. Epistemological treatises composed by In dian Buddhist scholars – works focusing on the nature of »valid cognition« and exploring peripheral issues of philosophy of mind, logic, and language – were, from the very beginning, part of the translated corpus, and had a profound impact on Tibetan intellectual history. This paper looks into the progression of the translation of such works in the two phases of the diffusion of Buddhism to Tibet – the early phase in the seventh to the ninth centuries and the later phase starting in the late tenth century – on the basis of lists of translated works in various catalogues compiled in these two phases and the contents of the section »epistemo logy« of canonical collections (Tenjur). The paper inquires into the prerogatives that directed the choice of works that were translated, the broader or narrower diffusion of existing trans lations, and also highlights preferences regarding which works were studied in particular contexts. I consider in particular the contribution of the famous »Great translator«, Ngok Loden Shérap (rngog blo ldan shes rab, 10591109), who was also a pioneer exegete, and discuss some of the practicalities and methodology in the translation process, touching on the question of terminology and translation style. The paper also reflects on the status of translated works as authentic sources by proxy, and correlatively, on the impact of mistaken translations and the strategies developed to avoid them. -
Reform in Tibet
REFORM IN TIBET AS A SOCIAL MOVEMENT By Luo Jia A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Master of Education Graduate Department of Sociology & Equity Studies in Education Ontario Institute for Studies in Education University of Toronto © Copyright by Luo Jia (2009) ii REFORM IN TIBET AS A SOCIAL MOVEMENT Master of Education, 2009 Luo Jia Graduate Department of Sociology & Equity Studies in Education Ontario Institute for Studies in Education University of Toronto Abstract Reform as a social process is underresearched in the case of Tibet. This study addresses this gap using Social Movement Theory, which sees social change as a complex process involving various Tibetan social groups and external reformers, the Communist Party of China (CPC). This approach was applied by comparing recruitment and mobilization efforts of several key internal and external reform movements in 20th century Tibetan history. Findings include that internal reform failures can be explained by their narrow social and geographic basis and limited mass appeal. Moreover, initial CPC reforms succeeded through recruitment and mobilization across Tibetan regions and social groupings. Subsequent reforms failed due to decreased attention to recruitment and mass mobilization of Tibetans. A major implication of the study is that understanding social reform in today‟s Tibet requires a SM Theory approach, which currently is lacking among scholars of the Tibetan question and political representatives of both sides. iii Acknowledgements While finishing this work, I thought it is not enough simply to say thanks because the support of many people are behind this research such as family, professors, helpers, and all the people whose work is related to this work. -
Andrew H. Quintman Curriculum Vitae October 2017
Andrew H. Quintman Curriculum Vitae October 2017 Department of Religious Studies Yale University 451 College ST • New Haven, CT 06511 t 203.432.0828 • [email protected] EDUCATION Ph.D., Buddhist Studies, 2006 Department of Asian Languages and Cultures University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI M.A., Buddhist Studies, 2001 University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI B.A., Philosophy and Tibetan Studies, 1989 Hampshire College, Amherst, MA ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT 2015–Present Associate Professor of Religious Studies, on term Department of Religious Studies, Yale University 2009–2104 Assistant Professor of Religious Studies Department of Religious Studies, Yale University 2006–2009 Cotsen-Mellon Fellow in the History of the Book Society of Fellows in the Liberal Arts, Princeton University 2001–2007 Academic and Program Director Summer Program for Tibetan Studies in Tibet University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 1993–1999 Academic Director Tibetan Studies College Semester Abroad School for International Training, Brattleboro, VT Andrew H. Quintman Curriculum Vitae 2 PUBLICATIONS Books 2014 The Yogin and the Madman: Reading the Biographical Corpus of Tibet’s Great Saint Milarepa. South Asia Across the Disciplines Series. New York: Columbia University Press. * 2014 Recipient of the American Academy of Religion’s Award for Excellence in the Study of Religion * 2015 Recipient of Yale University’s Samuel and Ronnie Heyman Prize for Outstanding Scholarship * 2016 Honorable Mention for the E. Gene Smith book award at the Association for Asian Studies. Reviews Gyatso, Janet. 2016. “Turning Personal: Recent Work on Autobiography in Tibetan Studies.” The Journal of Asian Studies 75 (1): 229–235. Durcher, Cécile. 2015. Review of The Yogin and the Madman: Reading the Biographical Corpus of Tibet’s Great Saint Milarepa by Andrew Quintman. -
Transformation of Tibetan National Identity
CHINA’S TIBET THE TRANSFORMATION OF TIBETAN NATIONAL IDENTITY BY WARREN W. SMITH A COMPILATION OF A SERIES OF PROGRAMS ON RADIO FREE ASIA TIBETAN SERVICE 1 CHINA’S TIBET1 THE TRANSFORMATION OF TIBETAN NATIONAL IDENTITY This article is a revised and updated synopsis of a series of RFA “Expert on Tibet” programs, originally broadcast in 2000, on China’s attempt to transform Tibetan national and cultural identity, to integrate Tibet into China, and to transform Tibetans into Chinese. The title of the series, “China’s Tibet,” refers to the way in which Tibet is described in Chinese propaganda as a possession of China. “China’s Tibet” means that China claims ownership over Tibet. The terminology of “China’s Tibet” or China’s “ownership” of Tibet reveals that even China unintentionally admits that China and Tibet are separate political entities. It is only because Tibet is not the same national, cultural, or political entity as China that China has to characterize Tibet as owned by China. China’s official statements and propaganda in English invariably refer to Tibet as “China’s Tibet,” or sometimes as “Tibet, China.” The PRC's foremost state-sponsored academic journal on Tibet is titled China's Tibet. A recent (1997) official Chinese version of Tibet's history is titled The Historical Status of China's Tibet. The PRC’s official website on Tibet is China’s Tibet Information Center. The possessiveness revealed by Chinese terminology about Tibet is most obvious in the title of the PRC's 1992 State Council White Paper on Tibet: "Tibet--Its Ownership and Human Rights Situation." China even insisted that the Chinese version of the classic French comic, Tintin in Tibet, should be "Tintin in China's Tibet," until the original publisher objected. -
Study on Traditional Beliefs and Practices Regarding Maternal and Child Health in Yunnan, Guizhou, Qinghai and Tibet
CDPF Publication No. 8 Study on Traditional Beliefs and Practices regarding Maternal and Child Health in Yunnan, Guizhou, Qinghai and Tibet Research Team of Minzu University of China April 2010 Study on Traditional Beliefs and Practices regarding Maternal and Child Health in Yunnan, Guizhou, Qinghai and Tibet Research Team of Minzu University of China April 2010 Acknowledgments The participants of this research project wish to thank Professor Ding Hong for her critical role guiding this research project from its initiation to completion, and to Associate Professor Guan Kai for his assistance and guidance. This report is a comprehensive summary of five field reports in the targeted areas. The five fields and their respective reporters are: 1. Guizhou province: Yang Zhongdong and Jiang Jianing in Leishan, Ma Pingyan and Shi Yingchuan in Congjiang 2. Yunnan province: Yuan Changgeng, Wu Jie, Lu Xu, Chen Gang and Guan Kai; 3. Qinghai province: Xu Yan, Gong Fang and Ma Liang; and 4. Tibetan Autonomous Region: Min Junqing, Wang Yan and Ma Hong. We wish to acknowledge Yang Zhongdong, Min Junqing, Xu Yan,Yuan Changgeng and Ma Pingyan for preparing the first draft of the comprehensive report, and Yang Zhongdong and Min Junqing for preparing the final report. We thank the following persons in the six targeted areas for their contributions: Guizhou: We thank Professor Shi Kaizhong; Li Yanzhong and Wang Jinhong; Wu Hai, Yang Decheng and Wu Kaihua; MCH Station in Leishan and Congjiang counties and Guizhou University for Nationalities. Yunnan: We appreciate the following friends and colleagues: Chen Xiuqin, Professor Guo Rui, Professor Liu Fang, Dehong Prefecture official Lin Rujian, Yunnan University for Nationalitie, and Yunnan University of Finance and Economics. -
Introduction to Tibetan
Buddhism and Literature in South Asia Week 7: Modern Buddhist Biographies: the 14th Dalai Lama’s Autobiography Overview of Syllabus Week 1: Introduction to Buddhist Literature, Jātaka Tales Week 2: Indian Buddhist Sūtra Literature Week 3: Life story of the Buddha in Indian poetry Week 4: Indian Buddhist Poetry and Drama Week 5: Tibetan Buddhist Inspirational poetry Week 6: Buddhist Biography and Hagiography in Tibet Week 7: Modern Buddhist Biographies: the 14th Dalai Lama’s Autobiography Week 8: Buddhist-inspired fiction in the 20th century History of Reincarnation lineages in Tibet • The concept of ‘incarnation’ (Sanskrit: nirmanakaya, Tibetan: tulku) dates to early Mahayana Buddhism • The concept of a particular person being the ‘reincarnation’ of another in the sense particular to Buddhism is uniquely Tibetan and relatively late, emerging in the 14th century • Over time, this doctrine of reincarnation of lamas became pervasive in Tibetan Buddhism and has become one of its distinctive features The first reincarnation lineages in Tibet • According to Tibetan tradition, the first recognized reincarnation lineage is that of the Karma-pa hierarchs. Dusum Khyenpa (12th century) is known as the first in this lineage. The first ‘incarnation’ in this lineage was the second hierarch: Karma Pakshi (13th century) • However the first time someone is described in documents as a reincarnation of another is the 3rd Karmapa hierarch, Rangjung Dorje (1284-1338). The biography of this hierarch contains a direct reference to “rebirth” and includes a prediction identifying where it would occur! • As we will see, the Dalai lama reincarnation lineage came later….. Tibetan tulku-s and reincarnation • The tulku system is an extension of the logic of the Buddhist understanding of karma and rebirth and the Mahayana system of spiritual development.