| From
Tehelka Magazine, Vol 6, Issue 13, Dated Apr 04, 2009 |
|
| CULTURE & SOCIETY |
|
guest column |
|
The Bounty Of March
The Tibetan activist outlines his
people’s crucial history of hope in the
half century since the March Uprising
TENZIN TSUNDUE
Poet-Activist The forefront Tibetan
youth leader has pledged to wear a
red headband till Tibet is free
| Tibetans
have repeatedly proved that the real issue is not the status of the
Dalai Lama but their own wishes |
AS A schoolboy in Class VII, my first serious
Tibetan history lesson was one of provocation.
I used to listen to Professor Samdhong
Rinpoche’s Tibetan history lectures on audio
tapes sent by a scholar uncle in Varanasi. In
one anecdote, Professor Rinpoche tells of the 1950 fall of the
eastern gate of Kham-Chamdo to invading Chinese troops.
A messenger in Lhasa ran to deliver the Morse code alert to
the Tibetan Cabinet. As he stood gasping for air at the door
to an official hall, the doorkeeper blocked his entry, stating
that this news would disturb the aristocrats’ party within.
In March 2008, protests swept across the entire Tibetan
Plateau in a people’s movement that was reminiscent of the
Lhasa uprising of March 1959. The international media
descended last year on His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s exile
residence in Dharamsala to ask him, “Do you support this
‘riot’? Can you stop it?” His
Holiness replied: “No, I can’t. I
have no magic power.” He was
right. He had expressed a similar
powerlessness back then in
1959 when the occupying People’s
Liberation Army ordered him to “control the rebels.”
Tibet’s unofficial resistance movement began with
monks, nomads and farmers taking up arms when China
first invaded Tibet in 1949. Tibetan soldiers later organised
themselves with the CIA and the Indian Government’s
help. And in exile, they fought for India: in 1962 against
China, in the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation war, and in 1975
against Pakistan. When US President Nixon befriended
Mao Zedong, the CIA dumped the Tibetans, and when the
Nepalese army threatened to flush out Tibetan camps, the
Dalai Lama ordered an end to violent resistance with the
camps’ disbandment. Today, 6,000 Tibetan soldiers serve
the Indian army in its declassified Sector 22, a paramilitary
force posted mainly at the Siachen Glacier.
| Tibetan
youth take aggressive and confrontational actions but their credo
remains Nonviolence |
In 1951, the Lhasa Government did officially protest Beijing’s
imposition of the 17-Point Agreement for the “Peaceful
Liberation” of Tibet, but then tried to live with newly-Communist
China in an arrangement of autonomy; by 1959,
citizens rebelled against Chinese bullying and arrogance.
The otherwise apolitical farmers and nomads rapidly spread
word: “The Chinese military plans to kidnap His Holiness
Kundun. We must protect him.” The next morning, people
gathered in unprecedented numbers and made history. In
Lhasa, the anxious crowds gathered in front of the Dalai
Lama’s summer palace, shouting slogans and begging their
leader not to leave his abode.
When government officials
from inside the Norbulingka
walls requested the crowd to
disperse, war cries arose of
“China, get out of Tibet!” The
protective gathering lasted for many days and the mounting
tension between PLA soldiers and Tibetans resulted in the
Dalai Lama escaping to India.
Thousands of Tibetans were massacred in the following
days and months. This public awakening is honoured in
exile every March 10 as Tibetan National Uprising Day, and
continues to inspire new generations of Tibetans. The spontaneous
protests in Lhasa in 1987, 1988, 1989 and 1993 have
all been resurgences of this public indignation. During the
last half century, Tibetans have repeatedly proved that the
real issue of Tibet is not the status of the country’s high-profile
leader, but the wishes of the citizens themselves, sometimes
even overriding official statements and agreements.
The protestors of the 2008 uprising knew they, too, would suffer loss of life, incarceration and torture. Yet
shepherds born under Mao, who had never seen the
Tibetan flag, photocopied the design from a book smuggled
into Tibet and flew it gaily in the air. A friend’s uncle, a
nomad from a remote mountain region in Amdo, reported
on the phone that since there were no Chinese in the mountains,
he was running about with other nomads searching for
them. The group hoped to “raise our fists and shout in their
faces: ‘Chinese Go Home!’”
The 2008 uprising happened in the wake of the failing “dialogue
process” between Dharamsala and Beijing. It historically
signifies Tibetan rejection of Beijing’s bribes of material
comforts and individual security. They repudiated Beijing’s
lofty claims of development and its “gifts” like modern
schools, hospitals, highways, shopping malls, discotheques
and the much-admired railway
linking Lhasa and Beijing. The
Chinese Government described
the people’s uprising
as a “disturbance” instigated by
the “Dalai Clique,” thereby belittling
the Tibetan nation’s aspirations and insulting the
intelligence of the six million Tibetans inside Tibet. This is
symptomatic of colonial powers that treat colonies as treasure
islands and their citizens as exotic beasts on leashes.
In 2002, after the resumption of “dialogue” with the Beijing
leadership, the Dalai Lama’s envoys were scolded by
their Chinese counterparts for masterminding anti-Beijing
protests within the international community, including the
pro-independence activities of the Tibetan Youth Congress.
The envoys replied that, as a democracy, the Dalai Lama
can’t dictate terms as the Beijing does in its own country.
Upon the promise of further dialogue and a possible “give
and take” solution in the future, the exile government “requested”
Tibetans not to stage protests during visits by Chinese
presidents and prime ministers of foreign countries.
But many of us have utterly no trust in the corrupt
Communist leadership and continue to protest. The exile
government created such high hopes for “dialogue” that some of us “rebels” have even been tagged as “anti-Dalai
Lama” by our community. By keeping our political stand
steadfast through this criticism, we appreciate only too well
that China itself lacks the will to negotiate, using the charade
of promised talks simply to fend off Western criticism of
their appalling human rights record. Today, the Dalai Lama
himself is saying that he is losing hope in Beijing.
BEIJING IS not confident enough to invite the Dalai
Lama to Tibet or China and has repeatedly rejected
his autonomy proposal. Most Tibetan youth believe
they can regain their identity and dignity of life through independence,
and that without independence Tibet will die
under the Chinese weight. Tomorrow, even if autonomy is
granted, our struggle for Independence will continue in
Tibet. The Tibetan people’s struggle to re-establish their lost
independence is, therefore, not a secessionist movement —
the difference is more philosophical than ideological.
Following the non-confrontational Buddhist way towards
conflicts, His Holiness has repeatedly tried to stop Tibetan
youth from sitting on hunger strikes, marching to Tibet, and
requested Tibetans inside Tibet to restrain from mass street
protests as they would result in loss of life. What, perhaps,
remains misunderstood is that even though Tibetan youngsters
take aggressive and confrontational actions, our common
credo remains Nonviolence.
The Dalai Lama has gone out of his way in introducing
and successfully nurturing a vibrant democracy-in-action
in the exile Tibetan community. We will bring this gift to
Tibet when independence is
achieved. With such strong
democratic safeguards now
enshrined in our exile community,
how can the Chinese
Government expect to continue
with its childish propaganda that the Dalai Lama’s return
to Tibet would re-establish “serfdom and feudalism”?
In 1997, having read my Shakespeare and AK Ramanujan
I graduated from Loyola College, Madras and went to Tibet
to start a revolution. This romantic rebel soon got arrested,
beaten and thrown into jail in Lhasa. A fellow-prisoner
advised me: “Do not let the smoke out even if free Tibet
burns in your heart.” But by then this inexperienced prisoner,
a Bhagat Singh fan, had already boasted he had come
to free Tibet. For both Tibetans inside and outside our land,
the undeclared common strategy of the movement is to live
through this difficult struggle with patience, and outlive the
dictatorial Chinese leadership to witness changes in China.
His Holiness has now called for people-to-people contact
between Tibetans and the Chinese. Our future leaders
may not be as brilliant, dynamic or unifying as the 14th
Dalai Lama, but Tibet will have passed successfully through
one of the most difficult periods in its long history.
WRITER’S
EMAIL
tentsundue@yahoo.com |