Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Tibet serf debate shadows China's "emancipation day"

Tibet serf debate shadows China's "emancipation day"





WORLD NEWS

Tibet serf debate shadows China's "emancipation day"

KHESUM, China (Reuters) - Lots of salty yak butter tea and an end to harsh beatings marked the start of the 1960s for farmer Kigya, who grew up shackled to the estate of a local nobleman by the inherited ties that once bound most Tibetans.

Former serf Kigya sits in the sun in his village of Khesum, the first village in 1959 to implement "democratic reforms", February 13, 2009. REUTERS/Emma Graham-Harrison

That world vanished overnight when Chinese troops flooded the Himalayan plateau in 1959 to quell an uprising, took direct control of government in Lhasa and rolled out radical changes.

China’s Communist leaders say they abolished a feudal, theocratic system that would have been familiar to the peasants of mediaeval Europe. This Saturday they will launch an annual “Serf Emancipation Day” public holiday in Tibet to mark the dissolution of the serf system.

But critics say China has exaggerated the cruelty of traditional Tibetan life to disguise a power grab, swept away much that was good along with the bad, and destroyed an indigenous government that was attempting more sensitive reforms.

By commemorating its “emancipation” of Tibetans, China may enrage many already angry and frustrated Tibetans, who do not feel they enjoy true freedom under Chinese rule, analysts said. This may spark unrest at a volatile time, they added.

“It will be very provocative,” said Tsering Shakya, a Tibet expert and research chair at the University of British Columbia. “People will be cowed into celebrating this holiday so this is a time when there may be more tension than early March.”

This month Tibetans have marked the 50th anniversary of the flight into exile of the Dalai Lama, their still widely revered spiritual leader, and one year since deadly riots shook Lhasa and triggered waves of protests in ethnic Tibetan areas.

A huge security presence has kept the restive region largely calm, but there have been sporadic protests; a monk set himself on fire and a bomb was lobbed at an unfinished police station. Experts and activists say the unrest is likely to continue.

SERFS OR NOT?

Even the name of the new holiday is controversial. Opponents say “serfdom” is too loaded to describe the Tibetan system, while China denounces its critics as apologists for a cruel regime.

“The serfs and slaves, making up over 95 percent of the total population, suffered destitution, cruel oppression and exploitation and possessed no means of production or personal freedom whatsoever,” a recent government white paper declared.

Few serious scholars contest that most Tibetans were bound by birth to estates held by nobles, monasteries or officials.

“The key characteristic of the system was that individuals did not have the right to opt out. They could not give back their land to the estate and live as free peasants,” said Melvyn Goldstein, at Ohio University’s Center for Research on Tibet.

But many foreign academics and exiled Tibetans also say Beijing has rewritten history, oversimplifying and distorting a complex system, in part by using transplanted concepts.

“The Chinese trick is to say the words ‘serf’ and ‘feudal’ and make us think brutal,” said Robbie Barnett, director of the Modern Tibetan Studies Program at Columbia University.

RELATED COVERAGE

Obligation to provide labor fell on families or households, not individuals, so while some worked for the estate, others were away trading or in the family’s own fields, academics say.

Peasants who ran away often were not brought back, and although trading of serfs happened, it was not widespread. Others rented their freedom on a yearly basis with a “human lease.”

Some “serfs” were also wealthy landowners in their own right, with serf-servants of their own, making a more complex social picture than is reflected in Beijing’s official line.

Managers could be brutal, and whips were still used in 1959.

“The owners always wanted more and one way of getting more is doing hard physical punishment and setting an example for the others, and that was common,” said Dawa Tsering, from the Tibet Academy of Social Sciences in Lhasa, who studied under Goldstein.

“The extreme was that they may beat you to death.”

But many Chinese accounts of cruelty mix details of extreme and disused punishments from centuries-old legal codes with actual practice in the 1950s, like a recent exhibition in Beijing where an “eye-gouging stone” was placed next to whips.

The last official blinding was in 1934, of a nobleman convicted of treason. By then, no living member of the caste who performed mutilations had ever done it, or even seen it carried out, Goldstein recounted in his “History of Modern China.”

They had to rely on stories of the technique passed down from their parents and bungled the operation horribly, he wrote.

DISCONTENTED DESCENDANTS

If the nature of Tibet’s traditional social system is disputed, the destitution of many living on the high, harsh plateau is not.

The modest way in which Kigya, who like many Tibetans only uses one name, marked improvements in his life after reforms are testament to that.

“It was not great but it was better. We could eat rice and noodles and salty butter tea, which we did not have before,” he told journalists visiting his village of Khesum on a government sponsored trip. Previously he ate largely roasted barley.

In a village where women still wash clothes in a trench and farm animals wander down the main alley, there is a forest of TV aerials and time to rehearse for a local dance showdown.

The vast majority of Tibetans in the region today are the descendants of serfs, and life has improved materially for many.

But resentment appears to have risen in tandem with living standards, and China has unveiled the new holiday at a time of mourning for the dead of last year and widespread discontent.

“This holiday is just another ‘made in China’ product,” said one radical Tibetan, in a scathing reference to the string of tainted and fake food and other goods that have streamed out of Chinese factories in recent years, denting its reputation.

The protests, riots and harsh security response this time last year appear to be a direct affront to China’s argument that it has brought progress to a backward region.

Beijing says the unrest stems from economic tensions in a still-developing region, and meddling by hostile Western powers in alliance with the Dalai Lama, whom it brands a separatist.

“The West is playing the Tibet card to create problems for China,” said Zhang Yun, at the China Tibetology Research Center.

But juxtaposed with the new holiday, the signs of widespread discontent raise an awkward question for China.

“These are the second or third generation who are supposed to be the sons and daughters of liberated serfs, so why are they rising up?” said the University of British Columbia’s Shakya.

Additional reporting by Yu Le; Editing by Megan Goldin


The Dalai Lama, CIA and Tibetan history

https://www.tiktok.com/@dantethehater/video/7220622143430675755

Survivor of Sexual Abuses inside Ogyen Kunzang Choling call-out to Dalai-Lama - 2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qK4X2G3v_4


"in 2021 we tried, again, after the lack of action of the 2018 meeting in Rotterdam with the Dalai-Lama, we tried to again, get him to remove his support for Ogyan Kunzang Choling, that he declared through the Kashag in 1997, after the french and belgian police had organized a raid on the coercive group organization OKC. We gave this video and other testimonies to the ARTE journalist then in India, trying to get a meeting with the Dalai-Lama about the documentary Buddhism the law of silence / the unspeakable truth, even this appeal, with this request, the ARTE documentary crew never managed to get the Dalai-Lama people to take this seriously. Even with covid-19, this is not a valid excuse, there are many ways that a virtual meeting could have been setup, the behavior of the Kashag and the Dalai-Lama is a demonstration that they don't care about the victims. 1992 Dalai Lama visit Ogyen Kunzang Choling in Brussels, meets with Robert Spatz, indirectly and directly legitimize him and the coercive group OKC Attestations of legitimacy given by the Dalai-Lama to OKC in 1994 1997 OKC is raided by the police in France, Belgium, Portugal inquiries start, complaints of sexual abuses are filled. Decades of trials will enfold, in 2018, OKC meets the Dalai Lama in Rotterdam with 3 others survivors of abuses inside Tibetan Buddhist centers. https://www.buddhistdoor.net/news/dal... After the meeting, the survivors supposedly gave "ammunitions" for the DalaiLama to act https://apnews.com/article/europe-asi... https://www.tibetanreview.net/the-dal... The promised 2018 november meeting will never take place, postponed indefinitely. In 2021, we record this video to call-out the Dalai Lama and have the Kashag institution to speak with the ARTE journalists, at the time producing the documentary, buddhism the law of silence. They were never received. the 4 promises were never taken care of."

the Dalai-lama can be seen kissing a boy on the mouth

https://hridayartha.blogspot.com/2023/04/not-tibetan-way.html?fbclid=IwAR3ciiN0SKWxr_mAsKxNWQyim0m6uKGfZXh94zANZtCF3lXuKDE4e3vJ_kU


samedi 8 avril 2023

Not the Tibetan way

Screencapture “Members of the audience posing for a group photo with His Holiness the Dalai Lama at the end of the program in the courtyard of the Main Tibetan Temple in Dharamsala, HP, India on February 28, 2023."

Two videos have appeared on Youtube, where the Dalai-lama can be seen kissing a boy on the mouth: Dalai Lama inappropriately tongue-kisses boy and a video on the channel of Tibetan Happy.

On February 28, 2023 in Dharamsala, the Dalai-lama addressed visitors from the M3M Foundation, “the philanthropic arm of M3M India group”, one of the country’s biggest real estate developers of “luxury residential developments and premium commercial projects”. One of the Foundation’s initiatives is iMpower. “iMpower Resource Center has been established to serve families of migrant construction workers that have no means for providing their children with supportive learning experiences.” The Dalai-lama addressed a group of graduates of this initiative.

At one point during the meeting, a boy (who may be related to one of the organisers, see photos below) asks if he can hug the Dalai-lama. Someone may have told him to ask this.

“Can I hug you?”


The translator explains “rgyal ba rin po che bsdam na grig gi red”, but the Dalai-lama doesn’t seem to understand. Then another translator adds “rgyal ba rin po che hug cig bcing gi ‘dug zer”. This time the Dalai-lama seems to understand (maybe confusing a hug and a kiss). 

"Ok, come !"

"First here" [points to his cheek]

"Then I think finally here also"

[points to his mouth, pouts his lips and moves forward]

 

"And suck… my tongue"

[DL sticks out his tongue and moves his head towards the boy.
The boy initially approaches hesitantly,
than withdraws, visibly somewhat ill at ease]

"Thank you." [grabs the boy’s hand and holds it against his cheek,
relatively long, the boy smiles a bit akwardly]

"We are same human brothers sisters [puts his arm around the boy’s neck and draws the boy towards him and holds him with one hand, relatively long, the boy tries to get out of the hug. When released the boy smiles akwardly] 

"Thank you." [the boy wants to go, DL holds him back,
pointing his finger up to imaginary good people] "
"Now, you should look those good human beings, who create peace, happiness."

"Should not follow those human beings who always kill other people. 
You should not look these people."



[DL pulls boy towards him and hugs him, with one hand, then with two hands,
then seems to tickle him under his right arm,
the boy withdraws, protecting himself with his right arm, smiling a bit akwardly]


On the picture above, the boy is standing in front of the Dalai-lama, a woman and a man standing next to him. Perhaps his parents, as representatives of the Foundation or the M3M Group? Would this explain all the “special attention” the boy is given by the Dalai-lama?


Hugging, kissing on the cheek, kissing on the mouth and tongue kissing in public are not Tibetan customs. Greeting with the tongue was a Tibetan custom, but has disappeared from the Tibetan communities in exile. The Dalai-lama seems to be mocking Western habits of greeting, by going further each time. Perhaps he finds those habits too intimate in public situations, especially compared to the Indian greeting with folded hands (namaste). Yet he doesn't refrain from acting them out in public, and with a boy. At every more intimate way of greeting the DL suggests, the audience laughs louder. Perhaps after the tongue kiss the Dalai-lama realises he may have gone too far, and goes back to the simple “hug”, the boy actually asked for, and talks about good and bad people and how the boy should strive to follow the good people. He hugs the boy again and tickles him, as an uncle would do to his nephew or niece..., ending the encounter in a more acceptable joking way, making thus forget what happened just before.

At one point after the meeting the boy breaks a coconut by throwing it on the floor. The DL laughs

During the meeting the Dalai-lama said: “Sometimes I jokingly say that in times past we Tibetans were the students and you Indians were the teachers, but now, when Indian has come so much under the influence of western thought, it is we Tibetans who have kept ancient Indian knowledge and values alive.” (Buddhist Times)

The Dalai-lama seems to want to suggest that the Indians, unlike Tibetans, went too far in accepting the Western influence, perhaps including “strange” Western habits and values. This could be a change from his former soft power tactics, perhaps the Dalai-lama wants to show stronger support to “traditional” Indian values and habits, and to Modi’s political choices. Since Western values are under attack, and the power balance may be changing, showing more criticism of the West and a greater inclination to traditional Asian values could perhaps be thought of as an intelligent soft power move in a changing world, and especially in India?

Apart from this, the way the Dalai-lama acted with the boy, used him as an object for whatever reason, is not acceptable. How the Dalai-lama could associate a hug asked by a child with a tongue kiss, only he himself or his shrink can know. All the boy asked for was a simple hug. I think the Pope, another His Holiness, would probably have given the boy a simple hug. Imagine what would have happened if the pope acted like the Dalaï-lama. Buddhist exceptionalism is still alive and kicking, but for how long?  

Update 10042023 Reaction Office of the Dala-Lama