Author Topic: The Tide Is Turning  (Read 7786 times)

vajratruth

  • Global Moderator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 706
The Tide Is Turning
« on: December 07, 2013, 03:34:33 PM »
This is a fairly new article on Phayul titled, "THE SAD PAINFUL JOKE OF TIBETAN DEMOCRACY" by Jamyang Norbu who is uncovering how backward, shallow and hypocritical the Tibetan leadership as represented by the Central Tibetan Administration have been. Many people around the world would find it difficult to believe that a modern "government" would have the audacity (and idiocy) to implement a religious ban as the CTA did with the Dorje Shugden practice but it would appear Tibetan politicians specialise in absurdities.

If anyone wonders why the Tibetans are still no where close to regaining their freedom and returning to their homeland, then the following article will provide evidence of how progress in the Tibetan cause and indeed, progress overall for the Tibetan people in exile, have long been incapacitated by foolish inanities of the CTA. But perhaps this is changing as the younger politicians ate speaking up.

And of course, Shugden is mentioned as is the case whenever the CTA needs to divert blame and attention away from their own stupidity.

Here is an excerpt followed by the full article:

"Presumably in a bid to obtain the support of the Indian public for his campaign, Speaker Penpa Tsering gave a brief interview to the Hindustan Times where he quoted His Holiness as saying that He had earlier intended to live to the age of 113 but because of “a Tibetan Youth Congress official (TYC), a staff of Radio Free Asia and a Tibetan writer expressing dissatisfaction …” His Holiness had decided to live only to the age of 108 years. Far from eliciting the sympathy of the Indian public this interview only invited ridicule. The comments from Indian readers were uniformly contemptuous. A Kurshid Alam wrote “Well done Tibetan politicians in exile, you have successfully made the whole Tibetan movement into a joke. Keep up the good work. Continue mixing your politics with ancient religion so your people back home continue dying. YOU JUST LOST A STRONG SUPPORTER".

Full article which is well worth the read:

THE SAD PAINFUL JOKE OF TIBETAN DEMOCRACY – by Jamyang Norbu

When Bhutan set out on its democracy experiment in 2008, I must admit to a little skepticism. I thought the Dragon Kingdom would follow in the footsteps of Nepal’s Panchayat democracy (initiated by King Mahendra in 1962). In this party-less “guided” democratic system the people could elect their representatives for a tame parliament, while real power remained firmly in the hands of the throne.

But then to my surprise the Bhutanese monarchy took the radical step of allowing, even insisting on the formation of actual political parties. To free-up the traditional feudal mindset of the Bhutanese public, the very popular king took the decision to abdicate and appointed his young son to the role of a low-profile constitutional monarch. Shortly thereafter a number of independent parties sprang up in Bhutan, but through mergers and disqualifications, two parties finally remained to contest the elections: the People’s Democratic Party, PDP (?????????????????????????) and the Bhutan Peace and Prosperity Party, DPT (????????????????????). The latter won the elections overwhelmingly though it was explained by some “analysts” that its victory had resulted from it being the more pro-monarchist of the two parties.

But two months ago, in Bhutan’s second national elections the weak opposition People’s Democratic Party (PDP) stormed into power, winning 32 of the country’s 47 parliamentary seats. Voter turnout was an impressive 80% of the country. Bhutan has proven that it is a real democracy, and a vibrant and dynamic one as well. The PDP not only defeated the “royalist” DPT party but did so while rejecting Bhutan’s official doctrine of “Gross National Happiness” or GNH. Earlier, such a repudiation of Bhutan’s core national policy promoted by His Majesty Jigme Singe Wangchuk in 1972, would definitely have been regarded as lèse majesté, perhaps even sacrilegious.

In an interview with AFP, the new Prime Minister, Lonchen* Tshering Tobgay was critical of GNH: “I’m sceptical on how it has been overused by some people and how they have been distracted from the real business at hand,” While campaigning for the election, often on foot through remote villages, Tobgay focused on what he sees as “the business at hand” for Bhutan: chronic unemployment, poverty, corruption and a sense that politicians were too remote. The Lonchen was recently in New York for the UN conference and in a lengthy interview with the New York Times he repeated his criticisms. Back home in Bhutan life went on as usual. The sky didn’t fall. The ground didn’t crack open and swallow up the kingdom. The royal family continued to maintain its dignified silence. Constitutionally, I am told that members of Bhutan’s royal family do not even have the vote, since the act of casting one would indicate royal support for a particular party, which could affect the fairness of elections.

There is a regrettable and absolutely unwarranted prejudice among older Tibetans (which the younger generation happily don’t seem to share) to look down on the Bhutanese as somewhat primitive and unsophisticated. So perhaps a comparison of the relative progress of our two political systems might be in order, if for nothing else than to try and guess which one appears to be more the creation of enlightened democrats and which one the work of superstitious barbarians (lalo).

In Dharamshala this September, shortly after celebrating “Tibetan Democracy Day”, the Parliament-in-Exile initiated what can perhaps be called Cultural Revolution style “struggles” (thamzing) against those who had “hurt the feelings” of His Holiness the Dalai Lama. The campaign was kicked off with the censuring of a Member of Parliament, Karma Chophel, on the crackpot charge of “speculating that, when composing the “Words of Truth Prayer”, His Holiness the Dalai Lama had “independence in his heart.” (A detailed report is available at Tibetan Political Review.) This bizarre accusation brought to mind a Cultural Revolution incident where a down-to-earth Chinese farmer speculated (perhaps a little too loudly) that sticking Mao Zedong’s quotations in the fields to encourage vegetables to grow, was perhaps not an effective agricultural technique. He was denounced, struggled, and beaten – possibly to death.

Led by the speaker, Penpa Tsering, our Members of Parliament then proceeded to launch fierce denunciations of other Tibetans (including myself) who had simply spoken up (often forcefully but never disrespectfully) in favor of independence over the Dalai Lama’s “Middle Way” policy. Our hur-tsunpa (Ch. jiji fenzi) MP’s demanded that these malefactors not only be exposed but banished from exile society, not withstanding the fact that the exile parliament does not have any legal powers to do anything of the kind. But of course the real but unstated intention was to instigate the more fanatical and uneducated elements members of exile public to take matters into their own hands, which in the past has resulted in a number of mob attacks and public humiliation of establishment critics. Even the murder of one.



Presumably in a bid to obtain the support of the Indian public for his campaign, Speaker Penpa Tsering gave a brief interview to the Hindustan Times where he quoted His Holiness as saying that He had earlier intended to live to the age of 113 but because of “a Tibetan Youth Congress official (TYC), a staff of Radio Free Asia and a Tibetan writer expressing dissatisfaction …” His Holiness had decided to live only to the age of 108 years. Far from eliciting the sympathy of the Indian public this interview only invited ridicule. The comments from Indian readers were uniformly contemptuous. A Kurshid Alam wrote “Well done Tibetan politicians in exile, you have successfully made the whole Tibetan movement into a joke. Keep up the good work. Continue mixing your politics with ancient religion so your people back home continue dying. YOU JUST LOST A STRONG SUPPORTER.”

If our hon’ble speaker had deliberately set out to sabotage the Tibetan issue in India, he couldn’t have done a better job than with this one interview.


The MPs were allowed unlimited time by the speaker and each one tried to outdo the others in the ferocity of their denunciations, one of the more rabid being the North American representative, Norbu Tsering, who declared, “We have to get rid of these people like we get rid of rotten teeth when they start aching.” With so many MPs essentially repeating themselves, some aspired to originality by denouncing the editors of the Tibetan Political Review, the only serious political journal in the Tibetan world, and even the filmmaker Tenzin Sonam for his documentary film, Sun Behind the Clouds, which received the 2010 Vaclav Havel Freedom Award from president Havel himself. The film also received a number of other Human Rights awards including the prestigious Rudolph Vrba “Right to Know” Award.


But when it seemed that this parliamentary exercise to crush free speech and free thought in Tibetan society had picked up a nice head of steam, something quite unexpected happened. A young MP, Dhardon Sharling, rose from her seat and calmly declared that instead of heaping blame on a few individual Tibetans, everyone in the Parliament ought to look into their own “conscience” (she used the English word) for not doing enough to realize His Holiness’s wishes. Dhardon la’s statement is on youtube. Another MP Chungdak Koren, who could not attend this parliamentary session asked a colleague to read her questions and opinions to the Parliament. Chundak la also posted them on her own blog. An excerpt: “… instead of excluding critics, we should be including them and inviting them to air and exchange views. These people might have constructive suggestions and their inputs could be of great value. We always need to retain an open mind when it comes to criticism“. A few other MPs, I am informed, did not join the thamzing denunciations.




Unlike the old days when the establishment could whip up large mobs of hundred or so thugs and fanatics to beat up and intimidate critics this time around the Parliament only managed to round up a small rent-a-crowd of old polas and molas who shuffled around Gangchen Kyishong carrying identical signs, almost certainly printed of a wide-format printer from a CTA office.

Even the efforts made to spread the campaign throughout Tibetan communities worldwide does not seem to have met with much success. I heard that a community meeting was held in Switzerland to denounce those who had “hurt the feeling of Kundun”, but other than that there has been no report of any such confab. In New York City an attempt was made to stop a public talk (The Rangzen Imperative) that the Tibetan National Congress (TNC) had arranged for me to give to the Tibetan public on the 5th of October.

The manager of the United Sherpa Association, whose hall the TNC had rented for the occasion, received anonymous phone calls claiming that the TNC and myself were against the Dalai Lama. Another phone call accused the Sherpa Association of renting its hall to Shugden worshippers. Threats of a public demonstration and disruption of the lecture were made, but on the actual morning of the talk no protester showed up. Inside the auditorium there was standing room only. TNC volunteers also streamed the talk on Livestream and have received, up to now, over sixteen thousand five hundred viewers from all over the world, even from Tibet and China.

In a welcome departure from the usual timidity and self-censorship of the Tibetan media, the exile-parliament’s conduct was vigorously condemned in a local Tibetan language newspaper Bod Kyi Bangchen (Tibet Express). The opinion piece by the deputy editor, Choenyi Woser, was also translated in English. Chonyi Woeser la was also the first to make the comparison of the exile parliament’s antics with the Cultural Revolution.

Another article in English, I Solemnly Swear by the Flag of Tibet by Tenpa Gashi, not only ridiculed the antics of our legislators with biting wit and satire, but also offered a well thought-out solution to this problem. Tenpa la is the son of the late Gashi Tsering Dorje, a leading political commentator from the 70s and 80s and a friend of mine. Back in those days he and I wrote articles exposing the limits of Deng’s Liberalization policy and the naïveté of Dharamshala’s hopes for negotiations with Beijing. Tse Dorje la’s writings had a greater impact on Tibetan public thinking than my pieces in the Tibetan Review, as he wrote in Tibetan and furthermore had a profound understanding of the Chinese Communist Party and its long history of duplicity and cruelty.

So in spite of our exile-parliamentarians diligently emulating the sycophancy of North Korean legislators (of the Supreme People’s Assembly) we now have a novel and welcome development where Tibetan journalists, bloggers, Rangzen activists, even a few MPs and a growing number of skeptical and concerned miming are openly asking hard questions about those who claim to represent them.

So perhaps all is not lost for Tibetan democracy, though it does appear to be touch and go right now. But how did our politics degenerate to this disgusting septic-tank low in the first place? I am not going to go into details on the history of our so-called democracy. I have already written a number of essays on that subject, and those needing a full picture might want to check out my three-part “Waiting For Mangtso” (WFM I, WFM II and WFM III ) on this blog-site.

What I would like to do in the next essay is uncover the more immediate causes of this September’s mini Cultural Revolution in Dharamshala, and the earlier undermining and enfeebling of the Tibetan Youth Congress and the Gu-Chu-Sum Association of Former Political Prisoners. I believe all these events are interconnected and point to an underlying scheme to weaken, even terminate the Tibetan struggle. I will also lay out a simple course of action that all Tibetans can take to save our democracy and make the exile-parliament and administration answerable to the exile public and heedful of the desire of those in Tibet for an end to Chinese rule.

_____
* “Lonchen” was the traditional term used in Tibet for prime-minister. The term “Si-lon” was adopted in 1926 when Langdun Kunga Wangchuk became prime-minister. Samdhong Rinpoche started the trend of Tibetan prime-ministers creating ever more grandiose titles for themselves, e .g. kalon-tripa , sikyong.


Source: http://www.phayul.com/news/article.aspx?id=34189&article=THE+SAD+PAINFUL+JOKE+OF+TIBETAN+DEMOCRACY+–+by+Jamyang+Norbu&t=1&c=4

dondrup

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 816
Re: The Tide Is Turning
« Reply #1 on: December 07, 2013, 04:59:23 PM »
Finally we see light at the end of the tunnel! Though it has taken so long for these concerned Tibetans to speak up against what they felt was wrong, it augurs well for the future of the Tibetans.

After years of subjecting themselves to the ridicule of an inefficient government, they have arisen from their doldrums.

Tibetan Shugden followers, do not rest on your laurels! Now is the time to bring about a change for the better. Now is the time to turn the tide against the Central Tibetan Administration. 

For the sake of the Tibetans, you must speed up the lifting of the ban!

Manisha Kudo

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 100
    • Email
Re: The Tide Is Turning
« Reply #2 on: December 08, 2013, 11:25:35 AM »
:o By lifting the ban, it will surely help to erase and liberate the Tibetan Government out of idiocy or shun their voice into wilderness forever. This is because it is ridiculous when all fails in controlling, suppressing and lying to the people, reliance on the curse of an ancient evil spirit is an easy way out but one that is without any credit. Let's just hope that because of this painfully sad joke (and mockery) more people will take the initiative to learn the truth and be exposed to the Buddha-Dharma.  8) 

fruven

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 659
Re: The Tide Is Turning
« Reply #3 on: December 14, 2013, 11:25:30 PM »
What are they getting at by saying HH Dalai Lama choosing to live 113 or 108? Why does living to a certain age even come into the picture? Seriously?!!!

I don't get it. What kind of benefits do one get by saying Dalai Lama living to this or that age? Having Dalai Lama living longer will benefit them more? Or they can use Dalai Lama for a long time?

Rinchen

  • Global Moderator
  • Sr. Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 407
Re: The Tide Is Turning
« Reply #4 on: December 15, 2013, 03:47:35 PM »
I too think that by saying the Dalai Lama living to a certain age should not be even in the picture. How long the Dalai Lama would live would all depend on his students. If they were to keep their promises and do things that they should be doing.

If we did not even take refuge in the Dalai Lama, how would it even affect him in the first place? It is just totally absurd.

The Dalai Lama's age should not be even stated in the article itself. If (touch wood) what is said is not true, then how would people even have faith and believe the next incarnation of the Dalai Lama. And if by practicing Dorje Shugden really does affect the Dalai Lama's health and life, there would be many health issues arising now as the number of practitioners has not decreased, instead it increased!

DharmaDefender

  • Moderator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 988
Re: The Tide Is Turning
« Reply #5 on: December 22, 2013, 07:45:42 AM »
The blind leading the blind. The Tibetans are so caught up in their own propaganda and upholding their image of the Tibet of old, without realising the rest of the world has moved on without them, even "unsophisticated" Bhutan. I say this without any offence intended as Im well aware Tibetan society has its fair share of intellectuals - when will the masses get it? That shouting and protesting, focusing on the stuff that doesnt matter and writing silly slogans impresses no one but themselves? The stuff some of them come up with... I cant help but think of how 1980s Communist it all sounds.

Buddha was right, attachment really does cause suffering.

fruven

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 659
Re: The Tide Is Turning
« Reply #6 on: December 22, 2013, 11:54:51 AM »
I too think that by saying the Dalai Lama living to a certain age should not be even in the picture. How long the Dalai Lama would live would all depend on his students. If they were to keep their promises and do things that they should be doing.

If we did not even take refuge in the Dalai Lama, how would it even affect him in the first place? It is just totally absurd.

The Dalai Lama's age should not be even stated in the article itself. If (touch wood) what is said is not true, then how would people even have faith and believe the next incarnation of the Dalai Lama. And if by practicing Dorje Shugden really does affect the Dalai Lama's health and life, there would be many health issues arising now as the number of practitioners has not decreased, instead it increased!

Many Dorje Shugden lamas have taken new rebirths and returned. They are formally recognized. One of them is HH Trijang Rinpoche himself. HH Dalai Lama is still healthy and teachings the Dharma. Doesn't it occur to them that Dorje Shugden never harm the Dalai Lama since they make him sounds so powerful and mighty?

Freyr Aesiragnorak

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 144
Re: The Tide Is Turning
« Reply #7 on: December 22, 2013, 02:08:08 PM »
Finally people are starting to wake up to the absurdity so long spewed out by the so-called government-in-exile. The fact that we have writers such as Jamyang Norbu, writing to shake people out of their complacency is great. We need more people like him in the world to counter the blanket of ignorance concerning the people of Tibet and the "blind faith" they have, especially in regards to the utterly unjustified ban on the practice of the protector Dorje Shugden. Once something is exposed and understood in the eyes of the people, the ban will never be upheld by anyone with an ounce of intelligence. Until that time all we can do is try our best to educate people on absurdities and educate them. Education here is the key, I mean even Buddha taught for one to analyse things oneself before making a decision.

Don't let the fire of your faith and conviction die, keep up with your practice and educate more people to open their eyes and see the truth. The Snow Lion's roar will trumpet over the earth. We need it to, for the benefit and preservation of the Buddhadharma.

DharmaSpace

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1470
Re: The Tide Is Turning
« Reply #8 on: December 24, 2013, 02:58:39 AM »
It is very good that CTA reveals what sort of "democracy" they are practicing.

Democracy means there is freedom of expression and speech.

Democratic governments has inclusive policies and not exclusive ones depending on their interpretations.

At this time CTA will never have autonomy or even any kind of independence from China. why?

It is so simple if a government oppresses its own people then from the laws of karma, if they oppress they will be oppressed. Wish the CTA would study and read up on the Lamrim. 

vajrastorm

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 706
Re: The Tide Is Turning
« Reply #9 on: December 26, 2013, 11:07:13 AM »
It is a relief to see evidence that the tide is indeed turning in favor of democracy for Tibetans in exile. This will augur well for the removal of the ban on Shugden practice.

How do we know that the tide is turning. Just take a look at a recent parliamentary session. CTA as usual made themselves out to be fools in their bumbling efforts to turn the public against those who are against the Dalai Lama's Middle Way stand in regard to Tibet's independence from China. The cheap effort to get the support of the Indian public truly misfired. As CTA MPs went on about how the Dalai Lama had changed his mind from wanting to live to 110 to now only wanting to live to 108, because of criticism of Dalai Lama's Middle Way stance, they got the reception they deserved. There was only contempt in response to this.       

Now more young voices in parliament are saying that critics of CTA policies should not be excluded. Also some MPs didn't even want to support  the renunciation of voices of criticism and opposition(which are healthy signs that democracy is returning). Furthermore, the press and media are less timid about voicing criticisms. One last sign that the CTA have little clout and are more like paper tigers is that the 'rented' crowd outside parliament supporting the CTA has grown very small and are less mob-like and intimidating.

All-in-all, the government -in-exile have had little success in their campaign against democracy and free speech, in India and in the rest of the world.