Author Topic: Behind Self-Immolations, a Cultural Genocide?  (Read 4268 times)

Positive Change

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Behind Self-Immolations, a Cultural Genocide?
« on: June 22, 2012, 08:19:19 PM »
BEIJING, Jun 22 2012 (IPS)

The Chinese government must not “eliminate individualism” but instead encourage diversity of religion, culture and language, the Dalai Lama, the Tibetan spiritual leader, stressed – after yet another Tibetan self-immolated last week in China’s Qinghai province.

Speaking at the University of Westminster in London earlier this week, the Dalai Lama exhorted the Chinese government to learn from the ‘success’ of pluralism in India, where he has lived in exile since he fled his homeland in 1959.

While he admitted, “Complete independence is… out of the question”, he bemoaned the “outdated” system of the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP), which Tibetan advocacy groups accuse of crushing Tibetan culture.

The Dalai Lama’s speech follows the self-immolation of a Tibetan herder, Tamdin Thar, who died in Huangnan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, located in northwest China, last week.

The herder was at least the 38th Tibetan to have set himself on fire since 2009 and the 29th to have died. Last month, the immolations spread to the Tibetan capital Lhasa for the first time as two men set themselves alight outside a temple.

Last year, the Dalai Lama accused Beijing of “cultural genocide” in Tibet at a press conference in Tokyo and attributed the unprecedented wave of self-immolations to the government’s increasingly harsh crackdown on Tibetan culture and religion.

Culture under attack

Since the 2008 Tibetan riots, China has unleashed an increasingly harsh crackdown in Tibetan areas of the country. Government policies in monasteries have been felt most keenly: permanent police surveillance, the severing of food and water supplies, and compulsory patriotic education for monks have fueled anger and despair.

This year, Beijing distributed over one million portraits of China’s four most important Communist leaders and Chinese flags to Tibetan monasteries, houses, and schools. Images of the Dalai Lama – Tibet’s most important spiritual figure – have been banned.

But government clampdowns have not only taken place in monasteries. Authorities have shut down a locally-funded Tibetan school offering classes in the Tibetan language and culture, according to the Indian-based Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy.

The Khadrok Jamtse Rokten School, founded in 1989, was forcibly closed on Apr. 2, according to a report by the Tibetan Centre. The school is situated in Ganzi County, known as Kardze in Tibetan, in China’s southwestern Sichuan province, an area of the country where self-immolations have become increasingly frequent. Two teachers were arrested.

The Tibetan poet and author Tsering Woeser, who has been instrumental in highlighting self-immolations on an influential blog, believes such actions are designed to wear down Tibetan culture.

“Language is very important to any race. But in Tibetan areas, the Chinese government is generating education reforms to diminish education in Tibetan language,” Woeser told IPS.

“In Tibetan schools, where classes are supposed to be taught in the Tibetan language, classes are instead taught in Mandarin and even textbooks are in Mandarin.Worse still, civilian-run schools are being shut down gradually.”

“Meanwhile, modern intellectuals, including writers, NGO workers and singers have been arrested and detained,” Woeser added. “I am worried Tibetan culture will die out one day.”

Burning in despair

“That’s why you see these sad incidents have happened, due to this desperate sort of situation,” said the Dalai Lama at the 2011 press conference. “Even Chinese from mainland China who visit Tibet have the impression things are terrible. ?Some kind of cultural genocide is taking place.”

Beijing has accused the Dalai Lama of whipping up unrest and has declared that the immolations are “terrorism in disguise”. An op-ed published in the state-run ‘China Daily’ on Monday said there is no “Tibet issue” and it is a fiction “invented by Britain”.

But the advocacy group International Campaign for Tibet (ICT) has also accused China of “cultural genocide”.

In a report entitled ‘60 Years of Chinese Misrule: Arguing Cultural Genocide in Tibet’, published in April, during Genocide Prevention Month, ICT stated that the Chinese authorities have made a systematic and concerted effort to replace organic Tibetan culture with a state-approved version that meets the objectives of the CCP.

“The situation in Tibet is not a case of episodic or discrete human rights violations against Tibetans; Tibetan culture has been targeted for destruction from the beginning (of the CCP’s takeover of Tibet),” ICT’s president Mary Beth Markey told IPS.

“Cultural oppression has been institutionalised through the implementation of various campaigns, regulations and laws,” Markey continued. “Where cultural expression falls within the parameters set by the Chinese state, it is tolerated and even commodified. Where it is not, culture is censored or marginalised through forcible assimilation.”

ICT released the report on Apr. 25, the birthday of Tibet’s Panchen Lama, Gedhun Choekyi Nyima. The religious figure, the second most important in Tibetan Buddhism after the Dalai Lama, was taken into custody by Chinese authorities in 1995 and has not been heard of since.

Beijing has since anointed its own Panchen Lama, 22-year-old Gyaincain Norbu, who delivered his first public speech outside mainland China this year. While the appearance in Hong Kong was widely seen as an effort from China to garner international recognition for the state-approved Panchen Lama, he is not recognised by the Dalai Lama or the Tibetan government in exile.

dsiluvu

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Re: Behind Self-Immolations, a Cultural Genocide?
« Reply #1 on: June 23, 2012, 09:30:43 AM »
What a sad news to read! While reading this I cannot help but to think...
The more and more HHDL and Tibetans talk about preserving their culture... the more and more China will suppress it. And obviously those self-immolation acts does not serve the Tibetans as China will clamp down even harder. I find the CTA is not really doing anything skillful apart from just using HHDL to do all the talking and all the work.

Then when you look at all the Dorje Shugden Lamas whom CTA dislike very much and you look at their monasteries and how they are growing, you think, how come they seem to be okay? Just go to this website's page here... it is all listed http://dorjeshugden.com/wp/?cat=5

Perhaps it is okay because HHDL said DS harms him and the Tibetan cause. And perhaps it is OK because the High Lamas who practice Dorje Shugden knows how to appease them?

You see when we look back in history... in any country that has been taken over by another, usually new systems are in place and even certain language. Take America for example... this country does not originally belong to Europeans...  they belongs to the Red Indians. Now in their school... are they teaching in Red Indian language and dialects? NO. 
Quote
When the Europeans settled in America, there were already over a million Indians in North America. With the arrival of the new settlers, there arose clashes between the new Americans and the Indians. While the new settlers kept pushing the Indians further and further into the West, the government tried to draw treaty after treaty. Every time a treaty failed, there followed small but savage wars between the old and the new settlers. Gradually things changed for the worse for the Indians. External pressures such as the new way of living that influenced their new generations left them witnessing a fall in their traditional way of living.
Source: http://www.wisedude.com/history/red_indians.htm


So we are probably witnessing this happening now in Tibet. So how can we prevent it from the many lessons of history? The only way is actually through spirituality or Dharma. Because that is the only thing that would give some hope and light to the greed of mankind. IT is not just China... though now this may seem so... but it is actually happening every where. Hence wouldn't it be wise to find an alternative solution rather then fight a force you know you will be badly defeated? In this sense I am happy that HHDL Ban Dorje Shugden and China is embracing Him... cos maybe that is the only HOPE we have.

DS Star

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Re: Behind Self-Immolations, a Cultural Genocide?
« Reply #2 on: June 24, 2012, 06:28:51 PM »
Very sad indeed with this 'trend' of self-immolations and even more sad that not only CTA leaders didn't do anything to stop Tibetan youth from taking their precious lives, they even promoting it as their strategy to put pressure on Chinese government.

This may be their last desperate protest to tell the world that they can't take it anymore but CTA should not be taking these self-immoslations as just another political move because we are looking at young Tibetans taking their own precious lives. To have the great merits to be born as human with complete faculties is like the blind turtle that found the golden yoke...

CTA should find other method to put pressures to Chinese authorities regarding cultural practice and religion freedom and at the same time educate young Tibetans on the important of preserving their lives. As Buddhists, we should not kill or take lives; taking own lives is bad as we cut short our potential to practice and to benefit all sentient beings.