Special report: Tibet: Its Past and Present
BEIJING, April 24 (xinhua) -- Canadian writer Lisa
Carducci wrote an article entitled "What's the matter with Tibet?" for China
Daily, a Beijing-based English newspaper, explaining why people outside China
usually have a prejudice against Tibet. Here is the full text of the article,
which was published on April 22:
It is one thing to be interested in Tibet, as most of
my acquaintances are. It is another to have totally prejudiced views, which
unfortunately is the case with most of them.
Only a handful are honest enough to hold their
opinions until they visit Tibet and see things with their own eyes. Some others
hear only what they want to hear and what doesn't disturb their "Tibetan
imagination".
Here is an example. A Canadian friend of mine, a
university professor, went to Tibet in May 1997. He later told me that his group
had been sent away from a Tibetan restaurant by the police and directed to a Han
establishment.
The reason, according to him, was racism, an attempt
to "break" the "Tibetan nation". His immediate analysis - before he understood a
word of what was going on - was obviously based on prejudice.
I was not there and didn't see what happened. But
after discussing the fact with Han and Tibetan people who knew better, we all
concluded that the real cause might have been one or more of the following: the
owner of the Tibetan restaurant had no permit; he had not paid his taxes; the
place was not hygienic enough for foreigners; the owner and the policeman had a
personal dispute; or the owner was trafficking ancient tangka, a kind of Tibetan
painting.
We also tend to assume that all Tibetans are the same
and feel and act the same way. Far from it. Those I met in Tibet or in Xiahe
county of Gansu province seem not interested in politics. They live happily and
quietly, and have no complaints about the central government as long as their
lives continue to prosper year after year.
At the village of Tashiling in Nepal, instead, the
Tibetan women I chatted with for two hours at the market had different stories
to tell.
The major difference between them and the Tibetans
living in China is that the Tibetans in Nepal think that "the Hans invaded Tibet
and forced them to flee the country".
The woman who spoke better Chinese and served as an
interpreter for the group said: "When our country is free, we'll go back
immediately and get good jobs! Do you think this is a life, what we do here?
Commerce!"
I took pity on her because she seemed to have been
completely swayed by anti-China propaganda. I told her that all the Tibetans I
had met earlier knew very well what the central government of China had done for
them and appreciated it.
"I'm sorry to tell you," I said, "that you fool
yourself if you think that your Tibetan fellows inside the country think the
same way you do and support your efforts for independence."
She stared at me, her eyes wide open. "Have you ever
been to Tibet?"
"Of course! If not, how could I speak like this?" She
remained silent a moment, then said: "Every year on March 10, the Tibetans of
the world march for independence. If you go to Tibet on that day, you'll see the
Chinese army killing so many people in the streets."
If there was any truth in her words, I thought, I
must have been transported to another planet.
"We have seen photos, and videos," she continued.
"Every year we see them."
"Who took these photos?"
"Foreigners. From other places."
I calmed down, before asking: "Are you sure these
photos and films were taken recently? They may be from the 'cultural revolution'
period when Tibetans just as other Chinese suffered and were treated badly. Or
during the civil rebellion in 1959? Might you not have been deceived? Maybe they
show you the same pictures year after year? Maybe the photos were altered?"
As a spokesperson of her group, she turned around,
and said: "It's possible, but we have no means of checking."
"Might these activist friends of the Dalai Lama," I
continued, "be the authors of the photocopied letters on the board at the
village entrance, issued by 'His Holiness Dalai Lama's office'? And the
inscription 'Chinese, leave', who do you think wrote it?"
I explained to them all the changes that had happened
in Tibet and talked about all the money invested by the central government into
reconstruction and development, the progress in education, the religious
freedom, the improvement of health, society, life, and they were astonished.
Apparently, no one had ever spoken to them like this.
"Do you believe me?" I asked.
"I believe you because you are a foreigner," said the
woman, "not a member of the communist party. Are you?"
"You can trust me. I tell you only what I have seen.
Tibet is a beautiful and peaceful place where people sing while they work, where
people smile and enjoy life."
The younger ones among them were born in Nepal;
others had fled Tibet to go to Nepal in the 1950s and never returned to Tibet.
They have no passports; of course they cannot enter China.
I then visited a temple where a young 17-year-old
monk said that his greatest aspiration was to see Tibet. He thought monks were
arrested, jailed or even killed in China, his thought based on the fact that his
friend went there and never returned.
"I'll tell you something, young man. Your friend may
have been arrested because he entered a country illegally. But if you never
heard from him after that, don't you think he might have accomplished his great
desire: to see Tibet. He may be living in a monastery there!"
He bowed his head and said, "I wish I had such a
chance!"
Finally, I realized that the Tibetans outside Tibet
are the victims not only of ignorance but of a well-organized campaign of
misinformation. And it struck me that it may be the same for the Dalai Lama.
The Dalai Lama, who left the country when he was still very young and under the influence of a group, and never saw Tibet with his own eyes later in life to be able to judge things for himself, is also a poor victim - much like the woman at the village market.