Special Report: Focus on
Tibet
by Xinhua writers Bai Xu, Gama Doje and Laba Cering
LHASA, Jan. 19 (Xinhua) -- Tibetan
legislators endorsed a bill Monday to designate March 28 as an annual Serfs
Emancipation Day, to mark the date on which about 1 million serfs in the region
were freed 50 years ago.
The bill was submitted last week to the second annual
session of the ninth regional People's Congress (legislature) for
review.
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"The 382 legislators attending the
session unanimously voted for the proposal," said Legqog, director of the
Standing Committee of the Tibetan Autonomous Regional People's Congress,
Jan. 19, 2009. Tibetan legislators endorsed a bill Monday to designate
March 28 as an annual Serfs Emancipation Day, to mark the date on which
about 1 million serfs in the region were freed 50 years ago. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
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"The 382 legislators attending the session
unanimously voted for the proposal," said Legqog, director of the Standing
Committee of the Tibetan Autonomous Regional People's Congress.
"Serfs Emancipation Day" will take place every year
on March 28.
On March 28, 1959, the central government announced
it would dissolve the aristocratic local government of Tibet and replace it with
a preparatory committee for establishing the Tibet Autonomous Region.
The move came after the central government foiled an
armed rebellion staged by the Dalai Lama and his supporters, most of whom were
slave owners attempting to maintain serfdom.
That meant the end of serfdom and the abolition of
the hierarchic social system characterized by theocracy, with the Dalai Lama as
the core of the leadership. About 1 million serfs and slaves, accounting for 90
percent of Tibetan population in the1950s, were thus freed.
Among the lawmakers who reviewed the bill was
Gaisang, 62, chief executive officer of the Yamei Ethnic Handicraft Ltd. Corp.
"The day should have been established earlier," he
said, beaming. "It is necessary to have the day remembered to comfort the old,
who were once serfs, and teach the young who have little idea of that part of
history."
"My parents, who were both serfs, didn't live to see
the day. They died several years ago." he said.
The entrepreneur was born to the family of Tralpa (a
kind of Tibetan serf) in Bailang County, Xigaze. His childhood memories were
bare feet, patched clothes and a leather whip as thick as a finger.
"If you dared to offend the lord, what was in store
for you was at least 50 lashes," he said.
The low point for him came in 1954, when the nearby
Nianchu River flooded, inundating crops.
"Thousands of kilograms of grain rotted in the
warehouses of the aristocrats, while serfs died from starvation," he recalled.
According to Gaisang, serfs then were bought and sold
like animals.
His aunt, Canggyoi, was sold from Xigaze to Lhasa in
her teens, and his parents didn't even know.
Gaisang's parents found his aunt, whose name had been
changed by her new owner, after a week-long search in Lhasa and they cried for
joy.
Now Canggyoi has a daughter and two grandchildren.
Like other people above 80, she gets a pension of 300 yuan (about 44 U.S.
dollars) a year. Her family's annual net income is about 5,000 yuan.
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