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Foreword
China is a united
multi-ethnic country. As a member of the big family of the Chinese nation,
the Tibetan people have created and developed their brilliant and
distinctive culture during a long history of continuous exchanges and
contacts with other ethnic groups, all of whom have assimilated and
promoted each other's cultures. Tibetan culture has all along been a
dazzling pearl in the treasure-house of Chinese culture as well as that of
the world as a whole.
The gradual merger of the Tubo culture of the
Yalong Valley in the middle part of the basin of the Yarlung Zangbo River,
and the ancient Shang-Shung culture of the western part of the
Qinghai-Tibet Plateau formed the native Tibetan culture. In the period of
the reign of Songtsen Gampo in the seventh century, Buddhism was
introduced to the Tubo people from the Central Plain of China, India and
Nepal, and gradually developed into Tibetan Buddhism with its distinctive
characteristics. At the same time, the Indian and Nepalese cultures of
South Asia, the Persian and Arabic cultures of West Asia and especially
the Han Chinese culture of the Central Plain had considerable influence on
the development of Tibetan culture. In the long process of Tibetan
cultural development, Tibetan architecture art and the plastic arts such
as sculpture, painting, decoration and handicrafts, as well as music,
dance, drama, spoken and written language, literature in written form,
folk literature, Tibetan medicine and pharmacology, astronomy and the
calendar all reached very high levels.
Tibet later became a local regime practicing a
system of feudal serfdom under a theocracy, and ruled by a few upper-class
monks and nobles. This ensured that Tibetan Buddhist culture gained the
dominant position in Tibetan culture for a long period of time, until the
Democratic Reform was carried out in 1959. Throughout this period, a
handful of upper-class lamas and aristocrats monopolized the means of
production, culture and education. Cultural and artistic pursuits were
regarded as their exclusive amusements, while the serfs and slaves, who
constituted 95 percent of the Tibetan population, lived in extreme poverty
and were not guaranteed even the basic right of subsistence, let alone the
right to enjoy culture and education. The long reign of feudal serfdom
under theocracy not only severely fettered the growth of the productive
forces in Tibet, but also resulted in a hermetically sealed and moribund
traditional Tibetan culture, including cultural relics, historic sites and
sites for Buddhist worship. As for modern science, technology, culture and
education, they did not get any chance to develop at all.
After the People's Republic of China was founded in
1949, the Central People's Government attached great importance to the
protection and development of the fine aspects of traditional Tibetan
culture. The "Seventeen-Article Agreement" on measures for the peaceful
liberation of Tibet signed by the Central People's Government and the
local government of Tibet in 1951 clearly stipulates: "In accordance with
the actual conditions of Tibet, the spoken and written Tibetan language
and school education will be progressively developed."; In 1959, with the
support of the Central Government, Tibet carried out the Democratic Reform
to abolish the feudal serf system and liberate the million serfs and
slaves, and implemented the ethnic regional autonomy system there step by
step. This marked the advent of a brand-new era in the social and cultural
development of Tibet, and ended the monopoly exercised over Tibetan
culture by the few upper-class feudal lamas and aristocrats, making it the
common legacy for all the people of Tibet to inherit and carry on.
In accordance with the provisions of the
Constitution and the Law on Ethnic Regional Autonomy, the Central People's
Government and the People's Government of the Tibet Autonomous Region have
made great efforts in the past 40-plus years to promote the social and
economic development of Tibet, to satisfy the Tibetan people's increasing
needs for rich material and cultural lives. At the same time, they have
devoted large amounts of human, financial and material resources to
protecting and carrying forward the fine aspects of traditional Tibetan
culture, as well as initiating and developing modern science, culture and
education by employing legal, economic and administrative means. As a
result, considerable achievements attracting worldwide attention have been
attained. All the people in Tibet, as masters of the new era, jointly
carry on, develop and enjoy the traditional Tibetan culture, and jointly
create modern civilized life and culture, bringing unprecedented
prosperity and development to Tibetan culture.
I. The Spoken and Written Tibetan Language Is
Widely Studied and Used, and Being Developed
The Tibet Autonomous Region is an area where
Tibetan people live in concentrated communities, constituting more than 95
percent of the population of the region. In Tibet, the spoken and written
Tibetan language is universally used. In accordance with the stipulations
of the Constitution and the Law on Ethnic Regional Autonomy, the Tibet
Autonomous Region has paid great attention to maintaining and safeguarding
the Tibetan people's right to study, use and develop their spoken and
written language. It promulgated and implemented Some Provisions of the
Tibet Autonomous Region on the Study, Use and Development of the Spoken
and Written Tibetan Language (Draft) and the Rules for the Implementation
of "Some Provisions of the Tibet Autonomous Region on the Study, Use and
Development of the Spoken and Written Tibetan Language (Draft)" in 1987
and 1988, respectively. These two laws put the work related to the study,
use and development of the spoken and written Tibetan language on a legal
track. The governments at all levels in Tibet have implemented the
provisions on protecting and developing the spoken and written Tibetan
language according to law, safeguarding the Tibetan people's right to
study and use their native language, and making the language develop
continuously together with the development of politics, economy and
culture.
The spoken and written Tibetan language is widely used in every aspect
of social life in Tibet. Since the Democratic Reform in 1959, the Tibetan
and Han Chinese languages have been used for all the resolutions, laws and
regulations adopted by the People's Congress of the Tibet Autonomous
Region, and the official documents and proclamations issued by the
governments at all levels or their departments in Tibet. In judicial
proceedings, the spoken and written Tibetan language is used in trying
cases and in the relevant legal documents if the litigant participants are
Tibetans. Both the Tibetan and Han Chinese languages are used for all work
units’ official seals, certificates, forms, stationery, and signs, and
signboards of institutions, factories, mines, schools, railway stations,
airports, stores and shops, hotels, cinemas, theaters and gymnasiums,
street and road signs, and traffic signs
At present, the radio and TV stations in the Tibet Autonomous Region
broadcast in the Tibetan language for over 20 hours per day. On October 1,
1999, the Tibet Television started its satellite broadcasting channel,
which broadcast telefilms and other programs in the Tibetan language every
day. The cinema is oriented toward grassroots and farming and pastoral
areas, guaranteeing that at least 25 movies newly dubbed into the Tibetan
language are shown in the various places in Tibet every year. Meanwhile,
the publication of Tibetan books, magazines and newspapers has made rapid
progress. Since 1989 alone, 441 titles of books have been published in the
Tibetan language, of which many have won domestic or international awards.
There are altogether 14 magazines and 10 newspapers published in the
Tibetan language in Tibet. The Tibetan edition of the Tibet Daily is
published every day, with a large number of articles and news dispatches
written or edited in the Tibetan language directly. The newspaper has said
good-bye to sort typesetting by investing a considerable sum of money to
establish Tibetan computer editing and typesetting systems. Both Tibet
Science and Technology News and Tibet Scientific and Technological
Information have their Tibetan-language editions, which are very popular
among the farmers and herdsmen. All the art troupes in Tibet create
programs and perform in the Tibetan language.
The study of the Tibetan language is protected by law. Educational
institutions in the Tibet Autonomous Region universally practice a
bilingual educational system whereby teaching is done principally in the
Tibetan language. Furthermore, the teaching and reference materials for
all the courses from primary school to senior high school have been edited
in or translated into the Tibetan language.
As the times progress and society advances, the Tibetan language
develops in tandem, with its vocabulary and grammar continuously enriched.
Much headway has been made in the normalization of technical terms and
standardization of information technology in the Tibetan language. The
encoded Tibetan language has been formally recognized by the Chinese state
and international standards, and the promotion of the Tibetan language as
an Internet communication tool is proceeding apace.
II. Cultural Relics and Ancient Books
and Records Are Well Preserved and Utilized
In
old Tibet, cultural relic protection was virtually nonexistent. But since
the Democratic Reform, the Central People's Government has attached great
importance to the protection of cultural relics in Tibet. As early as in
June 1959, the Tibet Cultural Relics, Historical Sites, Documents and
Archives Management Committee was established to collect and protect a
large number of cultural relics, archives, and ancient books and records.
At the same time, the Central People's Government assigned work teams to
Lhasa, Xigaze and Shannan to conduct on-the-spot investigations of major
cultural relics. A total of nine historical sites were listed among the
first batch of important cultural relic sites under state-level protection
by the State Council in 1961, including the Potala Palace, Jokhang Temple,
Ganden Monastery, Tibetan King's Tomb, Mount Dzong (Dzongri) Anti-British
Monument in Gyangze County, and the Guge Kingdom ruins. Even in such a
special period as the "Cultural Revolution"; (1966-1976), Premier Zhou
Enlai gave instructions personally that special measures be taken to
protect major cultural relics like the Potala Palace from destruction.
After the "Cultural Revolution," the Central People's Government took
prompt measures to repair and protect a lot of historical relics,
investing more than 300 million yuan to repair and open 1,400-odd
monasteries and temples. In particular, between 1989 and 1994, the Central
People's Government allocated 55 million yuan and a great quantity of
gold, silver and other precious materials to repair the Potala Palace,
which was unprecedented in China's history of historical relic
preservation. In May 1994, experts entrusted by the UNESCO World Heritage
Committee inspected the repaired Potala Palace and said that the design
and construction of the repairs had both attained advanced world levels.
They considered it "a miracle in the history of ancient building
protection" and "a great contribution to the protection of Tibetan, and
even world, culture." In December 1994, in view of its importance and
condition of protection the World Heritage Committee unanimously agreed to
place the Potala Palace on the World Heritage List. Meanwhile,
representatives from various countries also expressed their support for
the proposal on including the Jokhang Temple in Lhasa in the same list.
Now, the Central People's Government allocates four to five million yuan
every year for cultural relic protection in Tibet. From 1994 to 1997, the
Central Government invested nearly 100 million yuan to construct the Tibet
Autonomous Region Museum, one of the leading modern museums in China, with
an area of 52,479 square meters and a floor space of 21,000 square meters.
In 1965, the People's Government of the Tibet Autonomous Region set up
the Cultural Relics Administration Committee to take charge of the
preservation and administration of cultural relics in Tibet. It named 11
historical sites, such as Ramoche Monastery, Radreng Monastery and Tsurpu
Monastery, as important cultural relic sites under autonomous region-level
protection, and repaired those that urgently needed repair. Beginning in
the 1980s, the Tibet Autonomous Region has issued successively the
Proclamation of the People's Government of the Tibet Autonomous Region on
Improving the Preservation of Cultural Relics, the Interim Provisions of
the Tibet Autonomous Region on the Administration of Scattered Cultural
Relics, the Regulations of the Tibet Autonomous Region on the Protection
and Administration of Cultural Relics, and the Measures for the Protection
and Administration of the Potala Palace. These laws and regulations have
brought the work of preserving cultural relics in Tibet within the orbit
of legalization and standardization. At the same time, a large contingent
of cultural relic protection staff has been formed, and the ranks of such
personnel are constantly growing. According to statistics, there are now
more than 270 archeologists in Tibet, among whom 95 percent are Tibetans.
Remarkable achievements have been gained in archeological work in
Tibet. Among them, the excavation of the Karuo ruins, Qamdo, attracted the
attention of archeologists both at home and abroad. Since the 1970s, China
has conducted archeological work extensively in Tibet and unearthed many
Old and New Stone Age sites, gradually unveiling the mystery of the
origins of the society, history and traditional culture of Tibet. A
general survey made from the mid-1980s to the beginning of the 1990s
discovered 1,700-odd sites of cultural remains, and unearthed and
collected several thousand cultural relics. In addition, over six million
words of archeological documents were edited, along with 670-odd diagrams,
more than 30,000 photos were taken, and some 400 pictures of tablet
inscriptions, stone statues and murals were copied. These materials have
helped outline the changes and development of Tibet from ancient to modern
times, and revealed the long-standing cultural exchanges between the
Tibetan, Han and other neighboring ethnic groups. Moreover, they furnish a
full and reliable basis for archeological workers of the present and later
times to better preserve cultural relics and strengthen archeological work
in Tibet. Currently, there are 18 important cultural relic sites under
state-level protection, three famous historical and cultural cities under
state-level protection, 64 cultural relic sites under autonomous
region-level protection, and 20-odd cultural relic sites under county- or
city-level protection in Tibet. In recent years, Tibet has successfully
held Tibetan cultural relic exhibitions in Japan, France, Italy, Argentina
and other countries, promoting cultural exchanges between Tibet and other
nations worldwide, and helping the international community better
understand Tibet.
Ancient documents and archives are well preserved in Tibet. There are
enormous numbers of Tibetan-language documents and archives in various
categories, next in number only to the Han-Chinese language ones. In June
1959, the Preparatory Committee for the Tibet Autonomous Region, on the
instructions of the State Council, issued Some Provisions on Strengthening
the Administration of Cultural Relics, Historical Sites, Documents and
Archives, and started to edit, preserve, collect and store the documents
and archives of the former local government of Tibet and its subordinate
departments, as well as those collected by monasteries, temples and
aristocrats. As a result, a fairly complete collection of archives was
established. In 1984, the Central People's Government allocated a large
amount of money to build the new Tibet Autonomous Region Archives, with
improved functions and modern facilities. At present, there are over three
million volumes in the Archives. Large-format books such as A Selection of
Tibetan Historical Archives and An Inventory of the Year of the Iron-Tiger
edited by the Tibet Autonomous Region Archives have been published,
furnishing precious materials for research. The government institutions at
all levels in Tibet have collected over four million volumes of archives
on paper, silk, wood, metal, stone and Pattra leaf. Among them, more than
90 percent are in Tibetan, and the others in a variety of languages such
as Han Chinese, Manchu, Mongolian, Hindi, Sanskrit, Nepalese, English and
Russian. These archives, which date from the Yuan Dynasty to contemporary
times, constitute a treasure-house of chronologically complete historical
records.
III. Folk
Customs and Freedom of Religious Belief Are Respected and Protected
The state respects and safeguards the rights
of the Tibetans and other ethnic groups in Tibet to live their lives and
conduct social activities in accordance with their traditional customs,
and their freedoms to engage in normal religious activities and major
religious and folk festival celebrations. As society progresses, some
decayed, backward old customs despising laboring people that bear a strong
tinge of the feudal serf system have been abandoned, which reflects the
Tibetans' pursuit of modern civilization and a healthy life as well as the
continuous development of Tibetan culture in the new era. The Tibetan
people, while maintaining their traditions, have greatly enriched their
lives by absorbing many new cultural customs, as displayed in dress and
adornments, diet, residence, weddings and funerals. There are many
traditional festivals and fairs in Tibet, including the Tibetan New Year,
Sakadawa Festival, Ongkor (Bumper Harvest) Festival, Shoton (Yogurt)
Festival, Bathing Festival, Butter Lamp Festival, Dharma Festival, Burning
Offerings Festival, Garchachen Festival, and Horse Race Fair of Lhasa and
the many festivals of other places. Religious festivals celebrated by
monasteries include the Shimo Chento Festival of Tashilhunpo Monastery,
Nganjo Festival of Ganden Monastery, Collecting Sutras and Religious Dance
festivals of Samye Monastery, July Vajra Festival of Sakya Monastery,
Erecting the Prayer Banner Pole Festival of Tsurpu Monastery, and Paltung
Tanbo Festival of Radreng Monastery. In addition, the Tibetans also
celebrate some national and international festivals such as International
Working Women's Day (March 8th), International Labor Day (May 1st),
Chinese Youth Festival (May 4th), International Children's Day (June 1st)
and National Day (October 1st). Combining new concepts and the new culture
of modern civilization with the fine aspects of traditional Tibetan
culture, Tibet has formed new customs and habits with the characteristics
of both the ethnic group and the times.
The Central People's Government and the government of the Tibet
Autonomous Region have all along paid special attention to respect for and
protection of the freedom of religious belief and normal religious
activities of the Tibetan people. Since the Democratic Reform,
religion-related cultural relics and historical sites, monasteries and
temples have been well preserved at the behest of both the clerical and
secular masses. The Potala Palace, the Three Grand Monasteries in Lhasa,
Jokhang Temple and Tashilhunpo Monastery in Xigaze have been listed as
important cultural relic sites under state-level protection by the Central
Government. The murals, sculptures, statues, Thangkas (scroll paintings),
artistic decorations, scriptures, offerings, ritual musical instruments
and shrines of Buddha of those monasteries, as well as the scripture
halls, worship halls, monasteries, temples and pagodas, the carriers of
religious culture, have been preserved as far as possible or have been
repaired or restored to their original condition. Especially beginning in
the 1980s, the state has allocated large amounts of money for the
reconstruction of some famous monasteries, including the Ganden,
Yumbulagang and Sanggagorto monasteries, and the repairing of well-known
but dilapidated monasteries, such as the Samye, Shalu, Sakya, Changzhug,
Qamba Ling and Toling monasteries. The scriptures and classics of the
Potala Palace, the Norbulingka and Sakya Monastery have been well
preserved, with some edited and published as the Catalogue of the Classics
of the Potala Palace, Ancient Books of the Snowland, and Origin of
Religions by Deu. Now, Tibet is home to more than 1,700 monasteries,
temples and other sites of religious activity, with over 46,000 Buddhist
monks and nuns. Each year, religious activities are held and important
religious festivals are celebrated on schedule in the Autonomous Region.
The Tibet Branch of the Buddhist Association of China, an umbrella
organization of the various sects of Tibetan Buddhism, now has seven
prefecture (city)-level sub-branches, the journal Buddhism in Tibet in the
Tibetan language, an institute of Buddhist theology and a Tibetan
scripture printing house.
IV.Culture and Art Are Being Inherited and Developed in
an All-Round Way
The Central People's
Government and the People's Government of the Tibet Autonomous Region have
all along attached importance to the inheritance and development of
Tibetan culture and art. As early as in the 1950s, a group of literary and
art workers from different ethnic groups went to Tibet to collect music,
dance, folk stories, proverbs and folk songs together with their Tibetan
counterparts, and edited them for publication. One fruit of their labors
was the book Tibetan Folk Songs. Beginning at the end of the 1970s, the
state conducted a large-scale systematic survey, collection and edition of
the Tibetan folk cultural and art heritage. Since the 1980s, a group of
region-, prefecture- and city-level institutions have been set up to save,
collect, research, edit and publish the Tibetan folk literary and art
heritage, on a scale without parallel in history. The regional government
has assigned survey teams to go to the towns, villages and monasteries to
make extensive investigation and collection of this heritage. These
efforts have resulted in the collection of about 30 million words of
written materials in the Han Chinese and Tibetan languages, the making of
a large amount of video tapes and the taking of nearly 10,000 pictures. On
this basis, the History of Chinese Operas and Story-telling Ballads: Tibet
Volume, Collection of Chinese Folk Songs: Tibet Volume, Collection of Folk
Dances of Chinese Ethnic Groups: Tibet Volume, and Collection of Chinese
Proverbs: Tibet Volume have been published, and a series of collections of
Tibetan ballads, folk songs, opera music and folk stories are now under
compilation and will be published very soon. The editing and publishing of
these books reflects the regional government's achievements in the
protection of the fine aspects of traditional Tibetan culture and folk
literature and art.
The world-famous Life of King Gesar, a lengthy and valuable heroic epic
created by the Tibetan people over a considerable length of time, is a
rare literary treasure of China and the whole of mankind. However, it has
all along been passed down by folk artists orally. To better protect it,
the regional authorities set up special bodies in 1979 for the collection,
research, editing and publishing of the Life of King Gesar. The state
placed it on the key scientific research project lists of the Sixth,
Seventh and Eighth Five-Year Plans. After 20 years of effort, nearly 300
handwritten or block-printed Tibetan volumes have been collected. Among
them, except 100 variant volumes, about 70 volumes have been formally
published in the Tibetan language, with a total print run of well over
three million copies. Thus, this epic, which had for long centuries been
known only to a few folk artists, has come out as a systematically
complete literary masterpiece that is called "the king of world epics." In
addition, over 20 volumes of the Chinese edition have been published, and
some have been translated into English, Japanese and French, and
distributed all over the world. This was an unprecedented achievement in
protecting the Tibetan literary and art heritage, as well as in publishing
history.
Modern Tibetan literature and art have developed greatly in the process
of combining with the traditional formats, styles and characteristics.
After the peaceful liberation of Tibet, a group of literary and art
workers from different ethnic groups went into the thick of life in Tibet
to explore and inherit the fine aspects of the local literature and art
tradition. They created a lot of poems, novels, songs, dances, fine art
works, films and photos, introducing new literary and artistic ideas and
creation experience to the then closed or semi-closed parts of Tibet. A
large body of Tibetan intellectuals loving literature and art joined the
new ranks of literary and art workers, and created a batch of modern works
with distinctive ethnic features. Particularly after the Democratic Reform
in 1959, a number of excellent literary and art works emerged in Tibet
and, to a certain degree, influenced people both at home and abroad. These
works include the songs "On the Golden Hill of Beijing" and "Liberated
Serfs Sing," the song with actions "Strolling Around the New Town," the
song and dance combination "Washing Clothes," the dance epic with music
"Emancipated Serfs Turn Toward the Sun," the drama "Princess Wen Cheng"
and the movie "The Serfs." Over the past half century, professional
literary and art workers in Tibet have created and performed a total of
569 literary and art works and theatrical programs with distinctive ethnic
features and a strong feel of the times, of which 51 have won national
awards, and 121 regional awards. In the past five years, professional
theatrical troupes in Tibet have presented 4,887 performances, attracting
audiences totaling 2.79 million. In addition, they have presented over 400
performances for ordinary people every year.
Popular culture and art have developed energetically. Beginning in
1959, the emancipated serfs set up amateur song and dance and Tibetan
opera teams one after another in cities and townships. They composed,
wrote and performed a number of programs reflecting the people's new life
since the liberation in the forms loved by the masses. In 1963, Tibet, for
the first time, held a regional popular theatrical festival, and formed a
delegation to participate in the National Amateur Theatrical Festival of
Ethnic Minorities in Beijing. The delegation performed a number of
excellent programs with new contents and distinctive ethnic
characteristics, displaying the new level of popular literary and artistic
creation. In the past five years, with the support of the Central People's
Government and other autonomous regions, provinces and municipalities,
Tibet has intensified its efforts for the construction of cultural
facilities, investing a total of 140.46 million yuan in this sphere. So
far, Tibet has constructed more than 400 mass art centers, where rich
recreational and sports activities of diverse forms can be carried out.
The Tibet Library was opened in July 1996, and has been visited by over
100,000 Tibetan readers so far. Now Tibet has 17 mobile performance teams
and some 160 amateur theatrical performance teams and Tibetan opera teams
at the county level. These teams always perform for the people of the
farming and pastoral areas, and are very popular there. Many of their
performances have won awards at national or regional theatrical festivals.
In addition, the various prefectures, cities and counties hold mass
theatrical festivals from time to time to promote popular cultural
activities. On the traditional Tibetan Shoton Festival in recent years,
Tibetan opera and song and dance performances have been given in Tibet,
together with a wide range of other colorful traditional cultural
activities of popular appeal. Lhozhag County, Biru County, Chenggo
Township in Gonggar County, Jiongriwuqi Township in Ngamring County and
Gyangze County, which are famous for their Tibetan opera, song and dance
performances, folk plastic art, folk dances, Tibetan opera and Tibetan
carpets, respectively, have received official recognition from the state,
which invested over 2.6 million yuan to construct the state-level cultural
garden for rural children in Doilungdeqen County and established the Tibet
Children's Art Ensemble in 1996. The Tibet Children's Art Ensemble has
performed twice in Beijing, and participated in the International
Children's Art Festival in the United States in 1998, both times with
great success. From 1995 to 1999, a total of 40 professional and amateur
art ensembles made up of 360 people were sent by the Tibet Autonomous
Region to perform or hold exhibitions in or conduct academic exchanges
with more than 20 countries and regions worldwide, and wherever they went,
they were enthusiastically welcomed.
V. Tibetan Studies Are Flourishing, and Tibetan
Medicine and Pharmacology Have Taken On a New Lease of Life
Old Tibet had no Tibetan studies in the modern
sense. But today, great progress has been made in Tibetan studies in
Tibet, and Tibetology has been universally acknowledged as a newly
developed discipline worldwide, being highly valued in international
academic circles. It covers most of the basic subjects in the social and
natural sciences, including political science, economics, history,
literature and art, religion, philosophy, spoken and written language,
geography, education, archeology, folk customs, Tibetan medicine and
pharmacology, astronomy, the calendar, ecological protection, sustainable
economic development, and agriculture and animal husbandry, breaking the
narrow bounds of the "Five Major and Five Minor Treatises of Buddhist
Doctrine" of traditional Tibetan culture. Thus Tibetology has become a
grand system of comprehensive studies of Tibetan society. According to
statistics, there are over 50 institutions of Tibetan studies and more
than 1,000 experts and scholars in this field in China at present.
Tibetan studies in Tibet started after the peaceful liberation of the
region in 1951. A number of special organizations on Tibetan studies have
been established in Tibet since the 1970s, represented by the Tibet
Academy of Social Sciences. In the past few years, the Academy has made a
breakthrough in Tibetan studies by completing a sequence of important
monographs, including A General History of Tibet (Tibetan and Chinese
editions), A Political History of Tibet by Xagaba (Annotated), A
Communications History of Ancient and Modern Tibet (Chinese edition), The
Inference Theory in Tibetan Philosophy (Tibetan edition), A Dictionary of
Tibetan Philosophy (Tibetan edition), and Index of the Catalogues of
Tibetan Studies Documents. Tibetan Studies has become one of the 100
leading Chinese periodicals on the social sciences. Especially in recent
years, unprecedented development has been made in social sciences research
in Tibet, a great number of experts and scholars with outstanding
accomplishments have emerged, and many scientific research achievements
have filled important academic gaps in various fields of Tibetan studies,
making important contributions to collating, exploring and saving the
precious Tibetan historical and cultural heritage, promoting and carrying
forward the fine aspects of traditional Tibetan culture, and enriching the
treasure-house of traditional Chinese culture.
Great achievements have also been made in the collection and collation
of Chinese documents and historical materials relating to Tibetan studies.
A total of over 200 works in more than five million copies have been
compiled and published, producing a great impact both at home and abroad,
and providing rich evidence and reliable historical materials for research
in Tibetology, the history of Han-Tibetan relations, and the history of
the relations between the central and Tibetan local authorities. Extensive
academic exchanges and cooperation have been carried out between
Tibetologists in China and foreign countries, with China receiving more
than 200 foreign experts and scholars, and often sending experts and
scholars to other countries to give lectures and carry out cooperative
research.
Tibetan medicine and pharmacology, with distinctive Tibetan
characteristics, occupies an important position in traditional Tibetan
culture, and forms a unique part of the treasure-house of Chinese medicine
and pharmacology. However, there were only two medical organs in Tibet
before 1959--the "Mantsikhang" (Institute of Tibetan Medicine and
Astrology) and the "Chakpori Zhopanling" (Medicine King Hill Institute for
Saving All Living Beings) in Lhasa, the conditions at which were very
simple and crude. They had a combined floor space of only 500 square
meters for the outpatient clinics and a total staff of fewer than 50. They
handled 30-50 outpatients a day, and mainly served the nobles, feudal
lords and upper-strata lamas.
The state has allocated over 800 million yuan to promote the
development of Tibetan medicine and pharmacology since Tibet carried out
the Democratic Reform over 40 years ago, giving a great boost to this
sector. At present, there are a total of 14 Tibetan medical institutions
in Tibet, and over 60 county-level hospitals have established Tibetan
medicine sections. In 1959, the working personnel involved in Tibetan
medicine in Tibet numbered only 434, while in 1999 the number had
increased to 1,071, including 61 chief physicians and associate chief
physicians, 166 attending physicians and 844 resident physicians and
doctors. The "Mantsikhang" and "Chakpori Zhopanling" have been amalgamated
to become the Tibet Autonomous Regional Hospital of Tibetan Medicine, with
a floor space of over 100,000 square meters and a staff of 438, of whom
290 are health technicians. The hospital has 250 beds and provides free
medical care for the broad masses of the Tibetan people, receiving 230,000
outpatients annually. The hospital has set up outpatient and inpatient
departments, a pharmaceuticals factory, and research institutes of Tibetan
medicine, astronomy and the calendar. It has a department of medicine,
surgical department, department of gynecology and obstetrics, tumor
department, gastrointestinal department and department of pediatrics to
cater to outpatients. In addition, it has set up more than 20 special
outpatient departments, such as the department for disease prevention and
health protection, oral hygiene department, ophthalmological department
and department of external Tibetan therapeutic medicine, and some modern
medical and technical departments such as the departments of radiation,
ultrasonic wave examination, electrocardioscopy and gastroscopy. The
hospital has adopted the method of combining Western and Tibetan medicine
to treat diseases, thereby enriching and developing Tibetan medical
therapies and theories.
Due attention has been paid to scientific research and education
concerning Tibetan medicine. Tibetan medical institutions at all levels
are actively carrying out scientific research on Tibetan medicine, and
have collected and collated nearly 100 related documents and monographs.
New achievements have been made in studies relating to the history of
Tibetan medicine, medical documents, pharmacological theories, medical
ethics, the inheritance of the teachings of the masters, and Tibetan
materia medica. Thirty-two monographs have been published, including the
Four Medical Classics (Tibetan-Chinese bilingual edition), Blue Glaze, A
Complete Collection of Wall Charts of the Four Medical Classics,
Diagnostics of Tibetan Medicine, Newly Compiled Tibetan Medicaments and
Biographies of Famous Tibetan Doctors. The College of Tibetan Medicine has
trained 615 qualified personnel of various levels and categories since it
was established 10 years ago. The production of Tibetan medicine has been
put on a standardized, normalized and scientific administration track. The
Tibetan Pharmaceuticals Factory of the Tibet Autonomous Region, one of a
dozen similar factories in Tibet, has two production lines, turning out
over 110 varieties of products and boasting an annual output value of 46.1
million yuan.
Tibetan medicine is now taking its place in the world, arousing the
attention of international medical circles. Many foreign experts and
scholars come to Tibet every year to study Tibetan medicine. Tibetan
medicine and pharmacology has also been introduced to the United States,
Britain and Germany, and some countries have sent students to Tibet to
study Tibetan medicine. With the development and progress of the times,
the old science of Tibetan medicine and pharmacology is now full of vigor
and vitality, playing an important role in improving the health conditions
of the Tibetan people and bringing benefits to mankind as a
whole.
VI. Popular Education Makes a Historic Leap
There
were no proper schools in old Tibet. Monasteries monopolized education,
and there were only a few government schools for training only clerical
and secular officials, where most of the students were children of the
nobility. The masses of serfs and slaves had no chance to receive
education at all and illiterate persons accounted for 95 percent of their
total number. Less than 300 students studied in the state-run Lhasa
Primary School, which was established by the Ministry of Education of the
National Government in 1937, even during its period of full bloom, and
only 12 students graduated from higher primary school during its 10 or so
years of operation.
The People's Government of the Tibet Autonomous Region has always
regarded it as an important task to develop popular education to enhance
the scientific and cultural qualities of all the Tibetans since Tibet
carried out the Democratic Reform. To guarantee the people's right to
receive education in accordance with the law, the autonomous region
promulgated for implementation the Measures of Compulsory
Education in the Tibet Autonomous Region and A Plan for Compulsory
Education in the Tibet Autonomous Region in 1994, and adopted a policy
which favored investment in education, providing in explicit terms that
the proportion of education to either its annual financial budget or
annual investment plan in capital construction should reach 17 percent.
The investment in education within the local budget totaled 1.03 billion
yuan from 1990 to 1995. At present, a fairly complete educational system
has taken initial shape in Tibet. The teaching and administrative staff
have reached 22,279, among whom 19,276 are full-time teachers, and the
teachers of ethnic minorities, with most being Tibetans, account for over
80 percent. Education in Tibet has made great strides. According to
statistics, Tibet now boasts 820 primary schools, 101 middle schools and
3,033 teaching centers, with a total enrollment of 354,644 in primary and
middle schools, including 34,756 junior middle school students and 9,451
senior middle school students within the region itself. The enrollment
ratio of school-age children has reached 83.4 percent. A three-year
compulsory education system has been popularized in pastoral areas; in
agricultural areas, six years; and in major cities and towns, nine years.
Sixteen secondary vocational schools have been set up in the region, and
the number of students attending such schools both within and outside
Tibet has reached 8,161. With the development of adult education, the
illiteracy rate of Tibetan young and middle-aged people declined from 95
percent before 1951 to 42 percent in 1999. Higher education has also been
developed rapidly. Tibet has now established four universities--the Tibet
Ethnic Institute, Tibet Institute of Agriculture and Animal Husbandry,
Tibet University, and Tibet College of Tibetan Medicine, with a total
enrollment of 5,249.
In the last few decades in Tibet, over 20,000 students have graduated
from universities, and more than 23,000 from secondary vocational schools.
Some Tibetans have received master's or doctor's degrees. A large number
of Tibetan professionals have thus been trained, including scientists,
engineers, professors, doctors, writers and artists.
VII. The News and
Publishing, Broadcasting, Film and Television Industries Are Developing
Rapidly
There was no genuine news and
publishing industry in Tibet before its peaceful liberation, and the
materials printed by the few wood-block printing houses were almost all
scriptures. Tibet's news and publishing industry has grown gradually from
nothing since its peaceful liberation. Especially in the past 20 years,
the publishing of books, newspapers and audio-visual materials has made
rapid progress, and a news and publishing system covering the whole region
has already taken initial shape.
Publishing is flourishing. Tibet has established four publishing houses
and an audio-visual products duplication and manufacturing plant. The
Tibet People's Publishing House has published over 6,600 titles of books,
with a total distribution of over 78.9 million copies since it was founded
some 30 years ago, among which Tibetan-language books accounted for
approximately 80 percent, and nearly 100 titles won national or regional
prizes. At present, the region has the Tibet Xinhua Printing House and
another 24 printing houses, and new technologies have been gradually
introduced to printing enterprises, such as electronic composition, offset
lithography, electronic color separation and polychrome printing. There
was no system of book distribution in Tibet before its peaceful
liberation. But now, the region has 67 Xinhua bookstores at regional,
prefectural (city) and county levels. A network of book distribution
covering the whole region is now basically in place, offering a total of
90-odd million Tibetan-language books in over 8,000 titles to the masses
of Tibetan readers over the past 20 years. The publishing of newspapers
and periodicals has also been developed steadily. The Tibet Daily started
publication in 1956, and Tibetan Literature and Art in 1977. Now, a total
of 52 newspapers and periodicals are published for the general public in
Tibet.
Tibet's broadcasting, film and television industries have also been
developed gradually since its peaceful liberation. The Lhasa Cable
Broadcasting Station was established in 1953; wireless broadcasting was
started in 1958; the Tibet People's Broadcasting Station was formally
founded in 1959; black-and-white and color television programs were
trial-broadcast in 1978 and 1979, respectively; the Tibet Television was
established formally in 1985; and the project of the Production Center of
the Tibet Dubbed Radio and Television Programs was put in use in 1995. In
the last four decades and more, the state and the autonomous region have
invested a total of 530 million yuan in Tibet's radio, film and television
industries. The Central Government as well as provinces and municipalities
have also given their support to Tibet by supplying it with a large number
of equipment and materials, more than 200 technicians and cadres in five
groups, and training a galaxy of broadcasting, film and television
professionals for it. At present, Tibet has two radio broadcasting
stations, 36 medium- and short-wave radio transmitting and relay stations,
45 county-level FM relay stations, two wireless television stations, 354
television relay stations and 1,475 ground satellite stations, bringing
radio and TV programs to 65 and 55 percent of the people in Tibet,
respectively, and TV programs to 75 percent of the residents in Lhasa and
its vicinity. Seeing films is one of the main cultural activities of the
broad masses of people in agricultural and pastoral areas. Tibet now has
436 cinemas, 650 grassroots film projection teams and over 9,300
projection centers, giving more than 130,000 movie shows to 28.5 million
people annually, averaging at least one show per farmer or herdsman per
month. Films are dubbed in Tibetan in agricultural and pastoral areas so
that farmers and herdsmen can understand them. Radio, film and television
have become indispensable parts of the cultural lives of the people of
various ethnic groups in Tibet.
Conclusion
Over the past
four decades and more, Tibet has made much headway in carrying forward the
fine aspects of its traditional culture, while maintaining Tibetan
cultural traits, which is revealed prominently in the following aspects:
First, the main body of Tibetan culture, which was monopolized by a small
handful of feudal serf-owners in the past, has been changed completely,
and the entire Tibetan people have become the main body jointly carrying
forward and developing Tibetan culture and sharing its fruits; second,
Tibetan culture has undergone deep changes--with social progress and
development, decadent and backward things inherent in feudal serfdom have
been abandoned, the religious beliefs of Tibetan religious followers enjoy
full respect and protection, and the fine aspects of traditional Tibetan
culture have been carefully preserved and carried forward. Improvement has
been steadily made both in its contents and forms, adding some topical
contents to reflect the new life of the people and the new needs of social
development; and third, a substantive shift has taken place in the
development stance of Tibetan culture, from the self-enclosed, stagnating
and shrinking situation to a new stance--the stance of opening-up and
development oriented to modernization and the outside world. While
developing and promoting its traditional culture, Tibet is also developing
modern scientific and technological education and news dissemination at an
unprecedented rate.
It deserves careful reflection that, although Tibetan culture is
developing continuously, the Dalai Lama clique is clamoring all over the
world that "Tibetan culture has become extinct," and, on this pretext, is
whipping up anti-China opinions with the backing of international
antagonist forces. From the 40-odd years of history following the
Democratic Reform in Tibet it can be clearly perceived that what the Dalai
clique is aiming at is nothing but hampering the real development of
Tibetan culture.
First, as a social ideology, culture varies with the changes in the
other parts of the social economic foundation and superstructure. The
formation and development of modern Western culture are inseparable from
the modern European bourgeois revolution, in which the dictatorial system
of feudal serfdom and theocracy in the Middle Ages was eliminated, along
with the religious reforms and great changes in the ideological and
cultural fields caused by it. The development of Tibetan culture in the
last four decades and more has been achieved in the course of the same
great social change marked by the elimination of feudal serfdom under
theocracy that was even darker than the European system in the Middle
Ages. With the elimination of feudal serfdom, the cultural characteristics
under the old system, in which Tibetan culture was monopolized by a few
serf-owners was bound to become "extinct," and so was the old cultural
autocracy marked by theocracy and the domination of the entire spectrum of
socio-political life by religion, which was an inevitable outcome of both
the historical and cultural development in Tibet. Because without such
"extinction," it would be impossible to emancipate and develop Tibetan
society and culture, the ordinary Tibetan people would be unable to obtain
the right of mastering and sharing the fruits of Tibet's cultural
development, and it would be impossible for them to enjoy real freedom,
for their religious beliefs would not be regarded as personal affairs.
However, such "extinction" was fatal to the Dalai Lama clique, the chief
representatives of feudal serfdom, for it meant the extinction of their
cultural rule. Therefore, it is not surprising at all that they clamor
about the "extinction of traditional Tibetan culture."
Second, the development of a culture has never been achieved in
isolation, and it is bound to acquire new contents and forms ceaselessly
with the progress of the times and development of the society, and nourish
and enrich itself while adapting to and absorbing other cultures. The
development of Tibetan culture in the last four decades and more has been
achieved while Tibetan society is gradually putting an end to ignorance
and backwardness, and heading for reform, opening-up and modernization,
and while Tibetan culture and modern civilization, including modern
Western civilization, are absorbing and blending with each other. The
people's mode of thinking and concepts are bound to change with the
changes of the modes of production and life in Tibet. During this process,
some new aspects of culture which are not contained in the traditional
Tibetan culture but are essential in modern civilization have been
developed, such as modern scientific and technological education and news
dissemination. The fine cultural traditions with Tibetan features are
being carried forward and promoted in the new age, and the decayed and
backward things in the traditional culture that are not adapted to social
development and people's life are being gradually sifted out. It is a
natural phenomenon in conformity with the law of cultural development, and
a manifestation of the unceasing prosperity and development of Tibetan
culture in the new situation. To prattle about the "extinction of Tibetan
culture" due to its acquisition of the new contents of the new age and to
its progress and development is in essence to demand that modern Tibetan
people keep the life styles and cultural values of old Tibet's feudal
serfdom wholly intact. This is completely ridiculous, for it goes against
the tide of progress of the times and the fundamental interests of the
Tibetan people.
At present, as mankind has marched into the new millennium, economic
globalization and informationization in social life are developing
rapidly, increasingly changing people's material and cultural lives. With
the deepening development of China's reform and opening-up and the
modernization drive, especially the practice of the strategy of
large-scale development of the western region, Tibet is striding toward
modernization and going global with a completely new shape, and new and
still greater development will certainly be achieved in Tibetan culture in
this process.
Information Office of the State
Council of the People's Republic of China
June 2000,
Beijing |