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US House of Representatives Passes
Tibet Resolution
HR 226 recognizes the plight of the Tibetan people on the 50th
anniversary of His Holiness the Dalai Lama being forced into exile and
calls for a sustained multilateral effort to bring about a durable and
peaceful solution to the Tibet issue. Read full text
here.
The Dalai Lama's March 10 Statement
Click
here to read.
Anniversary of the Uprising
Why do Tibetans commemorate March 10?
Read the history
here at the Tibetan
Government-in-Exile's website.
This New Year, Tibetans
Replaced Parties with Prayers to Honor Tibetans Killed in 2008
Click
here for photos and article.
"Non-violence is our irrevocable commitment" - The Dalai Lama's Losar
Letter to Tibetans
Click
here to read the Message of H. H. The
Dalai Lama to the Tibetan People on the Occasion of the Earth-Ox Tibetan
New Year.
Making a Song and Dance
out of Tibet's "Liberation"
The hills were alive with the sound
of music as China marked the first Serf Liberation Day, but the only thing
this holiday had in common with the famous musical was a dictatorial
regime lurking in the background. Learn more about the Chinese
government's yak and pony show in this
editorial
written by
The Tibet Connection's Executive
Producer, Rebecca Novick, for The
Huffington Post.
March for Tibet in Los Angeles
Click
here for a photo essay by Ken Lee,
LAFOT Photojournalist

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Why Tibetans Won't Come to
the Party
By Rebecca Novick, Executive Producer
of
The Tibet Connection
Photo by Ken Lee
"Chinese
political circles get very worried about anniversaries." So says Professor
Perry Link, an expert on Chinese human rights at the University of
California, Riverside. And this year they have plenty to worry about with
2009 marking the 30th anniversary of the closure of Beijing's
Democracy Wall
and the 20th anniversary of the People's Liberation Army's brutal
suppression of a mass student movement in
Tiananmen Square.
And then there is the 50th anniversary of the Tibetan uprising.
But Beijing has a rather
schizophrenic tendency to announce politically sensitive anniversaries and
then to scramble to manage their equally sensitive consequences. The
Chinese government is hailing March 2009 as the 50th anniversary of
"democratic reform" in Tibet, and has tagged March 28th as the anniversary
of
"Serf Liberation Day"
when the Chinese army put down a rebellion led by the exploiting class and
freed one million Tibetan serfs from oppression. Xinhua says that this day
is an opportunity for Tibetans to "remind themselves to cherish the good
days they have enjoyed since the democratic reform." But for most
Tibetans, March 2009 is being commemorated as the 50th anniversary of a
popular uprising against China's oppression, the failure of which
confirmed Tibet's status as an occupied nation.
For China's Communist Party -- a time
to celebrate their achievements and re-affirm the wisdom of the political
status quo. For Tibetans -- a time to mourn the loss of their country and
to re-affirm their commitment to resistance. One would be hard pressed to
find two more opposing national perspectives on the same historical
events.
On January 25th, a Tibetan blogger
posted a comment to a Tibetan-run Chinese-language website, saying that
the Party wants Tibetans "to sing and dance about 'Serf Liberation
Day' and how the great Party liberated old Tibet and a million serfs from
darkness. You can't say anything to the contrary -- nothing about the
families that have been shattered, the many people who were killed, who
were beaten to death for the sake of upholding the unification of the
motherland and the unity of the masses -- don't mention those."
The Party wants Tibetans to be happy,
or at least to seem to be happy. If the emancipated serfs and
their descendants are walking around gloomy and dejected, or worse, taking
to the streets to protest their "liberation", it doesn't look good. But
this is exactly what is happening.
The International Campaign for Tibet
reports that "Tibetan women are in the streets, with solemn faces,
showing sadness rather than happiness, and to symbolize the
non-celebratory mood, they carry around dry bread and eat that." In
addition, the UK-based human rights organization
Free Tibet
has reported that this month saw the largest protest by Tibetans since
last spring. It erupted in Lithang County in the area of Kham on February
15th and built over a period of days, resulting in dozens of arrests and
two unconfirmed deaths. The protests were apparently sparked by the arrest
of a Tibetan man who had publicly called for Tibetans not to celebrate the
traditional holiday of Tibetan New Year called Losar.
The Tibetan blogosphere is buzzing
with sentiments about this popular movement that's sweeping the region
calling on Tibetans to boycott celebrations of Losar in lieu of a national
mourning for the victims of last year's crackdown of the protests. ICT's
Mary Beth Markey describes it as "an unprecedented and highly
significant statement, akin to people in the United States deciding to
forego Thanksgiving." And the Party has taken notice.
As one Tibetan netizen put it: "Our
great Party is not happy because at a time when it wants you to be
happy, you're not happy. And that's a problem with your thinking...The
great Party pays close attention to happy or not happy, and celebrating
or not celebrating the New Year."
It is traditional for Tibetan
families not to celebrate the New Year that follows the death of a
relative as part of the funeral rites. Tibetans declaring this Losar
season as a period of mourning for those who lost their lives in the 2008
uprising amounts to saying that those who died in the protests were
family. "Let's remember our lost brothers and sisters on March 10th
and make this the greatest demonstration of all times," one blogger
urges. Another Tibetan living in exile writes: "Why should we put on
this fake smile on New Year?...We will not celebrate because we are all
Tibetans...We will stand together through suffering and happiness."
Woeser, a Tibetan writer and blogger
who has become the poet laureate of Tibet's freedom struggle says: "Let
us light butter lamps to make offerings in memory of the dead...in the
corners where the video surveillance cannot reach." A posting in
Chinese on a Tibetan website, under the title Don't Celebrate this New
Year reads:
What kind of joys would make me
forget those who were killed?
I thought of them again last night--my compatriots
Lying flat in the road
Covered in white sheets
A single hand suddenly fell out
And dangled before me
Oh, heaven is so crowded!
For most Tibetans, Losar falls on
February 25th. In parts of Eastern Tibet, however, the Tibetan and Chinese
New Years are traditionally celebrated on the same day--this year, January
26th. When it became clear that the local Tibetans were not in the party
mood, authorities started handing out firecrackers to encourage them.
According to ICT, an anonymous
Tibetan blogger from the area of Amdo in the North-East wrote: "Thanks
to the Party Committee of Xiahe County for issuing us firecrackers worth
100 Yuan [$14] to resist the public resentment of boycotting the New Year.
I accepted the firecrackers, but never let my father know it, or he would
'beat me to death', so I threw them into the toilet. The county officials
are busy supervising who else did not use the firecrackers....Official
supervision of whether or not people use the firecrackers, and the PLA
[People's Liberation Army] round the clock street patrols, is a new scene
in Xiahe this year."
One source said that when Party
officials turned up on the doorstep of Kirti Monastery in Amdo Ngaba to
try to persuade the monks to join in the New Year festivities, a number of
the monks suddenly decided to go into meditation retreat. Refusing to
observe one's own cultural traditions doesn't, on the face of it, sound
very provocative. But the response by the authorities shows how seriously
China's Communist Party takes this stuff, and their reaction has helped to
elevate Tibet's 'No New Year' campaign from an expression of personal
grief to an act of civil disobedience.
In a rather desperate move, China's
state-run Tibetan television service, XZTV, declared on February 15th that
the government is even offering discount vouchers to Tibetans for their
New Year shopping needs. The Party can pay for the hats, set the table,
crank up the CD player and put up the streamers, but cadres have
discovered a limit to their power--they can't force Tibetans to have fun.
Rebecca Novick is a writer and the
founding producer of
The Tibet Connection
radio program. She is currently based in Dharamsala, India
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