Tibet - Myth and Reality
--by Foster Stockwell



 
Western concepts of Tibet embrace more myth than reality.  The idea that 
Tibet is  an oppressed nation composed of peaceful Buddhists who never did 
anyone any harm distorts history.  In fact the belief that the Dalai Lama 
is the leader of world Buddhism rather than being just the leader of one 
sect among more than 1,700 "Living Buddhas" of this unique Tibetan form 
of the faith displays a parochial view of world religions.

The myth, of course, is an outgrowth of Tibet's former inaccessibility,
which has fostered illusions about this mysterious land in the midst of 
the Himalayan Mountains ? illusions that have been skillfully promoted for 
political purposes by the Dalai Lama's advocates.  The myth will inevitably 
die, as all myths do, but until this happens, it would be wise to learn 
a few useful facts about this area of China.

First,  Tibet  has  been a part of China ever since it was merged into that 
country  in  1239,  when  the  Mongols  began  creating  the  Yuan  Dynasty 
(1271-1368).  This was before Marco Polo reached China from Europe and more 
than two centuries before Columbus sailed to the New World. 
True, China's hold  on  this  area  sometimes  appeared  somewhat  loose, 
but neither the Chinese  nor  many  Tibetans have ever denied that Tibet 
has been a part of China from the Yuan Dynasty to this very day.

The  early  Tibetans  evolved into a number of competing nomadic tribes 
and developed  a  religion  known  as Bon that was led by shamans who conducted 
rituals that involved the sacrifice of many animals and some humans.  These 
tribes fought battles with each other for better grazing lands, battles 
in which they killed or made slaves of those they conquered.  
They roamed far beyond the borders of Tibet into areas of China's Sichuan 
and Yunnan provinces, Xinjiang, Gansu, and Qinghai. Eventually one of these 
tribes, the Tubo, became the most powerful and took control of all Tibet. 
(The name Tibet comes from  Tubo.)   
During  China's  Tang Dynasty (618-907), Emperor  Taizhong improved 
relations with the Tubo king, Songtsen Gampo, by giving him one of his daughters,
 Princess Wencheng, in marriage. The Tubos, in response to this cementing 
of relations, developed close fraternal ties with the Tang court, and the 
two ruling powers regularly exchanged gifts.

The princess arrived in Tibet with an entourage of hundreds of servants, 
skilled craftspeople, and scribes.  She was a Buddhist, as were all of the 
Tang emperors, and so Buddhism entered Tibet mainly through her influence, 
only to be suppressed later by resentful Bon shamans.  Some years later 
another Tang princess was married to another Tubo king, again to cement 
relations between the two rulers.

The fact that the Tibetans and the Chinese had united royal families and 
engaged actively in trade (Tibetan horses for tea from the Central Plain) 
didn't mean an absence of  conflict between them.

 Battles occasionally occurred  between  Tang and Tubo troops, mostly

over territorial issues. At one point in the 750s, the Tubos, taking advantage 
of a rebellion against the  Tangs  by other armed groups in China, raced 
on horseback across China to enter the Tang capital of Chang'an. But, they 
couldn't hold the city.

In 838, the Tubo king was assassinated by two pro-Bon ministers, and the 
Bon religion was re-established as the only acceptable religion in Tibet.

Buddhists were widely persecuted and forced into hiding.
Trade  between  Tibet  and  the  interior  areas  continued during the Five 
Dynasties  (907-960)and the Song Dynasty(960-1279) that followed the collapse 
 of  the  Tang  Dynasty, although relations between the two ruling powers 
 were  limited.  During this time Buddhism revived in Tibet as a result 
of the  Buddhists'  willingness to accommodate some Bon practices.

The form of Buddhism that resulted from this merging of the two religions 
was quite different from that of China and other countries in Southeast 
Asia, as well as from the form that had been practiced previously in Tibet.
 
Tibetan Buddhism,  often called Lamaism, appealed  to the Mongols, who
conquered most of Russia, parts  of  Europe, and all of China under the
leadership of Genghis Khan.  The Mongols, like the Tibetans, were tribal 
herders who had a religion of animism similar to Bon.

When  Kublai  Khan,  the  first  Yuan  emperor, appointed administrators 
to Tibet,  he elevated the head of the Tibetan Buddhist Sakya sect to the 
post of  leader  of  all Buddhists in China, thus giving this monk greater 
power than  any  Buddhist had ever held before - and probably since.  Needless 
to say, the appointment irritated the leaders of the other Buddhist sects 
in Tibet and  the  much larger group of non-Tibetan Buddhists in China. 
But, they couldn't do anything to counter the wishes of the emperor.

The Yuan Dynasty divided Tibet into a series of administrative areas and 
put these areas  under the charge of an imperial preceptor.  Furthermore, 
the Yuan court encouraged the growth of feudal estates in Tibet as a way 
to maintain control there.
When  the  Yuan  Dynasty  collapsed,  it  was replaced by the Ming Dynasty 
(1368-1644),  which  was  composed  of the Han heritage.  Tibet then became 
splintered  because  the Ming court adopted a policy of granting hereditary 
titles to many nobles and a policy of divide and rule.
Although the Ming court conferred  the honorific title of Desi (ruling
 lama) to  the  head of one of Tibet's most powerful families, the Rinpung 
family, they  also bestowed enough official titles to his subordinates to 
encourage separatist  trends  within  the local Tibetan society.  
One of these titles was given to the head of the newly founded Gelugpa sect, 
better known as the Yellow sect.  He later took on the title "Dalai Lama." 
Tibet During the Qing Dynasty, the next and last dynasty, the Qing, came 
to power in 1644 and lasted until 1911. At the time of its founding, the 
most prominent Tibetan religious and secular leaders  were  the fifth Dalai 
Lama, the fourth Panchen Lama, and Gushri  Khan. They formed a delegation 
that arrived at the Chinese capital, Beijing, in 1652. Before  they  returned 
 to Tibet the following year, the emperor officially conferred  upon  Lozang 
 Gyatso  (the then Dalai Lama), the honorific title "The  Dalai  Lama,  
Buddha  of  Great Compassion in the West, Leader of the Buddhist  Faith 
Beneath the Sky, Holder of the Vajra."  (Dalai is Mongolian for "ocean"; 
lama is a Tibetan word that means "guru.")

The  fifth  Dalai  Lama  pledged  his  allegiance  to the Qing court and 
in return,  received enough gold and silver to build 13 new monasteries 
of the Yellow sect in Tibet.  All successive reincarnations of the Dalai 
Lama have been confirmed  by  the central government in China, and this 
has become a historical convention practiced to this very day.

A later Qing emperor suspected the intentions of the seventh Dalai Lama, 
so he increased the power of the Panchen Lama (also of the Yellow sect). 
 In 1713 the Qing court granted the title "Panchen Erdeni" to the fifth 
Panchen Lama,  thus  elevating  him  to a status similar to that given to 
the Dalai Lama  (Panchen  means  "great  scholar"  in  Sanskrit,  and  Erdeni 
 means "treasure" in Manchu.)

The largest part of the Tibetan population (more than 90 percent) at that 
time was composed of serfs, who were treated harshly by the landlords and 
ruling monks.  All monasteries had large tracts of land as well as a great 
number of serfs  under  their  control. The ruling monks' exploitation of 
these serfs was just as severe as that of the aristocratic landlords. Serfs 
had no personal freedom from birth to death.  They and their children were 
given freely as gifts or donations, sold or bartered for goods. They were, 
in fact, viewed by landlords as "livestock that can speak."  

As late as 1943, a high-ranking aristocrat named Tsemon Norbu Wangyal sold 
100 serfs to a monk in the Drigung area for only four silver dollars per 
serf. If  serfs  lost  their  ability  to  work,  the  lord confiscated 
all their property,  including  livestock  and  farm  tools.   If they  
ran away and subsequently  were  captured,  half their personal belongings 
were given to the  captors  while  the other half went to the lords for 
whom they worked.

The runaways then were flogged or even condemned to death.
The  lords used   such inhuman tortures as gouging out eyes, cutting off 
feet or  hands,  pushing  the  condemned  person  over  a  cliff,  drowning 
 and be-heading.  Numerous rebellions occurred over the years against this 
harsh treatment,  and  in  1347  alone (the seventh year of Yuan Emperor 
Shundi's reign), more than 200 serf rebellions occurr  ed in Tibet.

Foreign Aggression

Foreign nations made numerous attempts to invade Tibet and take it away 
from  China.   These were repulsed by Chinese troops and Tibetan fighters.
The first such invasion took place in 1337 when Mohammed Tugluk of Delhi 
(in what is now India) sent 100,000 troops into the Himalayan area.
During the second half of the 18th century, troops from the Kingdom of Nepal 
invaded Tibet twice in an attempt to expand Nepal's territory.
During the 19th century, Britain competed with Russia in pouring large sums 
of money and many spies into a struggle to see which of the two might eventually 
occupy and control Tibet.   When the British finally invaded Tibet, first 
in 1888 and again in 1903, the Russians were so involved in conflicts at 
home that they couldn't stop the British troops from pushing all the way 
to Lhasa.  And the Qing government, having recently lost the Opium War to 
the British, did nothing either.

The Tibetans, using spears,  arrows, catapults and homemade guns, fought 
valiantly but  to  no  avail against the invading British army and its big 
cannons and machine guns. The British withdrew after imposing "peace" terms 
and  before  the  harsh  winter  began  because  they feared  the  Tibetan 
resistance  would  prevent  supplies  from getting through to the occupying 
troops, thereby causing them to starve to death.

The  British  signed a Convention with China in 1906, the second article 
of which  stipulated  that  the  British  would  no  longer
interfere with the administration  of  Tibet  and that China had sovereignty 
over Tibet.  But, they conveniently  forgot  the terms of this agreement 
when, the very next year,  they signed a Convention with Russia that specified 
British "special interests"  in Tibet. It would probably fill a book to 
detail the many ways the British from that point on tried to take over Tibet 
and make it a part of their colony of India.

Yet, something needs to be said about the conference held at Simla, India, 
in  1914.  Conference  participants  included  representatives  of  the 
new Nationalist  government  of China that had overthrown the Qing Dynasty 
just two  years  before,  plus  Tibetans,  and British-Indians.  The British 
had blackmailed the  Chinese  into  attending by threatening to withdraw 
their recognition of the new nationalist government and by saying they would 
work out an agreement with the Tibetans alone if the Chinese didn't participate.

The Simla  Conference  failed  because the Chinese and the 13th Dalai Lama 
both  opposed  the  British plan to divide Tibet into two parts (Inner and 
Outer  Tibet). The conference, however, did produce one document that since 
has caused dissension? a map drawn by the British representative Arthur 
H. McMahon  that  never  was  shown  to  the Chinese, although it was revealed 
secretly to the Tibetan delegates.<  /SPAN>
McMahon's  map  showed a new boundary line that included three districts 
of Tibet  -- Monyul, Loyul, and Lower Zayul? within the territory of British-
 India.   This so-called  "McMahon Line" first became public 23 years later 
when  it  appeared  in  a  printed  set of British documents related to 
the conference and other diplomatic matters.  The McMahon Line became the 
basis for India's  failed  attempt to take over this part of Tibet in 1962. 
 
The criminal activities.  Eventually  these charges led to the regent's 
arrest and  murder in a Tibetan prison. The 14th Dalai Lama's father subsequently 
was poisoned because he was a friend and supporter of the regent.
 
 
Tibetan Buddhism
 
Before considering  Tibet today,  some words should be said about Tibetan 
Buddhism  as  a  religion.  The accommodations it made with Bon resulted 
in its becoming very different from other forms of Buddhism, 
particularly from the  more  common  and  much  larger  Chan Buddhism of 
China(called Zen in Japan). Images  found  in  Tibetan Buddhist temples 
are much fiercer than those  found  in  other  Buddhist temples, and some 
Tibetan ceremonies that once  used  human  skulls,  human  skin, and fresh 
human intestines clearly reflect the animistic elements of Bon.

Also, Tibetan Buddhists rely a great deal on prayer wheels, which most other 
Buddhists scorn. These are mech anical devices with prayers written on them 
that are constantly turned by water or wind so the forces of nature do the 
work of sending prayers to heaven.

The reincarnation of Living Buddhas,  which  is  unique to this form of
Buddhism, began as early as 1294 with the Karma Kagyu sect, a sub-sect of 
the  Kagyu sect (known as the black hats). It then spread to all of Tibetan 
Buddhism's other sects and monasteries, but it didn't reach the Gelugpa 
sect  (the  one that includes the Dalai and Panchen Lama lines) until after 
1419.

From  the  beginning,  the  system  of selecting Living Buddhas was open 
to abuse  because  it  was  easy  for  clever  members  of  the monk selection 
committee to manipulate the objects presented to potential child candidates 
in order to  make sure a particular child was chosen.  
In the case of the fourth Dalai   Lama, the child; selected was the great-grandson 
of the Mongolian chief Altan Khan.  He was chosen at a time when the Gelugpa 
sect badly needed the protection of the  Altan Khan's followers because 
the Gelugpa  were being persecuted by the older Tibetan sects, who were 
jealous of the Yellow sect's rapid growth.

Tibet Since 1949

In 1949, the Chinese  Communists  won  the  revolution and overthrew the 
Nationalist  government.   But they didn't send their army into Tibet until 
October 1951, after they and Tibetan representatives of the 14th Dalai Lama 
and 10th Panchen Lama had signed an agreement to liberate Tibet peacefully.

The Dalai Lama expressed  his  support for this 17-point agreement in a 
telegraphed message to Chairman Mao on October 24, 1951.  Three years later 
the  Dalai  and  Panchen Lamas went together to Beijing to attend the first 
National People's Congress  at which  the  Dalai  Lama  was  

Elected vice-chairman of the Standing Committee and the Panchen Lama was 
elected a member of that committee.  After the People's Liberation Army 
(PLA) entered Tibet,  they  took  steps to protect the rights of the serfs 
but didn't, at first,  try  to  reorganize  Tibetan  society along socialist 
or democratic lines.   Yet, the landlords and ruling monks knew that in 
time, their land would  be  redistributed,  just  as  the landlords' property 
in the rest of China had been confiscated and divided among the peasants.

The Tibetan landlords did all they could to frighten the serfs away from 
associating  with  the  PLA.   But, as the serfs increasingly ignored their 
landlords'  wishes and called on the Communists to eliminate the oppressive 
system  of  serfdom, some leaders of the "three great monasteries" (Ganden, 
Sera,  and  Drepung)  issued  a  statement,  in  the  latter  half of 1956, 
demanding the feudal system be maintained. 
 
At this point, the PLA decided the time had come to confiscate the landlords'
 property and redistribute it among the serfs.   The  landlords  and  top-level 
 monks  retaliated  by announcing, in March 1959, the founding of a "Tibet 
Independent State," and about  7,000  of  them assembled in Lhasa to stage 
a revolt.  Included were more  than  170  "Khampa  guerrillas"  who had 
been trained overseas by the O.S.S. and air-dropped into Tibet, according 
to a former C.I.A. agent.  The O.S.S. also gave them machine guns, mortars, 
rifles and ammunition.

The PLA put down the revolt in Lhasa within two days, capturing some 4,000 
rebels.  The rebellion had  the support of the Dalai Lama, but not of the 
Panchen Lama.  After it failed, the Dalai Lama, along with a group of rebel 
leaders, fled to India.

The most disruptive event of recent years was the "cultural revolution," 
which lasted from 1966 to 1976.  It turned most of Tibet's farm and herding 
areas into giant communes and closed or destroyed many monasteries and temples,
 just as it did elsewhere in China.  
At its end, the communes were disbanded and the temples and monasteries 
were repaired and reopened at government expense.

The  idea  that most Tibetans are unhappy about what has happened in Tibet 
and  want independence from China is a product manufactured in the West 
and promoted  by  the  dispossessed  landlords  who  fled  to India. Indeed, 
to believe it is true stretches logic to its breaking point. Who really 
can believe that a million former serfs - more than 90% of the population 
– are unhappy about having the  shackles of serfdom removed? They now care 
for their  own  herds  and  farmland,  marry  whomever  they wish without 
first getting  their  landlord's  
permission,  aren't  punished for disrespecting these  same  landlords, 
 own  their  own  homes,  attend  school,  and have
relatively modern hospitals, paved roads, airports and modern industries.

An objective measure  of  this  progress  is  found  in  the  population 
statistics.  The Tibetan population has doubled since 1950, and the average 
Tibetan's  life  span  has  risen from 36 years at that time to 65 years 
at present.

Of course  some  Tibetans  are  unhappy  with  their  lot,  but  a  little 
investigation  soon  shows  that  they  are, for the most part, people from 
families  who  lost their landlord privileges.  There is plenty of evidence 
that the former serfs tell a quite different story.

You will find some Tibetans who hate the Hans (the majority nationality 
of China) and  some  Hans  who hate the Tibetans, a matter of ordinary ethnic 
prejudice  something  any American should be able to understand.  But, this 
doesn't  represent  a  desire  for  an independent; Tibet  any  more  than 
black-white hostilities in Washington, D.C., Detroit, or Boston represent 
a desire on the part of most African-Americans to form a separate nation.

Tibetan Culture Today

The final part of the Tibetan myth has to do with Tibetan culture, which 
the Dalai Lama's supporters say has been crushed by "the Chinese takeover 
of Tibet."   Culture is an area that requires great care because it is fraught 
  with   biases and self-fulfilling judgments.   The growth of television 
in America, for example, is cited as killing American culture by some and 
as enhancing it by others.

Regarding the field of literature, prior to 1950 Tibetans could point with 
pride to only a few fine epics that had been passed down through the centuries.
   Now  that  serfs  can  become  authors,  many  new writers are producing 
 works  of  great quality; persons such as the poet Yedam Tsering and the 
fiction writers Jampel Gyatso, Tashi Dawa, and Dondru Wangbum.

As  for  art,  Tibet  for  centuries  had  produced nothing but repetitious 
religious  designs  for  temples.  Now there are many fine artists, such 
as Bama Tashi, who has been hailed in both France and


Canada as a great modern artist who combines Tibetan religious themes with 
modern pastoral images.

Tibet now  has more than 30 professional song and dance ensembles, Tibetan 
opera groups, and other theatrical troupes where none existed before 1950.
No, Tibetan culture is not dead; it is flourishing as never before.
 


Copyright(c) 2005, National Association for China's Peaceful Unification(NACPU), Washington D.C., USA. All rights reserved.