Author Topic: Tibet is Burning  (Read 784 times)

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BSB

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Tibet is Burning
« on: December 13, 2012, 06:44:28 AM »
Tibet Is Burning
By XU ZHIYONG
Published: December 12, 2012
Beijing

AROUND noon on Feb. 19, an 18-year-old named Nangdrol set himself on fire near the Zamthang Monastery in the northeast Tibetan town of Barma. In a note left behind, he wrote, “I am going to set myself on fire for the benefit of all Tibetans.” Referring to China’s ethnic Han majority as “devils,” he added, “It is impossible to live under their evil law, impossible to bear this torture that leaves no scars.”

Over the last three years, close to 100 Tibetan monks and laypeople have set themselves on fire; 30 people did so between Nov. 4 and Dec. 3. The Chinese government is seeking to halt this wave of self-immolations by detaining Tibetans it accuses of being instigators. Meanwhile, the scarless torture continues.

I first visited China’s far west 21 years ago with college friends. Back then it at least looked peaceful, but now, sad news arrives daily. When I returned in October, a young monk invited me to visit his monastery. Passing a checkpoint where a red banner read, “Stability Maintenance Calls for Fast Response to Emergencies,” he told me how he hated the sight of armed soldiers.

Because a road was closed for construction, I had to wait until evening to hitch a ride to Barma, where Nangdrol had lived, about 30 miles away. I was the third passenger in the car; the other two were young Tibetans.

“Are you Buddhist followers?” I asked them. One of them showed me a pendant portrait of the Dalai Lama that he pulled out from his chest. “He is our true Holiness,” he said.

“Have you heard about the self-immolations? Like, burning oneself?” I asked tentatively, finally broaching the topic. They knew about it.

“Pardon me, but do you hate the Hans?” I asked them because Nangdrol had used the term “Han devils” in his suicide note. They’d heard about Nangdrol. When I told them I was there to visit Nangdrol’s parents to express my sadness, they told me more.

They said they’d been to the site, as hundreds of Tibetans had. People had set up white tents at the intersection where he died. “He is our hero,” one said.

It was dark when we arrived in Barma. At a lamppost, one of my fellow passengers asked a man for directions but was waved off. At a crossroads, he asked two men on motorcycles and an argument broke out. A monk came to the window to examine me.

“Sorry,” my fellow passenger said, “they scolded me for taking you here.” A minivan approached. Two men jumped out of it and upbraided him indignantly. Fear and hostility shrouded the place like night.

“We are Tibetans,” he said all of a sudden as we left Barma in silence to spend the night in a nearby town. “We are Buddhists, but we can’t go to Lhasa without a permit.” Years ago, you could see many Tibetans on their pilgrimage to Lhasa, but not anymore.

The next day, I returned to Barma. I asked a young monk, on his way to fetch water, about Nangdrol. He took me to a hall where a middle-aged monk sat cross-legged in a corner. Since I didn’t have Nangdrol’s photo with me, he said he couldn’t help me.

A teenage monk asked several of his peers but got no answers. Passers-by shook their heads. At a construction site, no one had heard about him either. In the town’s elementary school I asked an armed soldier guarding the gate. I’d read that Nangdrol was a student. The soldier suggested that I check out the nearby compound where a Chinese flag flew, but people told me the town had no secondary school.

The road back from Barma was open only from noon to 1 p.m. I had to leave. Along a creek, a row of poplars basked in the golden sun, and a group of young monks in crimson robes were holding a class. Reluctantly, I climbed into a cab. I had been to many places over the years but never felt so lost.

I stopped the driver a mile or so down the road when we passed by a village on a slope. After my repeated pleadings, the roadside shop owner gave me directions to Nangdrol’s home. Up on the slope, an old couple pointed to the house.

It was a small mud-plastered house enclosed in mud-brick walls, and five tall sutra streamers flew on one side of the property. The iron gate was locked.

A middle-aged woman with a boy, passing by, said she had known Nangdrol. His parents now live on a faraway cattle farm, she said. The day of his death, she told me, he wore new clothes, and he was freshly bathed, with a fresh haircut. He asked people whether he was handsome.

I didn’t know how else to express my sorrow. I asked the woman to give 500 yuan (about $80) to Nangdrol’s parents, letting them know that a Han Chinese man had come to pay his respects.

I am sorry we Han Chinese have been silent as Nangdrol and his fellow Tibetans are dying for freedom. We are victims ourselves, living in estrangement, infighting, hatred and destruction. We share this land. It’s our shared home, our shared responsibility, our shared dream — and it will be our shared deliverance.

Xu Zhiyong, a lawyer and human rights advocate, is a founder of Gongmeng, the Open Constitution Initiative. This essay was translated from the Chinese by Yaxue Cao.

 http://www.skweezer.com/s.aspx?q=http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/13/opinion/tibet-is-burning.html

Plane

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Re: Tibet is Burning
« Reply #1 on: December 13, 2012, 06:52:18 AM »
  That is a brave guy.

Is he part of an organisation or just speaking for himself?

Xavier_Onassis

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Re: Tibet is Burning
« Reply #2 on: December 13, 2012, 12:19:26 PM »
Xu Zhiyong, a lawyer and human rights advocate, is a founder of Gongmeng, the Open Constitution Initiative.

================
I tend to think that answers your question. How big this organization is, I do not know.
"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."

Plane

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Re: Tibet is Burning
« Reply #3 on: December 13, 2012, 07:12:02 PM »
Wow.



Implications of the Gongmeng Report on Tibet (ICT Panel Discussion)

http://www.economist.com/blogs/analects/2012/12/self-immolation-tibet
Quote
Since the first self-immolation, more than 90 Tibetans have followed suit. Most have done so to protest against Chinese rule, and to call for the return to Tibet of the Dalai Lama, the exiled spiritual leader. The desperate protests are not petering out. On the contrary, they are intensifying. According to a detailed new report ("Storm in the Grasslands: Self-immolations in Tibet and Chinese Policy") produced by the International Campaign for Tibet, a Washington, DC-based lobby group, November saw 28 self-immolations—making it much the worst month so far

kimba1

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Re: Tibet is Burning
« Reply #4 on: December 14, 2012, 01:52:15 AM »
Uhm
I'm han

BSB

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Re: Tibet is Burning
« Reply #5 on: December 14, 2012, 03:04:24 AM »
Kimba, your mtDNA history:

The Han people constitute China’s and the world’s largest ethnic group, making up ~93% of the country’s population and nearly 20% of all humankind. The formation of the Han people was a process of continuous expansion by integration of numerous tribes or ethnic groups; it began with the ancient Huaxia tribe, which was formed during the 21st–8th centuries b.c.Although the Han people are now spread all over the country, the highest population concentrations are in the basins of the Yellow River, the Yangtze River, and the Zhujiang River and on the Songhuajiang-Liaohe plain in northeast China, as well as on the islands of Taiwan and Hainan (Du and Yip 1993; Ge et al. 1997). The migration of Han people to provinces such as Xinjiang and Yunnan occurred relatively recently, having started mainly ~100–600 years ago, and was caused by war, plague, and other reasons (Ge et al. 1997). Do these populations bear some genetic differences from those from the historical Han regions, such as Wuhan and Qingdao? To what extent can the genetic data reflect those recent migration events? A prerequisite for answering these and more-specific questions with genetic data is a thorough screening of mtDNA and Y-chromosome variation across China.

Hitherto, mtDNA from Han Chinese has been poorly sampled and understood in .................................lotsa luck......................................................In summary, our phylogenetic analysis of 263 Han mtDNAs shows that ~94% of the lineages can be allocated to specific subhaplogroups of the Eurasian founder haplogroups M, N, and R (which is itself a subhaplogroup of N shared between Europe and East Asia). Most of the nested haplogroups that are not infrequent have ages >30,000 years. It is conspicuous that the potentially most ancient of these haplogroups, R9 and B, may have their earliest diversification in southern China and/or Southeast Asia. A few possibly basal branches of M, present in Guangdong but absent or rare in northern China, still await a full description with more data from Southeast Asia. Only a restricted number of major subhaplogroups of M and N—namely, G, M8, M9, A, and N9—may be of central or northern Chinese provenance. All this makes an initial pioneer colonization of China ~60,000 years ago from Southeast Asia conceivable (as proposed by Su et al. 1999; Jin and Su 2000) but still leaves much room for speculation about the population dynamics during the long period between then and the Last Glacial Maximum. The contrast between the northern and southern genetic pools might have its roots in this period. Subsequent migration events may have somewhat blurred this early distinction, with the genetic pools of central China possessing mtDNA features of both the northern and the southern pools.

http://www.skweezer.com/s.aspx/-/www~google~com/url?q=http%3A//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC384943/&sa=U&ei=esrKUJj0L4XmiwL3_IHADQ&ved=0CDAQFjAFOAo&usg=AFQjCNGOSwatPG9BZd67gbRfeA-HMdfH5Q