[Buddha-l] nytimes, China, Tibet

Dan Lusthaus vasubandhu at earthlink.net
Thu Oct 24 19:24:46 MDT 2013


Latest from nyt. Online article includes photos.
Dan

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/25/world/asia/tibetan-monks-describe-a-web-of-unseen-controls.html?hp&pagewanted=all
or
http://tinyurl.com/mlo2mva

October 24, 2013
Tibetans Call China's Policies At Tourist Spot Tacit but Stifling
By DAN LEVIN
XIAHE, China - Buddhist monks in flowing burgundy robes hurried along the 
dirt paths of the Labrang Monastery, trying their best to ignore the scrum 
of Chinese tourists following their every move, many with cameras fit for 
paparazzi.

Pilgrims and those less spiritually inclined wandered through the ornate 
complex here in the mountain town of Xiahe to gaze upon towering Buddha 
statues bathed in incense. Some tourists held back to indulge in distinctly 
unenlightened pursuits, smoking cigarettes and pouting at smartphones in the 
high-tech vanity ritual known as the selfie.

One of the most important sites in Tibetan Buddhism, Labrang presents an 
idyllic picture of sacred devotion that is carefully curated by the Chinese 
government, which hopes to convince visitors that Tibetan religion and 
culture are swaddled in the Communist Party's benevolent embrace.

But behind closed doors, many of the monastery's resident monks complain 
about intrusive government policies, invisible to tourists, that they say 
are strangling their culture and identity.

"Even if we're just praying, the government treats us as criminals," said a 
young monk, who like others interviewed recently spoke on the condition of 
anonymity to avoid government repercussions.

Such frustrations, many monks say, are what have driven more than 120 
Tibetans to set fire to themselves since 2009, including 13 in the Labrang 
area, in a wave of protests that has gone largely unreported in Chinese news 
media.

International human rights advocates say that rather than address the 
underlying grievances - including Beijing's deeply unpopular campaign to 
demonize the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader - Chinese 
authorities have responded with even harsher policies that punish the 
relatives of those who self-immolate and imprison those who disseminate news 
of the protests to the outside world.

Exile groups and analysts say Labrang and a handful of other monasteries 
across the vast Tibetan plateau in Central Asia have become showcases for 
Beijing's strategy, which seeks to stifle dissent in well-trafficked tourist 
sites without scaring away visitors.

Monks here describe a largely unseen web of controls that keep potential 
troublemakers in line: ubiquitous surveillance cameras, paid informers and 
plainclothes security agents who mingle among the busloads of tourists. 
Hidden from the throngs are the political education sessions during which 
monks are forced to denounce the Dalai Lama. Stiff jail sentences await 
those who step out of line. "If we don't obey, it will be terrible for us," 
the monk said.

Founded in the early 18th century, the Labrang Monastery is tucked into the 
dusky hills of northwestern Gansu Province. Each day, hundreds of Chinese 
tourists arrive to spin colorful prayer wheels lining the monastery 
perimeter and sip tea at hotels designed to resemble Tibetan nomadic tents. 
Along the town's main street, they buy turquoise-encrusted amulets, dress up 
in monks' robes and take turns trying on the ceremonial yellow hats that 
resemble mohawk-style haircuts. Officials hope that a recently completed 
airport will draw even bigger crowds.

In a monastery courtyard surrounded by whitewashed mud walls, a Chinese 
family from the provincial capital, Lanzhou, knelt down to pray to Buddha. 
"If you ask nicely, he'll make your wish come true," said the mother, Ming 
Yang, who acknowledged that her understanding of Buddhism ended there.

With an eye on the lucrative prestige of a Unesco World Heritage listing, 
the central government is giving the monastery a $26 million face-lift. 
Around 1,000 monks and 65,000 volumes of Buddhist scripture are housed in 
the sprawling complex, which local officials say is in dire need of 
structural improvements.

Yet locals complain that much of the construction is aimed at increasing 
tourism, rather than benefiting Tibetans. "It looks fancy, but in reality 
all the improvements are for Chinese people," one said.

Tourism is rapidly reshaping much of the Tibetan plateau. According to the 
Xinhua state news agency, six million tourists visited Lhasa, the capital of 
the Tibetan Autonomous Region, in the first eight months of this year, a 20 
percent increase over the same period in 2012. The boom has attracted 
several international hotel chains to the city, which is under de facto 
martial law.

In May, Tibetan exile groups started a boycott campaign against the 
InterContinental Hotels Group, which is building a 2,000-room luxury resort 
next to the historic residence once occupied by the Dalai Lama.

In the wake of violent anti-Chinese protests that swept Tibet in 2008 and 
the wave of self-immolations that followed, security forces have tightened 
their grip. The crackdown reaches deep into the folds of Tibetan 
spirituality. According to the International Campaign for Tibet, officials 
have posted notices in Tibetan areas declaring it illegal to pray for 
self-immolators or to show solidarity "by burning incense, chanting 
religious scriptures, releasing animals from killing and lighting candles." 
At least two monks have been jailed for praying on behalf of 
self-immolators, the group said.

Exile groups say such tactics only alienate Tibetans further. "Even lighting 
a butter lamp or incense stick becomes an act against the state," Kate 
Saunders, communications director for the organization, said from London.

Yet local enforcement has been erratic. Nowhere is this more clear than at 
Labrang, where a framed photo of the Dalai Lama sits on an altar beside a 
large golden Buddha. For years, the government has banned photos of the 
Dalai Lama and forbidden Tibetans to worship him as a religious figure. 
Monks at Labrang said they believed that local officials had decided to 
quietly tolerate such photos in an effort to head off further unrest.

On the tour, few of the Chinese day-trippers seemed to recognize the older, 
bespectacled man Beijing has called "a wolf in sheep's clothing." The monk 
guiding the group made no mention of his identity, lest it threaten the 
ticket sales and donations needed to cover operating costs.

But being the main attraction on a Buddhist safari has spiritual drawbacks.

"Chinese tourists just barge in when we're studying," a middle-aged monk 
said as he fingered a set of prayer beads. "It knocks on our minds, but they 
don't care."

Such complaints appear to be falling on deaf ears. During a tour of the 
region in July, China's top official in charge of ethnic minorities, Yu 
Zhengsheng, insisted that economic development was the panacea for what 
ailed Tibetans. In the same breath, he condemned the Dalai Lama's "middle 
way," which calls for genuine autonomy in Tibet but not independence, saying 
it conflicts with China's political system.

"Only when people's lives have been improved can they be better united with 
the Chinese Communist Party and become a reliable basis for maintaining 
stability," he said, according to Xinhua.

But local Tibetans seethe at China's refusal to recognize their most basic 
aspirations. "Our hope is that the Dalai Lama can return," said a monk, 
looking out for eavesdroppers while sitting at a cafe. "Without him, there 
is no chance our religion and culture will survive."



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