People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII
No. 35 August 31, 2003 |
CHINA
VISIT - III
Sitaram
Yechury
THE
visit of our delegation to Tibet was, indeed, an eye-opener.
Ours was one of the first political delegations from India to visit the
Tibet autonomous region in many decades. The
economic development that we could see in the capital city of Lhasa as well as
in the other urban and rural areas clearly showed that compared to Nepal, Bhutan
or other Indian Himalayan areas, the Tibet region is witness to unprecedented
economic and other consequent social developments.
Imagine
that at a height of nearly 4000 meters with rarified oxygen in the air, in the
land closest to the sun, one has to confront with traffic jams in the capital
city. Or, imagine that the over 100
kilometer distance from the airport to the city is covered in an hour's time on
a four-lane cemented highway on the hills!
Or, imagine that the entry ticket to the 7th century Jokhang Monastery is
an interactive CD-Rom! Or, imagine
that as you enter the Tibetan museum in Lhasa, everyone is given a digital
devise which looks like a telephone
receiver. Every item in the museum is numbered and once the corresponding number
is dialed from your digital set, you can, as you walk around the museum, listen
to the detailed explanation -- historical and otherwise -- in an international
language of your choice! Such state
of the art technology, we are told, now exists at the famous Louvre museum in
Paris. But to expect this in a backward Tibet with its difficult terrain must
definitely be considered even by its worst critics as, extraordinary
developments.
Half-century
ago, landlords and slave owners owned all the productive materials and living
materials (cattle, live stock etc) in Tibet, while slaves and serfs who
constituted 95 per cent of the whole population owned no productive materials
and had absolutely no freedom. One look at the magnificent palaces and
monasteries will confirm the fact of intense inhuman exploitation of the Tibetan
society prior to the democratic reforms carried out by the socialist state in
1959/60.
ECONOMIC
AND
In
1972, the GDP of Tibet was only 132 million Yuan, however in 2002, the GDP
reached 15.9 billion Yuan, i e, more than 120 times! In 1952, the illiteracy
rate was 95 per cent. At present,
there are more than 1000 schools with more than 4,20,000 students in Tibet, the
enrolment rate of suitable age children reached 88 per cent.
From 1994 to 2002, the central government provided more than 53.1 billion
RMB Yuan as subsidy to the Tibetan autonomous region. In addition, other Chinese
provinces as well as other ministries
and departments of China also invested more than 40 billion RMB Yuan in the
region.
Tibetan
people, according to law, enjoy freedom of religion. There are 1787 places for religious activities at present and
more than 46,000 Buddhist monks. The
whole population in Tibet at present is about 2.62 million, among which there
are more than 1,20,000 CPC members. Altogether
there are more than 10,000 grass-roots level party committees in Tibet.
At
the time of the democratic revolution in 1959, one out of every ten people was a
Tibetan Buddhist monk, numbering 1,10,000.
The Tibet leaders with whom the delegation had extensive discussions
informed us that during the cultural revolution, the CPC made many Leftist
mistakes concerning religion. Only eight, out of over 1000 monasteries were
allowed to function. Since 1978,
however, these have been corrected. Many of the monasteries have been rebuilt
and renovated at a huge expense by the centre.
The famous Potala Palace was reconstructed with some thousands of
kilograms of solid gold. At the
moment, amongst the various monasteries we visited in our rather extensive tour
of Tibet, we found a fairly conducive atmosphere where the Buddhist monks seem
to be engaged in their activities without any interference.
This
atmosphere of calm, however, is based on the simple principle of separation of
religion from politics and strict implementation of equal rights to all
religions. Apart from the five
major Buddhist sects, Muslims and Christians also co-exist in Tibet.
There are four functioning mosques and one church.
There is a strict intolerance by the administration and the state for
mixing religion with politics.
In
fact, this is the charge that they have against the Dalai Lama.
They claim that in an opinion poll conducted in 2000, while most
Tibetans accept the Dalai Lama as a religious head and as the highest
manifestation of the living Buddha, 86 per cent of them do not accept him as the
political leader.
The
question of Tibet being a part of unified China goes all the way back to the 7th
century. During the period of the
Tang Dynasty in China (618-907 AD), the great Tibetan leader, Songtsan Gambo,
brought together ten separate but influential tribes and established the Tubo
Kingdom with Lhasa as the capital. Songtsan
Gambo developed good relations with the Tang Dynasty as well as with
neighbouring Nepal and Indian kingdoms of his time.
In 641, he married a Princess of the Tang Emperor cementing the close
ties with China. He is also
believed to have married into royal families of Nepal and India.
ARRIVAL
OF
BUDDHISM
Buddhism
comes to Tibet through these intermarriages.
That was a time also when the Buddhists, facing persecution in India from
the reassertion and the reestablishment of a brahmanical order, were seeking the
refuge outside. One such was padma
sambhava considered by many to have taken Buddhism to Tibet.
Interacting with the indigenous religion, Bon, this particular form of
Mahayana Buddhism known as Tibetan Buddhism emerged. It has its own distinctive
qualities and practices. One such is the recognition of reincarnating living
Buddhas, a belief alien to Chinese Buddhism.
The Dalai Lama and the Panchen Lama are the manifestations of the living
Buddhas.
Incidentally,
it was at this time in the 7th century that the Tibetan language was also
developed relying heavily on both Sanskrit and the Chinese languages.
A large number of original Pali and Sanskrit Buddhist manuscripts are
believed to have been translated, under orders from the king, into Tibetan
language. In India, following the
persecution of the Buddhists, much of this valuable knowledge as well as history
is believed to have been lost. It
was in search of a more accurate historical record of this period that Rahul
Sankrityan embarked on his visit to study the Tibet manuscripts.
Every single Tibet monastery has a large collection of manuscripts which
are revered by pilgrims today. Walking
below the columns holding these manuscripts is considered a blessing.
This Tubo kingdom disintegrated by the year 842.
BECOMES
A PART
However,
it is only by the mid-13th century that Tibet, formally, becomes territorially a
part of China. The Mongol Gengiskhan established the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368) in
China and began the process of unification of all Chinese territories.
With the ascendance of Kublai Khan to the throne of the Yuan Dynasty in
1260, Tibet became an
administrative unit directly
governed by the Chinese central
government. Since then, the
records show that Tibet was all along a part of the Chinese administrative
set-up.
During
the late Qing Dynasty period, in the beginning of the 20th century, Britain
twice launched armed invasions against Tibet.
After the triumph of 1911, democratic revolution in China and the
overthrow of the Qing Dynasty, Britain taking advantage of the chaotic
transition period, intensified its efforts to occupy Tibet. In 1914, Britain
organised the Shimla conference and proclaimed a "Shimla convention"
which gravely violated China's
sovereignty over Tibet. The
government led by Dr Sun Yat-Sen decisively rejected such a position of British
imperialism. Britain, however,
continued to foment trouble and
made efforts all through till the 1940s to separate Tibet from China and to
incorporate it with British India.
As
the president of the Republic, Dr Sun Yat-Sen, in his declaration to the
founding of the Republic of China in January 1912, said: "The foundation
of the state lies in the people's power to incorporate the areas inhabited
by the Hans, Manchus, Mongolians, Huis and Tibetans into one country and
to unite the Han, Manchu, Mongolian, Hui and Tibetan nationalities into one
nation. That is called the national
unification." The five-colour
flag used then as the national flag symbolised the integral whole of the five
nationalities constituting Republic of China.