- Two Tibetan monks were shot in the head and several others seriously injured after Chinese police opened fire at a crowd gathered to peacefully celebrate the 78th birthday of the Dalai Lama in Nyitso, Tawu, eastern Tibet, on Saturday (July 6).
- Despite the intimidating presence of high numbers of armed troops, many Tibetans still gathered in various areas of Kham and Amdo to light incense, make offerings and pray to mark the Dalai Lama’s birthday on July 6. In some areas the Dalai Lama’s picture was displayed prominently. The news follows reports that there have been discussions in some areas about allowing Tibetans to worship the Dalai Lama as a religious leader.
Dalai Lama birthday celebrations in Kham and Amdo
Despite the intimidating presence of armed troops deployed in various areas, Tibetans still gathered at different locations in Kham and Amdo (north eastern Tibetan region) to mark the Dalai Lama’s birthday on Saturday (July 6). In some areas, monks and laypeople went into the grasslands away from monasteries or towns to hold low-key celebrations, including burning incense and making prayer offerings. Images of the Dalai Lama were displayed in some of the gatherings. In the Labrang area of Amdo (Kanlho Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Gansu), a large number of Tibetans gathered to mark the birthday, in an area away from the monastery, while in Chabcha (Chinese: Gonghe) in Tsolho (Chinese: Hainan) Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Qinghai, an image of the Dalai Lama was displayed in one monastery. Tibetans marked the birthday in Draggo (Chinese: Luhuo) in Kardze,[2] Sichuan, and Darlag (Chinese: Dari) in Golog (Chinese: Guoluo), Kumbum and Rebkong (Chinese: Tongren) in Qinghai. The gatherings this year at the time of the birthday are evidence of Tibetan resilience and determination to practice their religion and demonstrate the importance of the Dalai Lama in their lives despite an intimidating security crackdown and increasingly repressive policies across Tibet. A Tibetan researcher in exile said: “Before the protests and crackdown in 2008, Tibetans in Kham and Amdo would not usually hold large gatherings to mark the Dalai Lama’s birthday. But this year it seems that the imperative was there to do so. It indicates a continued determination not only to express their loyalty to their religious leader, but also it is a statement about the importance of His Holiness as a symbol of the Tibetan cause. In many of these places there have been self-immolations, and these have left a deep emotional impression.” In some Tibetan areas, Tibetans have specifically held religious ceremonies close to or on the date of the Dalai Lama’s birthday, partly in order to avoid restrictions due to anti-Dalai Lama policies. In Tawu, Tibetans previously invited monks to a traditional religious festival at the holy mountain in January each year. In 2004, the date of the festival was changed to July 6, the Dalai Lama’s birthday, and it was on this occasion that troops opened fire this year. The two monks who were shot in the head at Tawu are both from Nyitso monastery, which is located within Tawu county town and is populated by more than 200 monks (prior to the Cultural Revolution nearly 2,000 monks are believed to have been based there). Nyitso has more than 400 years of history and is recognized as a protected heritage site in Sichuan. Monks from other areas of Kham and Amdo frequently come to Nyitso to study, while monks from Nyitso also travel elsewhere for study. There is a school within the monastery for young monks to learn grammar, philosophical debate, Buddhism, history, poetry and literature, taught in the Tibetan language. Proposals to display portraits of the Dalai Lama, end denunciation of the Tibetan leader, and lessen police presence in monasteries were discussed at a series of meetings in Qinghai in recent weeks, including a discussion at Chabcha, although it is not known whether they will be implemented on an experimental basis or not. (ICT report, New challenges to Tibet policy from inside China). In the Tibet Autonomous Region there is no sign of any images of the Dalai Lama or celebrations of the birthday being allowed, as the anti-Dalai Lama campaign has been stringently enforced as a core policy in the area since the mid-1990s. In the eastern Tibetan areas outside the Tibet Autonomous Region, images of the Dalai Lama have been on display for some years, although the authorities have taken a more aggressive approach against their display since the protests and crackdown in 2008 – particularly in monasteries connected to self-immolations.[1] Tsewang Norbu, a Nyitso monk, was the third Tibetan monk to self-immolate in Tibet. He set himself on fire and died on August 15, 2011 (ICT report, Troops surround monastery as Tibetan monk dies after setting himself on fire and calling for the return of the Dalai Lama to Tibet). [2] In an incident in January, 2012, armed police opened fire on unarmed Tibetans in Draggo (ICT report,Three Tibetans shot dead on first day of Chinese New Year)