Archive for the 'Dalai Lama' Category

Mar 19 2008

Gordon Brown to Meet Dalai Lama

Published by Jianjun under Culture, Dalai Lama, News

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According to BBC News, Gordon Brown (I just knew he’s the current prime minister of Great Britain) said he will meet Dalai Lama when the exiled spiritual figure visits Britain.

The report also quoted that the Tory leader David Cameron said: “Does the prime minister agree that our relationship with China is vital… But we must be absolutely clear in telling the Chinese that this is unacceptable.”

“But we must be absolutely clear in telling the Chinese that this is unacceptable”? Mr. Cameron sounded like it was in 1840 when the British Empire attacked China in the Opium War. Maybe these guys never want to see a China that is strong and independent. Just as they can’t like Russia, they can’t like China.

The mobs in Tibet attacked civilians not only Han, but also Uygurs. Foreign tourists in Tibet saw innocent people beaten to death by these same guys wielding long knives, and shops set to fire. Do you call this peaceful protest? CNN footage shows Lamas were among the rioters damaging public facilities. Are they peaceful Buddhists? Ridiculous!

If memory serves me right, history tells me that it was just the then British Empire that had wanted to separate Tibet from China even before the 14th Dalai Lama was born. They invaded India, sent their King into exile. They exported opium to China to poison its people… Now they are “telling the Chinese”.

Tibet has always been part of China. Before it was peacefully liberated (not as the western media say it was invaded) from a cruel feudal system, the serfs had no basic human rights. Even in the 1950s, to celebrate Dalai Lama’s birthday, they used human sacrifice! Lamaism was used as tool to slave the brainwashed people. To learn more about the feudal rules of old Tibet from a literary perspective, I suggest Tibetan author Alai’s novel Red Poppies. Here’s a review by Guang Yue.

Further resources:

A Few More Words Regarding the Tibet Issue(西藏问题再啰嗦几句)blog post by drunkpiano
http://www.my1510.cn/article.php?8ea5a6e56d721111
(in Chinese with pictures from the rioting)

Tibet Violence Deepens, with Violence and Rioting by By Christopher Johnson (the Christian Science Monitor) details how PLA soldiers were beaten without attacking back even though they were equipped with riot gear, how innocent Han and Muslim Hui people were beaten up and police cars were burned. The ‘peaceful’ protest is a lie.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20080315/wl_csm/ostreets

*Update*
A blogger wrote about first-hand Tibet situation. The protests were not peaceful from their observance (March 14th):
http://kadfly.blogspot.com/2008/03/more-from-lhasa.html

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Mar 16 2008

2008, Dalai Lama…

Published by Jianjun under Dalai Lama

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I’m a little tired today and won’t write too long. So bear with me…

The other day, when I was lunching with my wife, something came to my mind and I spoke out, causing my wife to laugh out aloud. The ’something’ is just the title of this piece - ‘2008, Dalai Lama.’ When spoken in Chinese, 8 (pronounced as BA) would rhyme with Lama, creating a funny effect.

Indeed, 2008 seems to be doomed to associate with so many things, from Beijing to Washington to Hollywood to Taiwan, Xinjiang and Tibet and, of course, also Dalai Lama, who earned his Nobel Peace Prize in 1989, a representative of Buddha, the embodiment of peace.

But who is Dalai Lama? Here are a few historical pictures:

Dalai Lama

Dalai Lama, installation ceremony in 1939

Dalai Lama

Wu Zhongxin(吴忠信, Chairman of Mongolian and Tibetan Affaires Committee of China who presided over the installation ceremony)and Dalai Lama, 1939

Dalai Lama

Dalai Lama and Bainqen Lama (left), 1954 Beijing
Dalai Lama was voted Vice-Chairman of National People’s Congress

1955 Dalai Lama

Zhou Enlai(周恩来),Mao Zedong(毛泽东),Liu Shaoqi(刘少奇)with Dalai Lama and Painqen Lama, 1955

Chenyi

Chen Yi(陈毅)was welcomed in Tibet in 1956

Further resources:

Articles about Tibet.

http://english.gansudaily.com.cn/system/2007/10/08/010486120.shtml
http://www.rense.com/politics2/better.htm

The True Face of the Dalai Lama
(http://kalovski.blog.com/763351/)

The Dalai Lama Controversy
(http://www.emorywheel.com/detail.php?n=24612)

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