Showing posts with label Tibet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tibet. Show all posts

July 25 - Yalong Cultural Festival in Tibet

   Posted on July 25, 2022     


This is an update of my post published on July 25, 2011:





National sports contests, singing, dancing, Tibetan opera, ethnic costume shows, and trade fairs are just some of the cool things offered during this important festival.


Tibet is located in the northern portion of the Himalaya Mountains. It is ruled by the People's Republic of China, but many people in Tibet and the world think that Tibet should be an independent nation. The Dalai Lama, leader of Tibetan Buddhism, lives in exile, and there is off-and-on political unrest and violence about Tibet's situation.



Here is a short You-Tube video about the growth of tourism in Tibet. Since the video was created in 2016, I checked to see how the global pandemic had changed the situation - and Tibet is booming with tourists, apparently, once again.

I also found an interesting music video by Tibetan singer Dowa Tskeyi. I found it cool partly because it shows a mixture of traditional and modern clothing and of urban and natural settings.



September 2 - Tibetan Democracy Day

Posted on September 2, 2020

Tibet is the highest region in the world - it includes Mt. Everest, the highest mountain in the world, and the average altitude is 5,000 meters or 16,000 feet! 


I have only been as high as 10,000 to 11,000 feet, myself, and it was pretty hard to breathe while climbing a hill. Some people in my family got physically ill from the lack of oxygen at that high altitude. And it's much lower than the average altitude in Tibet!

Tibet was once an empire, but long ago it was divided into a lot of different territories. Much of the region was ruled by China. Tibet declared independence in 1913, and although it wasn't officially recognized as an independent nation by China, it did remain pretty much self-ruled until 1951. At that point, soldiers from the People's Republic of China occupied it, and some Tibetan leaders and people fled while others remained under Chinese rule.


On this date in 1960, Tibetans living in exile elected representatives to form the Commission of Tibetan People's Deputies.The spiritual leader of Tibet, the Dalai Lama, encouraged Tibetans living in exile to remember and teach what it's like to live in a democracy.

Some Tibetans-in-exile protest
China ruling their homeleand.

Here are some pictures of Tibet:





March 28 – Serfs' Emancipation Day in Tibet

Posted on March 28, 2020

There are a lot of emancipation days - and many of them deal with the freeing of enslaved peoples.

Today, Tibet Autonomous Region of China celebrates the freeing of serfs.

Tibet is seen here in red; the rest of China is colored yellow.

Serfdom was a lot like slavery in many ways. It was very common in medieval Europe and during widespread time periods elsewhere in the world, such as China (although some scholars disagree on when and where the term serfdom is appropriate).

Serfs could be bought, sold, or traded, like slaves. But generally they could only be sold together with the land they were on. This tended to keep families together and in familiar homes.

Serfs could be mistreated and had no rights over their own bodies. They were basically bound to particular plots of land, and they were required to work for the lord who owned the land. We generally think of serfs working in the lord's fields, growing and raising his food, but serfs also worked in the lord's mines and forests, and they built and maintained the roads that crossed his lands.

Serfs in medieval Europe

Unlike enslaved people, serfs in many feudal societies were considered to have certain rights in exchange for their labor and loyalty:

They were entitled to protection and justice. If some other lord invaded their land, or if ruffians stole from them, their own lord and his armed soldiers would defend or avenge them.

Also, serfs were given the right to grow their own food on certain fields within the lord's possession.

Serfs - or "poor people" in relatively modern Tibet

At least one historian considers that Tibet maintained serfdom centuries after Western nations abandoned or outlawed the practice, until 1959. (Other historians say that another label, tenancy, is much more appropriate and that the two systems were quite different.) On this date in 1959, the premier of the People's Republic of China issued an order dissolving the Tibetan government (China had controlled Tibet from 1951 on), and the People's Liberation Army was ordered to confiscate the possessions of the Tibetan landowners, who were rebelling against China, and give them to the serfs. According to China, the serfs made up 90% of the population of Tibet and lived in poverty, with no land and few rights. The March 28, 1959, action was considered democratic reform.

Of course, many Tibetans describe China's action on this date in a very different way. It was suppression, many say, and unfair to a people who deserve self-rule. This holiday is considered by many Tibetans to be propaganda. But some seem to enjoy it: