Sunday, June 14, 2026
ADVT 
International

Monks, Bollywood And Gleaming Infrastructure In Tibet

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Aug, 2016 01:27 PM
    When they see tourists from India, Tibetan monks reverentially greet them with a "Namaste". But beyond that, they don't say much.
     
    The monks can be seen everywhere in Lhasa, the Tibetan capital, chanting Buddhist sutras with rosaries in their hands.
     
    Beside them sit well-suited men with hands-free plugged into their ears. They keep a close eye on visitors.
     
    The monks are one reason officials in the Tibetan government say there is religious freedom in Tibet.
     
    "There is no restriction on practising religion here. People are free to practise Buddhism," Me Jiang, Vice Governor of Tibet and a Han Chinese, told a visiting IANS correspondent.
     
    Monks can be seen aplenty at the majestic 13-storey Potala Palace - the chief residence of the Dalai Lamas until the 14th one fled to take exile in India in 1959.
     
    The 7th century structure, which sits atop a hillock, is dimly-lit by yak butter lamps.
     
    Believers offer customary white scarfs in an enclosure which once served as the court of Dalai Lama.
     
    Jokhang Temple is another site which reveals how deeply Buddhism is entrenched in Tibet. Worshippers repeatedly prostrate themselves outside the temple.
     
    On the streets, Tibetans clearly show a liking for Indians and their popular culture. Bollywood songs and actors are popular among the locals, many of whom keep posters of Rani Mukherjee and Kareena Kapoor in their homes.
     
    But Tibet today is far removed from the Tibet the Dalai Lama escaped from.
     
    As the Air China flight touches down at Lhasa airport, one can see over a dozen military choppers on one side of the runway.
     
    But the excitement of reaching Tibet gives way to a slight headache and dizziness. It is natural to experience shortness of breath when you are at the "roof of the world" -- 3,656 metres above sea level.
     
    The discomfort subsides when one sees sheep and yaks graze in alpine meadows and the long tunnels on the 57 km-long stretch between the airport and the city.
     
    Closer to Lhasa flutter the Chinese flags. There are numerous posters of a smiling Chinese President Xi Jinping.
     
     
    There are high-rise buildings, high-end cars ply in Lhasa and locals talk on iPhones.
     
    The Chinese government seems to be trying every bit to change Tibet's image of being a restive region.
     
    It is building infrastructure on a massive scale in Tibet: an expansive network of roads, the world's highest railway and multi-storey apartments in a difficult terrain.
     
    China is bringing development to Tibet, home to 3.23 million people spread over 690 towns and over 5,000 villages.
     
    However, there have been concerns of environment degradation in the region.
     
    "Over the past few decades, the socio-economic developments have brought great changes in the lives of Tibetans," Yingxi Pingcuo, an official in the Tibetan government, told IANS.
     
    Education, healthcare and job creation seem to be among the priorities of the Communist party.
     
    Tibet has not been totally calm of course. Since 2009, some 140 Tibetans have set fire to themselves in protest against Chinese rule.
     
    The Chinese government says these people were incited by the Dalai Lama, who lives in exile in India. Beijing calls him a "separatist".
     
    With unemployment at 2.5 percent, the government is opening vocational training centres.
     
    In one such centre in Lhasa hundreds can be seen acquiring skills ranging from the packaging of mineral water bottles to carving the Buddha on wood.
     
    "Tibet has achieved a double-digit growth rate in the past two decades," said an official, Wang Niangdong. "We want Tibetans to be part of the mainstream."
     
     
    Tibetans get a special place in educational institutes and other economic benefits.
     
    Any discussion about the Dalai Lama, however, is off-limits here. When officials do talk about him, he is referred to as a "separatist" who "betrayed" his country.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Slain Indian Grocery Store Owner's Widow Testifies In Auckland Court Who Was Killed In Front Of Her

    Slain Indian Grocery Store Owner's Widow Testifies In Auckland Court Who Was Killed In Front Of Her
    Arun Kumar, who ran a convenience store in Auckland's Henderson suburb, was killed in an attack last year. 

    Slain Indian Grocery Store Owner's Widow Testifies In Auckland Court Who Was Killed In Front Of Her

    Indian Father In UK Killed Family After Researching How To Cut A Person's Throat Online

    Indian Father In UK Killed Family After Researching How To Cut A Person's Throat Online
    An India-born IT professional in Britain stabbed his wife and two daughters to death after researching how to cut someone's throat -- then lived with their bodies for a weekend before hanging himself, an inquest has heard.

    Indian Father In UK Killed Family After Researching How To Cut A Person's Throat Online

    Canadian Diplomat, Teen Son Anxiously Await Bail Decision In Miami Killings

    Canadian Diplomat, Teen Son Anxiously Await Bail Decision In Miami Killings
    Canada's consul general to Miami finds out Wednesday if she can take her 15-year-old son home while he awaits trial on felony murder and other charges related to a shooting that left her other son dead.

    Canadian Diplomat, Teen Son Anxiously Await Bail Decision In Miami Killings

    Taslima Nasreen Relocated To Us After Death Threats

    Taslima Nasreen Relocated To Us After Death Threats
    A New York-based think tank has relocated controversial Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen to "safety" in the US amid death threats from Islamist radicals, according to a press release.

    Taslima Nasreen Relocated To Us After Death Threats

    Malaysian Indian Barber Surjeet Singh, 30, Dies In Fight With Pakistani

    Malaysian Indian Barber Surjeet Singh, 30, Dies In Fight With Pakistani
    A Malaysian Indian barber died when he fell on broken glass during a fight with a Pakistani in Malaysia on Tuesday, media reported.

    Malaysian Indian Barber Surjeet Singh, 30, Dies In Fight With Pakistani

    Indian-Australian Student Wins Apple Conference Scholarship

    Indian-Australian Student Wins Apple Conference Scholarship
    Class 10 students Deepan Kumar, Ben Maliel and Christopher Seidl from Canberra Boys Grammar School won the scholarship by submitting their own coded iOS application, reported Canberra Times. 

    Indian-Australian Student Wins Apple Conference Scholarship