Chinese Whispers
(by Y Kumar | Outlook | January 31, 2000)
In China, if you ask probing questions on politics or sensitive
issues, the answer you are likely to get is, "Sorry, I don't know
much about it." You cannot blame the ordinary Chinese for this
attitude. First, the local media is state-controlled - there's
no news which does not eulogise the Communist leadership. Second,
the people are naturally cautious – any utterance contrary to the
party line invites prompt police retribution. No wonder, then,
so far there hasn't been much talk in Beijing about the flight
of Ugyen Trinley Dorje, the 17th Karmapa, to India. On January 8,
the lone English newspaper in the Chinese capital, People's Daily,
briefly mentioned the incident, but the local people, who read only
Chinese language newspapers, are unaware of it.
The Karmapa's exit is a blow to the Chinese government as it has
been portraying that in Tibet it is all hunky-dory.
Only a few who surf the Internet know, but like a research scholar
at Peking University, they are cautious in their reaction.
"I'm happy with the Karmapa's decision," says the scholar.
"The Chinese government isn't doing justice to the Tibetans."
Most Buddhist scholars and academicians at Peking University and
the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences have no clue why the Karmapa fled Tibet.
The official line, put out on January 7 by the religious
affairs bureau of the state council, China's highest executive body,
is that "the 17th Karmapa named Wu Jin Chi Lie had left
Lhasa recently.... He has gone to buy some black hats and religious
instruments for the sect."
The Chinese indifference seems a put on. For, the Karmapa is
important in its scheme of things as he's considered third in the
Tibetan Buddhist hierarchy after the Dalai Lama and Panchen Lama.
In September 27, 1992, when the Karmapa, called Wu Jin Chi Lie by the
Chinese, was crowned the "Living Buddha" in Lhasa, it was approved
by the state council. Two years later, during the 45th anniversary
celebrations of the formation of the People's Republic of China, he
was invited to meet President Jiang Zemin in Beijing. The Karmapa was
then allowed to visit Shanghai and Buddhist sacred places in China
like Wu Tai and E Mei mountains. In January 1999, the Karmapa was
again given clearance to travel to Guangzhou, Fujian, Zhejiang and
Beijing, and in July to meet the Chinese-propped Panchen Lama.
The official media had then reported that the two had agreed to work
for the prosperity of China under the leadership of the Chinese
Communist party.
The Karmapa's dramatic escape is indeed a blow to the Chinese
government as it has been portraying that it's all hunky-dory in Tibet,
a country it began to occupy in 1950. The previous Karmapa
too had fled to India in 1959 citing religious persecution by the Chinese.
"The flight of the Karmapa and his closeness to the Dalai Lama
will boost the ambitions of Tibetan separatists,"
says Prof Suiming Sui, a Tibetan expert.
A touch of mystery surrounds the Karmapa's sudden departure from Lhasa.
Prof No Bu, deputy director of a Tibetan institute in China,
reiterates what is by now a well-known point: "The Chinese military
was lax owing to the freezing temperatures during January-March
in the Himalayas. A large number of Tibetans take refuge in India
during this period." According to a disciple of the Karmapa,
the religious leader had been planning to flee to India for the past
two years. Since last November, he had been climbing mountains to
get himself fit. It is believed he had also sent one of his closest
aides on a recce mission to study the entire route.
Some academicians in Beijing say the Karmapa decided to flee
Tibet because he was denied permission by the Chinese government to
visit the US. Since the Karmapa's arrival in India on January 5,
the Chinese government has been maintaining that some Tibetan separatists
were behind the escape and no foreign hand was involved.
Apparently, it wants to settle the issue amicably. The official media has
been propagating this view. A Chinese external affairs ministry
spokesperson recently reiterated that "China wants to strengthen
its relations with India on the basis of the five principles of
peaceful coexistence." But, as long as the question of Tibet's
freedom remains, will there be real peace between the two nations?
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