Vasundhra

Showing posts with label TIBET FREE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TIBET FREE. Show all posts

Monday, July 12, 2021

TIBET : The Dalai Lama’s Army (r)

 SOURCE :

 (a) https://www.buddhistchannel.tv/index.php?id=8,3916,0,0,1,0 

 (b) VIDEO- Upheaval in Tibet Chinese Occupation & its Impacts  : https://youtu.be/Ymlu6CoI_sQ






“In the future, this system [Communism] will certainly be forced either from within or without on this land…If, in such an event, we fail to defend our land, the holy lamas…will be eliminated without a trace of their names remaining;…our political system…will be reduced to an empty name; my officials…will be subjugated like slaves to the enemy; and my people, subjected to fear

 and miseries, will be unable to endure day or night.”

    “.…we should make every effort to safeguard ourselves against this impending disaster. Use peaceful means where they are appropriate; but where they are not appropriate, do not hesitate to resort to more forceful means” (emphasis added).      

          13 TH Dalai Lama Thupten Gyatso [ 1932]




VIDEO:  Upheaval in Tibet. Chinese Occupation & its Impacts  

                            CLICK .....................HERE

OR GOOGLE URL TO OPEN :   : https://youtu.be/Ymlu6CoI_sQ 



                       The Dalai Lama’s Army

                                                                                            By

                                       Dave Kopel

                   National Review Online, April 5, 2007


A right to self-defense is recognized by the Dalai Lama — indeed, his predecessor tried to recruit an army.

New York, USA -- An al Qaeda organization is attempting to assassinate the Dalai Lama. Lashkar-e-Toiba, al Qaeda’s South Asian affiliate, is acting consistently with Osama bin Laden’s April 2006 denunciation of “pagan Buddhists.”

This raises an interesting question: Can an ethical follower of Tibetan Buddhism kill someone in order to save the Dalai Lama? Or in order to fight religious totalitarianism in general?

Absolutely yes. Although some Westerners imagine that the Dalai Lama is an absolute pacifist, the teachings of the present Dalai Lama and of his predecessor, as well as the traditions of Tibetan Buddhism, all legitimize the use of deadly force against killers and would-be tyrants.

This may come as news to certain anti-American pacifists in the United States and Europe who are guilty of “Shangri-La-ism” — of what Jane Ardley (in her book The Tibetan Independence Movement) describes as the “idealized, romantic vision of Tibet as a land of enlightened, non-violent, happy and exotic people.” She observes, “For those in the West who look to Tibetan Buddhism for all the answers to their insecurities, the image of ‘violent’ Buddhists is uncomfortable particularly where Buddhism itself can be offered as a justification for their actions.”

Warrior Monks

The tradition of forceful resistance to tyranny is very old in Tibet. For example, in the early centuries of the first millennium, ancient Tantric Buddhist texts gave “formulae for killing unjust kings” (Thomas Cleary, Classics of Buddhism and Zen, vol. 5).

Buddhist Tibet was a powerful warrior kingdom during the latter part of the first millennium. Later, during the thirteenth century, Tibet fell under Mongol control. The Mongols respected Buddhism, granted Tibet internal autonomy, provided military protection, and exempted Tibetans from military service.

Late in the 14th century, the Chinese overthrew the Mongols, and Tibet regained independence. Thereafter, China and Tibet engaged in many wars for control of eastern Tibet. The Chinese managed to conquer much of the provinces of Kham and Amdo, and merged them into Chinese provinces. The British dubbed this region “Inner Tibet.” The Buddhist Khampa tribes of Inner Tibet were battle-hardened warriors, described by a Chinese observer in 1666 as people who “delight in wars and conflicts, not hesitant to die.”

By the middle of the 19th century, the fierce Khampas had won themselves almost complete independence from the decrepit Chinese empire and from the Tibetan government in Lhasa. Nominally, they lived in Chinese territory which was claimed by Tibet. In practice, they ruled themselves.

Outer Tibet was also claimed by China, although Chinese influence there was very small.

In Outer Tibet during the nineteenth century, three large monasteries attained preeminent power over the government, and held that power until the Communist takeover in 1951. As of 1951, the three monasteries held about 22,000 monks; of them, about 10 to 15 percent were dobdobs, fighting monks. They carried knives and had access to the guns and ammunition stored in the monasteries. The dobdobs were stronger than the tiny Tibetan army and police, and so the monasteries enjoyed coercive power over the government, which had an army of only 5,000, plus a small police force in Lhasa only.

During the final years of the Manchu dynasty, the Chinese attempted to assert real control over Tibet and used military force. The Dalai Lama fled to India. When the Chinese Manchus were overthrown by the Chinese Nationalists in 1911-12, Tibet declared independence.

Outer Tibet’s independence was not seriously contested, but the Chinese eventually began to war for Inner Tibet. Tibetan troops and monks fought against the Chinese Nationalist government in Inner Tibet.

Violence in Practice

Today, the Dalai Lama is the leader of the Tibetan Buddhist religion. (“Dalai” means “oceanwide.”) The current Dalai Lama, Lhamo Thondup, is believed to be the thirteenth reincarnation of the original Dalai Lama, and a manifestation of Avalokitsehvara, the bodhisattva of compassion.

Winner of the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize, the Dalai Lama is perhaps second only to the Roman Catholic Pope as a well-known and respected worldwide religious leader. Many Westerners are familiar with the non-violent teaching of the current Dalai Lama, such as “The basis of all moral teaching ought to be nonresponse to attacks.” But before Westerners take such sayings as categorical imperatives, it is essential to remember that, as the Dalai Lama emphasizes, Buddhism does not operate on the binary terms of Western thought.

During Tibet’s wars against the Chinese Nationalists, the Dalai Lama was Thupten Gyatso, who died in 1933. In 1935, Gyatso’s soul was reincarnated, according to Tibetan Buddhist belief, in the baby who grew up to be the current Dalai Lama.


 In 1932 Gyatso left a “Political Last Testament,” predicting:

    “In the future, this system [Communism] will certainly be forced either from within or without on this land…If, in such an event, we fail to defend our land, the holy lamas…will be eliminated without a trace of their names remaining;…our political system…will be reduced to an empty name; my officials…will be subjugated like slaves to the enemy; and my people, subjected to fear and miseries, will be unable to endure day or night.”

    “.…we should make every effort to safeguard ourselves against this impending disaster. Use peaceful means where they are appropriate; but where they are not appropriate, do not hesitate to resort to more forceful means” (emphasis added).

As the current Dalai Lama explains, Gyatso knew that independent Tibet could never overcome a huge nation like China. So he turned to Nepal and Bhutan and proposed, “A sort of common defense: raise an army, train it as best as possible. Just between us, this isn’t strictly practicing non-violence.” Gyatso proposed bringing young men from Kham to the capital of Lhasa. In Lhasa, they would receive “a complete military education. Politically, that was very farsighted. He was already advancing the idea that defense of a land has to be assured by the people who occupy it” (Dalai Lama with Jean-Claude Carrière, Violence and Compassion: Dialogues on Life Today).


Gyatso’s program was never implemented. Nepal and Bhutan ignored the proposal for mutual defense. Tibetan dignitaries refused to build up the army, because they were sure that the gods would protect Tibet.


Would Gyatso’s defense system have saved Tibet? “I’m convinced it would have,” said the current Lama.

In 1950, when the current Dalai Lama was only 15 years old, Mao Tse-Teng’s Red Army invaded Outer Tibet. In 1951, the Dalai Lama was forced under duress to sign a seventeen-point agreement with China declaring that all of Tibet is part of “the Motherland” of China. The agreement pretended that Outer Tibet retained its internal autonomy.

Armed resistance to Communism began in 1952 with numerous uprisings in eastern Tibet. Although the Chinese at first proceeded cautiously in Outer Tibet, they regarded Inner Tibet as an ordinary part of China, and pushed Communist “reforms” (including genocide) in Inner Tibet with the same vigor with which the Communist program was enforced in ethnically Chinese lands ruled by Mao.

About 68,000 Tibetans joined with approximately 12,000 fighters from the defeated Chinese Nationalist army to war against their mutual enemy, the Communists. The revolt cooled down when the Chinese backed away from their program to impose serfdom in eastern Tibet (that is, farm collectivization in which the government would own and control the farms, and the farmers would be de facto slaves of the government).

More people joined the revolution in 1953. In 1954 the Chinese 18th Army suppressed a 25-day revolt of 40,000 farmers in Tibet. The resistance fighters were known as the “National Volunteer Army for the Defense of Buddhism” (Tensung Dhangland Magar).

The core of the resistance was the men of Kham and Amdo, the tribesmen of eastern Tibet. It was they whom the previous Dalai Lama had wanted to turn into the foundation of a strong Tibetan army. They thrived in the thin atmosphere of the mountains, while their Chinese adversaries gasped for breath.

Eastern Tibet’s Kanting Rebellion began in the winter of 1955-56. It was defeated by the end of 1956, and many of the rebels fled to Outer Tibet. Yet the Khampas began a new uprising in 1956-67, and Amdo rose up in 1958. More refugees and fighters from Inner Tibet fled to Outer Tibet. Many of them clustered around the capital, Lhasa, and the many, disparate tribes and clans began working to form a united fighting force.

The Lhasa Uprising began on March 10, 1959, in response to rumors that the Chinese were about to arrest the Dalai Lama. The Dalai Lama fled to India, and the Chinese appointed the Panchen Lama (the second-highest spiritual leader in Tibetan Buddhism) as their puppet. Participants in the Lhasa Uprising included Tibet’s little army of 3,000 men; about 10,000 Khampas who had fled to Lhasa; most of the 20,000 Buddhist monks in Lhasa; and thousands of members of the general public. The Chinese had to kill more than 87,000 people to suppress the Lhasa Uprising.


Unsurprisingly, in April 1959 the Chinese forbade the Tibetan male tradition of wearing swords.


Violence in Principle

How could Tibetan Buddhists engage in violence? Jampa Tenzin, a former guerilla and monk, explained,

    “Generally, of course, non-violence is good, and killing is bad…But each and every thing is judged according to the circumstances of the situation, and, particularly in Buddhism, according to the motivations….In order to save a hundred people, killing one person may be acceptable…Individual, or self, motivation is obviously not allowed….

    “…unless we did something sooner or later we couldn’t practice religion…Dharma [had to] prevail and remain…even by violent means.”

Protests and small revolts that began in 1987 culminated in March 1989 rioting against the Chinese colonists whom the Communist government had settled in Tibet, and who now comprise the majority of Tibet’s population.

China has perpetrated genocide in Tibet, and continues to do so, having killed approximately one million Tibetans directly or by starvation. What the Dalai Lama calls China’s “final solution” is the subjugation of the Tibetan people in the lands which they have inhabited from time immemorial, their human right of self-determination crushed by their Chinese colonialist masters.

Living in exile in India, the Dalai Lama professes his admiration of Mohandas Gandhi. Yet, like Gandhi, the Dalai Lama is not as inflexibly pacifist as some Westerners imagine. Indeed, the Lama defended what he calls India’s “right to nuclear weapons.”

According to the Dalai Lama, “If someone has a gun and is trying to kill you, it would be reasonable to shoot back with your own gun.” (Seattle Times, May 15, 2001). Elsewhere, the Dalai Lama said:

If the situation was such that there was only one learned lama or genuine practitioner alive, a person whose death would cause the whole of Tibet to lose all hope of keeping its Buddhist way of life, then it is conceivable that in order to protect that one person it might be justified for one or 10 enemies to be eliminated—if there was no other way. I could justify violence only in this extreme case, to save the last living knowledge of Buddhism itself.

The Dalai Lama has never supported armed resistance in Tibet. The non-violence of the Lama’s approach has won him widespread sympathy in the West, although thus far, there has been no progress in convincing the Chinese to relax their iron grip.

Sometimes the Dalai Lama states that non-violence is the most important thing. Sometimes he offers broad justifications for violence — such as national defense against Communist imperialism, or individual self-defense against deadly attack. Sometimes he allows only an extremely narrow justification for violence — namely, saving his own life. To puzzle over the contradictions is to miss the non-binary spirit of Tibetan Buddhism.

What is clear that the Dalai Lama has never sold arms to Israel, stationed troops in Saudi Arabia, sent military forces to fight for freedom in Afghanistan or Iraq, reconquered Spain from Islamic invasion, drawn cartoons mocking Islamic terrorists, dismantled the Ottoman Empire, or performed any of the other acts which the apologists for terrorism claim have “provoked” al Qaeda. Yet al Qaeda is still trying to kill him — as it trying to kill everyone who does not submit to it hideous totalitarian “religion.”

To kill the terrorists who are trying to kill the Dalai Lama would be eminently just, and fully in accordance with the theory and practice Tibetan Buddhism. Westerners who attempt to enlist the Dalai Lama in their finger-wagging denunciations of self-defense against al Qaeda would do better to study the history of Tibet, and to ponder the farsighted teachings of the current Dalai Lama and

              “that defense of a land has to be assured by the people who occupy it.”


Posted by Vasundhra at 6:16 PM No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: DALAI LAMA, REBELLIONS CHINA, TIBET, TIBET FREE

CHINA : 1959 Tibetan Uprising

SOURCE: 

( a )  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1959_Tibetan_uprising 

 (b)   VIDEO: 33 YEARS UNDER TOTURE  - https://youtu.be/nsfZZTipR5s



INDEX 

(a) First Opium war :       https://bcvasundhra.blogspot.com/2021/07/china-first-opium-war-1839-42.html

(b) Second Opium War :  https://bcvasundhra.blogspot.com/2021/07/china-second-opium-war-1856-to-1860.html

 (c) Taiping Rebellion :  https://bcvasundhra.blogspot.com/2021/07/china-taiping-rebellion-by-younger.html

 (d) Boxer Rebellion :       https://bcvasundhra.blogspot.com/2021/07/china-boxer-rebellion.html 

 (e)  1959 Tibetan Uprising :     https://bcvasundhra.blogspot.com/2021/07/china-1959-tibetan-uprising.html


                  1959 Tibetan Uprising

                              From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to navigationJump to search

1959 Tibetan uprising
Part of the Cold War
Tsarong in captivity.jpg
Tsarong Dazang Dramdul and several Tibetan monks captured by the PLA during the uprising.
Date10–23 March 1959[6]
Location
Lhasa, Tibet Area, China
ResultChinese victory
Belligerents

 Tibetan and Khampa protesters and militants[1]


Simultaneous rebellion in eastern Tibet:
 Chushi Gangdruk
Supported by:
 United States[2]
 India[3]
 Republic of China[4][5]
 People's Republic of China
Commanders and leaders
Several resistance leaders[7] Gen. Tan Guansan[8]
(highest-ranking PLA commander in Tibet)
Casualties and losses
85,000–87,000 casualties (disputed; see below)2,000 killed[5]
Part of a series on the
History of Tibet
Potala Palace
  • Neolithic Tibet
  • Zhangzhung
  • Yarlung Dynasty
  • Tibetan Empire
  • Era of Fragmentation
  • Mongol Empire
  • Phagmodrupa Dynasty
  • Rinpungpa Dynasty
  • Tsangpa Dynasty
  • Rise of Ganden Phodrang
  • Qing rule
  • Reign of 13th and 14th Dalai Lama
  • PRC rule
See also
  • Timeline
  • Historical money
  • List of rulers
  • European exploration
Asia (orthographic projection).svg Asia portal • Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg China portal
  • v
  • t
  • e

The 1959 Tibetan uprising or the 1959 Tibetan rebellion (Chinese: 1959年藏区骚乱) began on 10 March 1959, when a revolt erupted in Lhasa, the capital of Tibet, which had been under the effective control of the People's Republic of China since the Seventeen Point Agreement was reached in 1951.[9] The initial uprising occurred amid general Chinese-Tibetan tensions and in a context of confusion, as Tibetan protestors feared that the Chinese government might arrest the 14th Dalai Lama. The protests were also fuelled by anti-Chinese sentiment and separatism. At first, the uprising consisted of mostly peaceful protests, but clashes quickly erupted and the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) eventually used force to put down the protestors, some of whom had captured arms. The last stages of the uprising included heavy fighting, with high civilian and military losses. The 14th Dalai Lama escaped from Lhasa, while the city was fully retaken by Chinese security forces on 23 March 1959. Thousands were killed during the 1959 uprising, although the exact number is disputed.

Earlier in 1956, armed conflict between Tibetan guerillas and the PLA started in the Kham and Amdo regions, which had been subjected to socialist reform. The guerrilla warfare later spread to other areas of Tibet and lasted through 1962. Some regard the Xunhua Incident in 1958 as a precursor of the Tibetan uprising.[10][11]

The annual March 10 anniversary of the uprising is observed by Tibetan exiles as the Tibetan Uprising Day and Women's Uprising Day.[12] According to Warren W. Smith, on January 19, 2009, the PRC-controlled legislature in the Tibetan Autonomous Region chose March 28 as the national anniversary of Serfs Emancipation Day, as a "counter-propaganda" celebration following the March 10th 2008 Tibetan unrest.[13]

Contents

  • 1Armed resistance in east Tibet
  • 2Lhasa Rebellion
  • 3Republic of China's involvement and its position on Tibetan independence
  • 4Casualties
  • 5Aftermath
  • 6See also
  • 7References
    • 7.1Citations
    • 7.2Sources
  • 8External links

Armed Resistance in East Tibet

In 1951, an agreement between the People's Republic of China and representatives of the Dalai Lama was put into effect. Socialist reforms such as redistribution of land were delayed in Tibet proper. However, eastern Kham and Amdo (western Sichuan and Qinghai provinces in the Chinese administrative hierarchy) were outside the administration of the Tibetan government in Lhasa, and were thus treated more like other Chinese provinces, with land redistribution implemented in full. The Khampas and nomads of Amdo traditionally owned their own land.[14] Armed resistance broke out in Amdo and eastern Kham in June 1956.[citation needed]

Prior to the PLA invasion, relations between Lhasa and the Khampa chieftains had deteriorated, although the Khampa remained spiritually loyal to the Dalai Lama throughout. Because of these strained relations, the Khampa had actually assisted the Chinese in their initial invasion, before becoming the guerrilla resistance they are now known for.[15] Pandatsang Rapga, a pro Kuomintang and pro Republic of China revolutionary Khampa leader, offered the governor of Chamdo, Ngabo Ngawang Jigme, some Khampa fighters in exchange for the Tibetan government recognizing the independence of Kham. Ngabo refused the offer. After the defeat of the Tibetan Army in Chamdo, Rapga started mediating in negotiations between the PLA and Tibetan rebels.[citation needed]

Rapga and Topgay engaged in negotiations with the Chinese during their assault on Chamdo. Khampas either defected to the Chinese PLA forces or did not fight at all. The PLA attack succeeded.[16]

By 1957, Kham was in chaos. Resistance fighters' attacks and People's Liberation Army reprisals against Khampa resistance fighters such as the Chushi Gangdruk became increasingly brutal.[17] Kham's monastic networks came to be used by guerilla forces to relay messages and hide rebels.[18] Punitive strikes were carried out by the Chinese government against Tibetan villages and monasteries. Tibetan exiles assert that threats to bomb the Potala Palace and the Dalai Lama were made by Chinese military commanders in an attempt to intimidate the guerrilla forces into submission.[19]

Lhasa continued to abide by the seventeen-point agreement and sent a delegation to Kham to quell the rebellion. After speaking with the rebel leaders, the delegation instead joined the rebellion.[20] Kham leaders contacted the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), but the CIA under President Dwight D. Eisenhower insisted it required an official request from Lhasa to support the rebels. Lhasa did not act.[20] Eventually the CIA began to provide covert support for the rebellion without word from Lhasa. By then the rebellion had spread to Lhasa which had filled with refugees from Amdo and Kham.[21] Opposition to the Chinese presence in Tibet grew within the city of Lhasa.

In mid-February 1959 the CCP Central Committee's Administrative Office circulated the Xinhua News Agency internal report on how "the revolts in the Tibetan region have gathered pace and developed into a nearly full-scale rebellion." in a "situation report" for top CCP leaders.[22]

"The more chaotic [the situation] in Tibet becomes the better; for it will help train our troops and toughen the masses. Furthermore, [the chaos] will provide a sufficient reason to crush the rebellion and carry out reforms in the future." – Mao Zedong[23]

The next day, the Chinese leader saw a report from the PLA General Staff’s Operations Department describing rebellions by Tibetans in Sichuan, Yunnan, Gansu, and Qinghai. He again stressed that "rebellions like these are extremely favorable for us because they will benefit us in helping to train our troops, train the people, and provide a sufficient reason to crush the rebellion and carry out comprehensive reforms in the future."[23]

The PLA used Hui soldiers, who formerly had served under Ma Bufang to crush the Tibetan revolt in Amdo.[24] Hui cavalry were stationed in Southern Kham.[25] The situation in all of Tibet became increasingly tense, as a growing number of Tibetans began to support the Khampa uprising, while the regional government in Lhasa neither wanted to back a rebellion nor publicly oppose it. In this unstable situation, the Chinese generals resident in Lhasa was summoned back to mainland China, leaving the inexperienced PLA commander Tan Guansen in charge.[26]

 Lhasa Rebellion


Photo of the Dalai Lama during a visit in India
The 14th Dalai Lama in 1956

According to historian Tsering Shakya, the Chinese government was pressuring the Dalai Lama to attend the National People's Congress in April 1959, in order to repair China's image in relation to ethnic minorities after the Khampa rebellion.[27] On 7 February 1959, a significant day on the Tibetan calendar, the Dalai Lama attended a religious dance, after which the acting representative in Tibet, Tan Guansan, offered the Dalai Lama a chance to see a performance from a dance troupe native to Lhasa at the Norbulingka to celebrate the Dalai Lama's completion of his lharampa geshe degree.[26] According to the Dalai Lama's memoirs, the invitation came from Chinese General Chiang Chin-wu, who proposed that the performance be held at the Chinese military headquarters; the Dalai Lama states that he agreed.[28]:130[29] However, tibetologist Sam van Schaik stated that the Dalai Lama was the one who proposed that the dance should take place in the military headquarters as the Norbulingka was too small. Both parties did not yet agree on a date, and the Dalai Lama seemed to put the event "out of his mind", focusing instead on his ongoing examinations for his Geshe degree as well as the Monlam Prayer Festival.[26]

Besides Tan and the Dalai Lama, nobody was seemingly informed of the plans for the dance.[26] As a result, planned performance date was only finalized 5[30] or 3 days beforehand when Tan reminded the Dalai Lama of the dance who suggested 10 March. The decision was seemingly concluded on a whim.[31] Neither the Kashag nor the Dalai Lama's bodyguards were informed of the Dalai Lama's plans[31] until Chinese officials briefed them on 9 March, one day before the performance was scheduled, and insisted that they would handle the Dalai Lama's security.[19] The Dalai Lama's memoirs state that on 9 March the Chinese told his chief bodyguard that they wanted the Dalai Lama's excursion to watch the production conducted "in absolute secrecy"[28]:132 and without any armed Tibetan bodyguards, which "all seemed strange requests and there was much discussion" amongst the Dalai Lama's advisors.[28]:132 Some members of the Kashag were alarmed and concerned that the Dalai Lama might be abducted, recalling a prophecy that told that the Dalai Lama should not exit his palace.[30][31]

Tibet is independent! Chinese leave Tibet!

Slogans used by protestors during the early uprising[7]

According to historian Tsering Shakya, some Tibetan government officials feared that plans were being laid for a Chinese abduction of the Dalai Lama, and spread word to that effect amongst the inhabitants of Lhasa.[32] On 10 March, several thousand[33][34][35] Tibetans surrounded the Dalai Lama's palace to prevent him from leaving or being removed. The huge crowd had gathered in response to a rumor that the Chinese were planning to arrest the Dalai Lama when he went to a cultural performance at the PLA's headquarters.[36] This marked the beginning of the uprising in Lhasa, though Chinese forces had skirmished with guerrillas outside the city in December of the previous year.[19] Although CCP officials insisted that the "reactionary upper stratum" in Lhasa was responsible for the rumor, there is no way to identify the precise source.[37] At first, the violence was directed at Tibetan officials perceived not to have protected the Dalai Lama or to be pro-Chinese; attacks on Chinese started later.[30] One of the first casualties of mob was a senior lama, Pagbalha Soinam Gyamco, who worked with the PRC as a member of the Preparatory Committee of the Tibetan Autonomous Region, who was killed and his body dragged by a horse in front of the crowd for 2 kilometres (1.2 mi).[7]

On 12 March, protesters appeared in the streets of Lhasa declaring Tibet's independence. Barricades went up on the streets of Lhasa, and Chinese and Tibetan rebel forces began to fortify positions within and around Lhasa in preparation for conflict. A petition of support for the armed rebels outside the city was taken up, and an appeal for assistance was made to the Indian consul. Chinese and Tibetan troops continued moving into position over the next several days, with Chinese artillery pieces being deployed within range of the Dalai Lama's summer palace, the Norbulingka.[citation needed]

17 March 1959: Thousands of Tibetan women surround the Potala Palace, the main residence of the Dalai Lama, to protest against Chinese rule and repression in Lhasa, Tibet. Hours later, fighting broke out and the Dalai Lama was forced to flee to safety in India. Photograph: AP

On March 12 thousands of women gathered in front of the Potala Palace in Lhasa on the ground called Dri-bu-Yul-Khai Thang.[12][38] The leader of this nonviolent demonstration was Pamo Kusang.[39] This demonstration, now known as Women's Uprising Day, started the Tibetan women's movement for independence.[12] On March 14 at the same location thousands of women assembled in a protest led by "Gurteng Kunsang, a member of the aristocratic Kundeling family and mother of six who was later arrested by the Chinese and executed by firing squad."[40]

On 15 March, preparations for the Dalai Lama's evacuation from the city were set in motion, with Tibetan troops being employed to secure an escape route from Lhasa. On 17 March, two artillery shells landed near the Dalai Lama's palace,[30][41][42] triggering his flight into exile. The Dalai Lama secretly left the palace the following night and slipped out of Lhasa with his family and a small number of officials. The Chinese had not strongly guarded the Potala, as they did not believe it likely that the Dalai Lama would try to flee.[43]

The last fighting of the uprising took place at the Jokhang, here pictured in 1938
The Jokhang, on whose roof the last Tibetan rebels had placed machine guns to defend themselves against the PLA[44]

Rumours about the Dalai Lama's disappearance began to spread rapidly on the next day, though most still believed that he was in the palace. Meanwhile, the situation in the city became increasingly tense, as protestors had seized a number of machine guns. On 20 March, the Chinese army responded by shelling the Norbulingka to disperse the crowd, and placed its troops at a barricade that divided the city into a northern and southern part in the following night. The battle began early on the following day,[44] and even though the Tibetan rebels were outnumbered and poorly armed,[19][21][45] the street fighting proved to be "bloody". The last Tibetan resistance was centered on the Jokhang, where Khampa refugees had set up machine guns, while a large number of Tibetans circumambulated the temple in reverence. The PLA started to attack the Jokhang on 23 March, and a hard-fought, three hours-long battle with many casualties on both sides ensued. The Chinese eventually managed to break through using a tank, whereupon they raised the flag of China on the temple, ending the uprising.[44]

Two British writers, Stuart and Roma Gelder, visited the Chensel Phodrang palace in the Norbulingka in 1962 and "found its contents meticulously preserved".[46]


Republic of China's [TAIWAN] Involvement and its Position on Tibetan Independence 

Pandatsang Rapga, a pro-Kuomintang and pro-Republic of China revolutionary Khampa leader, was instrumental in the revolt against the Communists.[citation needed] The Kuomintang had a history of using Khampa fighters to oppose both the Dalai Lama's Tibetan government, and battle the Communist Red Army.[citation needed]

Rapga continued to cooperate with the ROC Kuomintang government after it fled to Taiwan; they provided training to Khampa rebels against the Communist PLA forces.[47][48]

The Republic of China on Taiwan disputed with America whether Tibet would be independent, since the ROC claimed Tibet as part of its territory. Rapga agreed to a plan in which the revolt against the Communists would include anti feudalism, land reform, a modern government, and to give power to the people.[49]

The Republic of China continued to claim Tibet as an integral part of its territory in accordance with its constitution, contrary to the claims of the Dalai Lama's Central Tibetan Administration which claimed Tibetan independence.

After the 1959 Tibetan Rebellion, Chiang Kai-shek announced in his Letter to Tibetan Friends (Chinese: 告西藏同胞書; pinyin: Gào Xīzàng Tóngbāo Shū) that the ROC's policy would be to help the Tibetan diaspora overthrow the People's Republic of China's rule in Tibet. The Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission sent secret agents to India to disseminate pro-Kuomintang (KMT) and anti-Communist propaganda among Tibetan exiles. From 1971 to 1978, the MTAC also recruited ethnic Tibetan children from India and Nepal to study in Taiwan, with the expectation that they would work for a ROC government that returned to the mainland. In 1994, the veterans' association for the Tibetan guerrilla group Chushi Gangdruk met with the MTAC and agreed to the KMT's One China Principle. In response, the Dalai Lama's Central Tibetan Administration forbade all exiled Tibetans from contact with the MTAC. Tibetans in Taiwan, who are mostly of Kham origin, support the Republic of China's position that Tibet is part of the ROC, and are against both the Tibetan exile community in India who live under the Tibetan Government in Exile (TGE) and the Communists in mainland China. The Taiwanese Tibetans are considered traitors by the TGE for their position.[50]


 Casualties

Colin Mackerras states, "There was a major rebellion against Chinese rule in Tibet in March 1959, which was put down with the cost of much bloodshed and lasting bitterness on the part of the Tibetans."[51] The Tibetan government-in-exile reports variously, 85,000, 86,000, and 87,000 deaths for Tibetans during the rebellion, attributed to "secret Chinese documents captured by guerrillas".[19][21] Tibetologist Tom Grunfeld said "the veracity of such a claim is difficult to verify."[52] Warren W. Smith, a writer with Radio Free Asia, writes that the "secret documents" came from a 1960 PLA report captured by guerrillas in 1966, with the figures first published by the TGIE in India in 1990. Smith states that the documents said that 87,000 "enemies were eliminated", but he does not take "eliminated" to mean "killed", as the TGIE does.[53] A Tibetan Government in Exile (TGIE) official surnamed Samdup released a report for Asia Watch after three fact-finding missions from 1979 to 1981, stating that a speech by premier Zhou Enlai, published in Beijing Review in 1980, confirmed the 87,000 figure.[citation needed] Demographer Yan Hao could find no reference to any such figure in the published speech, and concluded, "If these TGIE sources are not reluctant to fabricate Chinese sources in open publications, how can they expect people to believe in their citations of so-called Chinese secret internal documents and speeches that are never available in originals to independent researchers?"[53]  


 Aftermath

Lhasa's three major monasteries—Sera, Ganden, and Drepung—were seriously damaged by shelling, with Sera and Drepung being damaged nearly beyond repair. According to the TGIE, Members of the Dalai Lama's bodyguard remaining in Lhasa were disarmed and publicly executed, along with Tibetans found to be harbouring weapons in their homes. Thousands of Tibetan monks were executed or arrested, and monasteries and temples around the city were looted or destroyed.[19]

After the March 12 Women's Uprising demonstration, many of the women involved were imprisoned, including the leader of the demonstration, Pamo Kusang. "Some of them were tortured, died in prison, or were executed."[39] Known as Women's Uprising Day, this demonstration started the Tibetan women's movement for independence.[12]

The CIA officer, Bruce Walker, who oversaw the operations of CIA-trained Tibetan agents, was troubled by the hostility from the Tibetans towards his agents: "the radio teams were experiencing major resistance from the population inside Tibet."[54] The CIA trained Tibetans from 1957 to 1972, in the United States, and parachuted them back into Tibet to organise rebellions against the PLA. In one incident, one agent was immediately reported by his own brother and all three agents in the team were arrested. They were not mistreated. After less than a month of propaganda sessions, they were escorted to the Indian border and released.[55]

In April 1959, the 19-year-old Choekyi Gyaltsen, 10th Panchen Lama, the second ranking spiritual leader in Tibet, residing in Shigatse, called on Tibetans to support the Chinese government.[56] However, after a tour through Tibet, he wrote a document in May 1962 known as the 70,000 Character Petition addressed to Zhou Enlai criticizing Chinese abuses in Tibet, and met with Zhou to discuss it. The outlined petition dealt with the brutal suppression of the Tibetan people both during and after the PRC's invasion of Tibet[57] and the sufferings of the people in The Great Leap Forward. In this document, he criticized the suppression that the Chinese authorities had conducted in retaliation for the 1959 Tibetan uprising.[58] But in October 1962, the PRC authorities dealing with the population criticized the petition. Chairman Mao called the petition "... a poisoned arrow shot at the Party by reactionary feudal overlords." In 1967 the Panchen Lama was formally arrested and imprisoned until his release in 1977.[59]

Buddhist monk Palden Gyatso was arrested in June, 1959 by Chinese officials for demonstrating during the March uprising.[60] He spent the following 33 years in Chinese prisons and laogai[61] or "reform through labor" camps, the longest term of any Tibetan political prisoner.[62][63] "He was forced to participate in barbarous re-education classes and He was tortured by various methods, which included being beaten with a club ridden with nails, shocked by an electric probe, which scarred his tongue and caused his teeth to fall out, whipped while being forced to pull an iron plow, and starved."[64] leading to irreversible physical damage.[65][66][67] Released in 1992, he escaped to Dharamsala in India, home of the Tibetan government in exile and became an internationally acclaimed activist for the Tibetan independence cause.[citation needed]

Chinese authorities have interpreted the uprising as a revolt of the Tibetan elite against Communist reforms that were improving the lot of Tibetan serfs. Tibetan and third party sources, on the other hand, have usually interpreted it as a popular uprising against the alien Chinese presence. Historian Tsering Shakya has argued that it was a popular revolt against both the Chinese and the Lhasa government, which was perceived as failing to protect the authority and safety of the Dalai Lama from the Chinese.[68]

 Demographic Map of Communist Tibet

Google URL to OPEN

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/7e/%22TIBETO-BURMAN%22_GROUPS_1967_map_with_group_key%2C_%22COMMUNIST_CHINA_ETHNOLINGUISTIC_GROUPS%22_by_the_U.S._Central_Intelligence_Agency%2C_Directorate_of_Intelligence%2C_Office_of_Basic_Geographic_Intelligence%2C_1967_%28cropped%29.jpg


See Also

  • Xunhua Incident
  • 1987–1989 Tibetan unrest
  • 2008 Tibetan unrest
  • Events leading to the Sino-Indian War
  • Ganden Phodrang
  • History of Tibet (1950–present)
  • Incorporation of Tibet into the People's Republic of China
  • List of wars involving the People's Republic of China
  • Sinicization of Tibet
  • Tibetan resistance since 1950
  • National liberation
  • Decolonization of Asia
  • First Indochina War
  • Decolonization of Africa
  • Tibetan sovereignty debate

 References:

Citations

  1. ^ Van Schaik 2013, pp. 234–236.
  2. ^ "Status Report on Tibetan Operations". Office of the Historian. January 26, 1968.
  3. ^ Salopek, Paul (January 26, 1997). "THE CIA'S SECRET WAR IN TIBET". Chicago Tribune. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 11 December 2018.
  4. ^ Conboy, Kenneth J.; Morrison, James; Morrison, James (2002). The CIA's Secret War in Tibet. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas. Retrieved 11 December 2018.
  5. ^ Jump up to:a b "China/Tibet (1950–Present)". University of Central Arkansas .
  6. ^ Van Schaik 2013, pp. 233, 236.
  7. ^ Jump up to:a b c Van Schaik 2013, p. 234.
  8. ^ Van Schaik 2013, pp. 232, 235.
  9. ^ Chen Jian, The Tibetan Rebellion of 1959 and China's Changing Relations with India and the Soviet Union, Journal of Cold War Studies, Volume 8 Issue 3 Summer 2006, Cold War Studies at Harvard University.
  10. ^ Li, Jianglin (2016-10-10). Tibet in Agony. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-97370-1.
  11. ^ Luo, Siling (2016-06-22). "西藏的秘密战争,究竟发生了什么?(下)". The New York Times (in Chinese). Retrieved 2020-07-15.
  12. ^ Jump up to:a b c d Gyatso, His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama, Tenzin (18 November 2011). "The Genesis Of The Tibetan Women's Struggle For Independence". tibetanwomen.org. Tibetan Women’s Association. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  13. ^ Norbu, Jamyang (20 March 2009). "Warren Smith on "Serf Emancipation Day"". Shadow Tibet. Retrieved 3 August 2010.
  14. ^ Grunfeld 1996, p. 9.
  15. ^ Norbu, Dorwa (September 1978). "When the Chinese Came to Tibet | Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs". www.carnegiecouncil.org. Retrieved 2018-02-08.
  16. ^ Knaus 1999, p. 71.
  17. ^ Knaus 1999, p. 134.
  18. ^ Knaus 1999, p. 86.
  19. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f Official Website of the Tibetan Government in Exile. History Leading up to March 10th 1959. 7 September 1998. Retrieved March 16, 2008.
  20. ^ Jump up to:a b "Chushi Gangdruk". Archived from the original on 2009-05-04. Retrieved 2009-03-28.
  21. ^ Jump up to:a b c "Inside Story of CIA's Black Hands in Tibet. The American Spectator, December 1997". Retrieved 2009-02-28.
  22. ^ page 69
  23. ^ Jump up to:a b http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~hpcws/jcws.2006.8.3.pdf page 69
  24. ^ Smith 1997, p. 443.
  25. ^ Smith 1997, p. 444.
  26. ^ Jump up to:a b c d Van Schaik 2013, p. 232.
  27. ^ Ngapoi Ngawang Jigme (1988). 1959年西藏叛乱真相 [The True Facts of the 10 March 1959 Event] (in Chinese). Retrieved 2018-11-27. 达赖喇嘛在他的卧室会见他们时主动提出:"听说西藏军区文工团在内地学习回来后演出的新节目很好,我想看一次,请你们给安排一下。"谭政委和邓副司令员当即欣然应允,并告诉达赖喇嘛,这事很好办,只要达赖喇嘛确定时间,军区可以随时派出文工团去罗布林卡为他演出专场。达赖喇嘛说,去罗布林卡不方便,那里没有舞台和设备,就在军区礼堂演出,他去看。[non-primary source needed] [While meeting with them (Tan Guansan and Deng Shaodong) in his room, the Dalai Lama initiated a request: "I have heard that after the Tibet Military District Cultural Workgroup completed their studies in China proper, their performance of their new program turned out very well, I would like to attend one such performance; please arrange for this."]
  28. ^ Jump up to:a b c Lama, Dalai (1990). Freedom in exile: the autobiography of the Dalai Lama (1st ed.). New York, NY: HarperCollins. ISBN 0060391162. OCLC 21949769.
  29. ^ Dalai Lama's (1990) Freedom in Exile states that "General Chiang Chin-wu... announced... a new dance troupe... Might I be interested to see them? I replied that I would be. He then said that they could perform anywhere, but since there was a proper stage with footlights at the Chinese military headquarters, it might be better if I could go there. This made sense as there were no such facilities at the Norbulingka, so I indicated that I would be happy to do so" (p. 130)
  30. ^ Jump up to:a b c d Shakya 1999, p. 186-191.
  31. ^ Jump up to:a b c Van Schaik 2013, p. 233.
  32. ^ Shakya 1999, p. 188-189.
  33. ^ Avedon 1997, p. 50 says 30,000
  34. ^ 1959 Tibetan Uprising | Free Tibet goes as high as 300,000
  35. ^ Tell you a True Tibet – How Does the 1959 Armed Rebellion Occur?, People's Daily Online, April 17, 2008 (Excerpts from Tibet – Its Ownership And Human Rights Situation, published by the Information Office of the State Council of The People's Republic of China) : "The next morning, the rebels coerced more than 2,000 people to mass at Norbu Lingka, spreading the rumor that 'the Military Area Command is planning to poison the Dalai Lama' and shouting slogans such as 'Tibetan Independence' and 'Away with the Hans'."
  36. ^ page 71
  37. ^ page 72
  38. ^ "The Tibetan uprising: 50 years of protest". The Guardian. March 10, 2009. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  39. ^ Jump up to:a b Vandenbrink, Rachel (March 5, 2012). "Women Energize Tibetan Struggle". Radio Free Asia. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  40. ^ Li, Jianglin (October 10, 2016). Tibet in Agony: Lhasa 1959. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 157. ISBN 9780674088894. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  41. ^ Smith 1997, p. 446.
  42. ^ Richardson 1984, pp. 209–10.
  43. ^ Van Schaik 2013, pp. 235, 236.
  44. ^ Jump up to:a b c Van Schaik 2013, p. 236.
  45. ^ Chushi Gangdruk Archived 2008-03-25 at the Wayback Machine
  46. ^ Stuart and Roma Gelder, Timely Rain: Travels in New Tibet, in Monthly Review Press, New York, 1964, facing p. 160 : "He [the dalai-lama] was told this building with other palaces in the Jewel Park was reduced to ruin by Chinese gunfire soon after he left. We found its contents meticulously preserved."
  47. ^ Garver 1997, p. 172.
  48. ^ Garver 1997, p. 170.
  49. ^ Garver 1997, p. 171.
  50. ^ Okawa, Kensaku (2007). "Lessons from Tibetans in Taiwan: Their history, current situation, and relationship with Taiwanese nationalism" (PDF). The Memoirs of the Institute of Oriental Culture. University of Tokyo. 152: 588–589, 596, 599, 602–603, 607. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-24.
  51. ^ Mackerras, Colin (1988). "Drama in the Tibetan Autonomous Region". Asian Theatre Journal. 5 (2): 198–219. JSTOR 25161492.
  52. ^ Grunfeld 1996, p. 247.
  53. ^ Jump up to:a b Hao, Yan (March 2000). "Tibetan Population in China: Myths and Facts Re-examined" (PDF). Asian Ethnicity. 1 (1): 20. doi:10.1080/146313600115054. S2CID 18471490.
  54. ^ Conboy & Morrison 2002, p. 220.
  55. ^ Conboy & Morrison 2002, p. 213.
  56. ^ Feigon 1996, pg. 163
  57. ^ The 10th Panchen Lama Archived 2008-11-23 at the Wayback Machine
  58. ^ Hostage of Beijing: The Abduction of the Panchen Lama, Gilles Van Grasdorff, 1999, ISBN 978-1-86204-561-3 fr:Pétition en 70 000 caractères
  59. ^ International Campaign for Tibet, "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-11-23. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
  60. ^ Spencer, Metta (Mar–Apr 1998). "The heart of Tibetan resistance". Peace Magazine. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
  61. ^ "PROVIDING FOR CERTAIN MEASURES TO INCREASE MONITORING OF PRODUCTS OF PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA MADE WITH FORCED LABOR". gpo.gov. Congressional Record Volume 143, Number 153, November 5, 1997. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
  62. ^ Rosenthal, A. M. On My Mind; You Are Palden Gyatso, The New York Times, April 11, 1995
  63. ^ Huckenpahter, Victoria (October 1, 1996). "A Bodhisattva's Ordeal/". Snow Lion. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
  64. ^ Pittman, Congressman Michael. "TRIBUTE TO PALDEN GYATSO". congress.gov. 109th Congress, 2nd Session Issue: Vol. 152, No. 84, June 26, 2006. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
  65. ^ Waller, Douglas (June 24, 2001). "Weapons Of Torture". Time. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
  66. ^ "Torture and Impunity: 29 Cases of Tibetan Political Prisoners". savetibet.org. International Campaign for Tibet. 27 February 2015. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
  67. ^ Moffett, Shannon (May 2, 2000). "Monk Reflects on Time in Prison" (50). The Stanford Daily. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
  68. ^ "A Review of The Dragon in the Land of Snows: A History of Modern Tibet Since 1947". Archived from the original on 2009-09-03. Retrieved 2009-02-24.

Sources

  • Avedon, John (1997). In Exile from the Land of Snows: The Definitive Account of the Dalai Lama and Tibet Since the Chinese Conquest. Harper Perennial. ISBN 978-0-06-097741-2.
  • Conboy, Kenneth; Morrison, James (2002). The CIA's Secret War in Tibet. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-1159-1.
  • Feigon, Lee (1996). Demystifying Tibet: Unlocking the Secrets of the Land of the Snows. Ivan R Dee. ISBN 978-1-56663-089-4.
  • Garver, John W. (1997). The Sino-American Alliance: Nationalist China and American Cold War Strategy in Asia (Illustrated, reprint ed.). M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 978-0-7656-0053-0. OCLC 36301518.
  • Grunfeld, A. Tom (1996). The Making of Modern Tibet. East Gate Book. ISBN 978-1-56324-713-2.
  • Knaus, Robert Kenneth (1999). Orphans of the Cold War: America and the Tibetan Struggle for Survival. PublicAffairs. ISBN 978-1-891620-18-8.
  • Laird, Thomas (2006). The Story of Tibet: Conversations with the Dalai Lama. Grove Press. ISBN 978-0-8021-1827-1.
  • Li, Janglin (2016). Tibet in agony, Lhasa 1959. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-08889-4.
  • 14th Dalai Lama (1990). Freedom in exile: the autobiography of the Dalai Lama (1st ed.). New York, NY: HarperCollins. ISBN 0060391162. OCLC 21949769.
  • Richardson, Hugh E (1984). Tibet and its History (Second, Revised and Updated ed.). Shambhala. ISBN 978-0-87773-376-8.
  • Shakya, Tsering (1999). The Dragon In The Land Of Snows. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-11814-9.
  • Smith, Warren W. Jr (1997). Tibetan Nation: A History Of Tibetan Nationalism And Sino-tibetan Relations. Westview press. ISBN 978-0-8133-3280-2.
  • Van Schaik, Sam (2013). Tibet: A History. London; New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300194104.
  • Watry, David M (2014). Diplomacy at the Brink: Eisenhower, Churchill, and Eden in the Cold War Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.

External Links

Library resources about
1959 Tibetan uprising

  • Resources in your library
  • Resources in other libraries

  • MARCH WINDS, March 7, 2009 – Jamyang Norbu
  • Tibetan Government in Exile's account of the events leading to the March 10, 1959, uprising
  • Kopel, Dave. "The Dalai Lama's Army". National Review, April 5, 2007.
  • Patterson, George N. The Situation in Tibet The China Quarterly, No. 6. (Apr.-Jun., 1961), pp 81–86.
  • Ginsburg, George and Mathos, Michael. Communist China's Impact on Tibet: The First Decade. Far Eastern Survey, Vol. 29, No. 7. (July,1960), pp. 102–109.
  • The Tibetan Uprising of 1959
  • The Tibetan Rebellion of 1959 and China's Changing Relations with India and the Soviet Union
hide
  • v
  • t
  • e
Armed conflicts involving the People's Republic of China
Mainland China
  • Chinese Civil War (1927–50)
  • Kuomintang insurgency (1949–1961)
  • Kuomintang Islamic insurgency (1950–58)
  • Battle of Chamdo (1950)
  • Tibetan uprising (1959)
  • Xinjiang conflict (1980–present)
  • Tiananmen Square protests (1989)
Cross-Taiwan Strait
(vs Taiwan)
(after 1 Oct 1949)
  • Kuningtou (1949)
  • Dengbu Island (1949)
  • Hainan Island (1950)
  • Nanri Island (1952)
  • Dongshan Island (1953)
  • Yijiangshan Islands (1955)
  • Dachen Archipelago (1955)
  • Second Taiwan Strait Crisis (1958)
  • Burmese border (1960–61)
  • Dong-Yin (1965)
  • Third Taiwan Strait Crisis (1995–96)
International
vs USSR
  • Sino-Soviet border conflict (1969)
vs United States and allies
  • Korean War (1950–53)
  • Vietnam War (1965–70)
vs India
  • Sino-Indian War (1962)
  • Chola incident (1967)
  • Sino-Indian skirmish (1987)
  • Daulat Beg Oldi incident (2013)
  • Sino-Indian Standoff (2017)
  • Sino-Indian skirmishes (2020)
vs South Vietnam/Vietnam
  • Paracel Islands (1974)
  • Sino-Vietnamese War (1979)
  • Sino-Vietnamese conflicts (1979-1991)
  • Johnson South Reef Skirmish (1988)
See also
  • Annexation of Tibet by the People's Republic of China
  • Incorporation of Xinjiang into the People's Republic of China
hide
  • v
  • t
  • e
Tibet articles
History
Overviews
  • Timeline
  • List of rulers
  • European exploration
  • Historical money
Chronology
  • Prehistory (Neolithic)
  • Zhangzhung
  • Yarlung dynasty
  • Empire (7th–9th century) 
    • Timeline
    • List of emperors
    • Lönchen
    • Relations with Tang (618–907)
  • Era of Fragmentation (9th–11th century) 
    • Guge kingdom
    • Tsongkha
  • Yuan dynasty rule (1270–1350) 
    • Bureau of Buddhist and Tibetan Affairs
  • Phagmodrupa dynasty 
    • Relations with Ming (1368–1644)
  • Rinpungpa dynasty
  • Tsangpa dynasty
  • Ganden Phodrang 
    • Kashag
  • Qing dynasty rule (1720–1912) 
    • Lifan Yuan
    • List of imperial residents
  • Post-Qing to 1950 
    • Tibetan Army
  • People's Republic of China (PRC) rule 
    • PRC annexation
    • political leaders
Wars and
conflicts
  • Tibetan attack on Songzhou
  • Battle of Dafei River
  • Mongol invasions of Tibet
  • Tibet–Ladakh–Mughal War
  • Battle of Dartsedo
  • Battle of the Salween River
  • Chinese expedition to Tibet (1720)
  • Jinchuan campaigns
  • Lhasa riot of 1750
  • Sino-Nepalese War
  • Dogra–Tibetan War
  • Third Nepal-Tibet War
  • Sikkim expedition
  • British expedition to Tibet
  • 1905 Tibetan Rebellion
  • Chinese expedition to Tibet (1910)
  • Xinhai Lhasa turmoil
  • Sino-Tibetan War 
    • Qinghai–Tibet War
  • 1938–39 German expedition to Tibet
  • 1939 Japanese expedition to Tibet
  • Battle of Chamdo
  • Protests and uprisings since 1950 
    • 1959 Tibetan uprising
    • 1987–1989 Tibetan unrest
    • 2008 Tibetan unrest
    • Self-immolation protests by Tibetans in China
  • Special Frontier Force
Documents
  • Treaty of Tingmosgang (1684)
  • Treaty of Chushul (1842)
  • Treaty of Thapathali (1856)
  • Treaty of Lhasa (1904)
  • Convention Between Great Britain and China Respecting Tibet (1906)
  • Treaty of friendship and alliance with Mongolia (1913)
  • Simla Accord (1914)
  • Seventeen Point Agreement (1951)
  • Sino-Indian Trade Agreement over Tibetan Border (1954)
  • 70,000 Character Petition (1962)
Geography
  • Flora
  • Fauna
  • Environment
  • Mountains 
    • Kailash
    • Lhotse / Changtse
    • Namcha Barwa
    • Tanggula
  • Rivers 
    • Yarlung Tsangpo 
      • Grand Canyon
  • Rongbuk Glacier
  • Tibetan Plateau 
    • Changtang 
      • Nature Reserve
  • Valleys
Traditional regions
  • Amdo
  • Kham
  • Ü-Tsang 
    • Ngari
Politics
  • Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR)
  • Central Tibetan Administration 
    • Parliament
  • Definitions of Tibet
  • Foreign relations
  • Human rights 
    • LGBT
  • Patron and priest relationship
  • Golden Urn
  • Tibet Area
  • Independence movement
  • Serfdom controversy
  • Sovereignty debate
  • CIA Tibetan program
  • Tibet-India relations
Government
  • Regional Government
Economy
  • Postage and postal history
  • Qinghai-Tibet Highway
  • Qinghai–Tibet railway
Society
  • Education
  • Languages
  • Religion 
    • Bon
    • Tibetan Buddhism 
      • Sakya 
        • Imperial Preceptor
        • Dpon-chen
      • Nyingma
      • Kagyu
      • Jonang
      • Gelug 
        • Ganden Tripa
        • Dalai Lama 
          • list
        • Lhamo La-tso
        • Panchen Lama 
          • list
    • Islam
  • Sinicization
  • Social classes
  • Tibetan people 
    • Changpa
    • Yolmo
    • Diaspora
    • Names
Culture
  • Art
  • Calendar
  • Cuisine
  • Dzong architecture
  • Emblem
  • Festivals
  • Flag
  • Historical and cultural sites
  • Khata (ceremonial scarf)
  • Literature 
    • Annals
    • Chronicle
    • writers
  • Music
  • Tibetology
  • Traditional medicine
  • Outline
  • Index
  • Category
hide
  • v
  • t
  • e
Cold War
  • USA
  • USSR
  • NATO
  • Warsaw Pact
  • ANZUS
  • SEATO
  • Baghdad Pact (METO)
  • Non-Aligned Movement
1940s
  • Morgenthau Plan
  • Hukbalahap Rebellion
  • Jamaican political conflict
  • Dekemvriana
  • Percentages agreement
  • Yalta Conference
  • Guerrilla war in the Baltic states 
    • Operation Priboi
    • Operation Jungle
    • Occupation of the Baltic states
  • Cursed soldiers
  • Operation Unthinkable
  • Operation Downfall
  • Potsdam Conference
  • Gouzenko Affair
  • Division of Korea
  • Operation Masterdom
  • Operation Beleaguer
  • Operation Blacklist Forty
  • Iran crisis of 1946
  • Greek Civil War
  • Baruch Plan
  • Corfu Channel incident
  • Turkish Straits crisis
  • Restatement of Policy on Germany
  • First Indochina War
  • Truman Doctrine
  • Asian Relations Conference
  • May 1947 crises
  • Marshall Plan
  • Comecon
  • 1948 Czechoslovak coup d'état
  • Al-Wathbah uprising
  • 1947–1949 Palestine war 
    • 1947–1948 Civil War in Mandatory Palestine
    • 1948 Arab–Israeli War
    • 1948 Palestinian exodus
  • Tito–Stalin split
  • Berlin Blockade
  • Western betrayal
  • Iron Curtain
  • Eastern Bloc
  • Western Bloc
  • Chinese Civil War
  • Malayan Emergency
  • March 1949 Syrian coup d'état
  • Albanian Subversion
1950s
  • Bamboo Curtain
  • Korean War
  • McCarthyism
  • Mau Mau Uprising
  • Algerian War
  • Egyptian revolution of 1952
  • 1953 Iranian coup d'état
  • East German uprising of 1953
  • Pact of Madrid
  • Bricker Amendment
  • 1954 Guatemalan coup d'état
  • Capture of Tanker Tuapse
  • 1954 Geneva Conference
  • Jebel Akhdar War
  • Vietnam War
  • First Taiwan Strait Crisis
  • Cyprus Emergency
  • Kashmir Princess
  • Geneva Summit (1955)
  • Bandung Conference
  • Poznań protests of 1956
  • Hungarian Revolution of 1956
  • Suez Crisis
  • "We will bury you"
  • Ifni War
  • Operation Gladio
  • Arab Cold War 
    • Syrian Crisis of 1957
    • 1958 Lebanon crisis
    • Iraqi 14 July Revolution
  • Sputnik crisis
  • Second Taiwan Strait Crisis
  • 1959 Tibetan uprising
  • 1959 Mosul uprising
  • Cuban Revolution 
    • Aftermath of the Cuban Revolution
  • Kitchen Debate
  • Sino-Soviet split
1960s
  • Congo Crisis
  • Simba rebellion
  • 1960 U-2 incident
  • Bay of Pigs Invasion
  • 1960 Turkish coup d'état
  • Soviet–Albanian split
  • Iraqi–Kurdish conflict 
    • First Iraqi–Kurdish War
  • Berlin Crisis of 1961
  • Berlin Wall
  • Papua conflict
  • Sand War
  • Portuguese Colonial War 
    • Angolan War of Independence
    • Guinea-Bissau War of Independence
    • Mozambican War of Independence
  • Cuban Missile Crisis
  • El Porteñazo
  • Sino-Indian War
  • Communist insurgency in Sarawak
  • Ramadan Revolution
  • Eritrean War of Independence
  • North Yemen Civil War
  • 1963 Syrian coup d'état
  • Assassination of John F. Kennedy
  • Aden Emergency
  • Cyprus crisis of 1963–64
  • Vietnam War
  • Shifta War
  • Mexican Dirty War 
    • Tlatelolco massacre
  • Guatemalan Civil War
  • Colombian conflict
  • 1964 Brazilian coup d'état
  • Dominican Civil War
  • Rhodesian Bush War
  • South African Border War
  • Transition to the New Order (Indonesia)
  • Domino theory
  • ASEAN Declaration
  • Laotian Civil War
  • 1966 Syrian coup d'état
  • Argentine Revolution
  • Korean DMZ Conflict
  • Greek military junta of 1967–1974
  • Years of Lead (Italy)
  • USS Pueblo incident
  • Six-Day War
  • War of Attrition
  • Dhofar Rebellion
  • Al-Wadiah War
  • Nigerian Civil War
  • Protests of 1968 
    • May 68
  • Cultural Revolution
  • Prague Spring
  • 1968 Polish political crisis
  • Communist insurgency in Malaysia
  • Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia
  • 17 July Revolution
  • 1969 Libyan coup d'état
  • Football War
  • Goulash Communism
  • Sino-Soviet border conflict
  • Communist rebellion in the Philippines
  • Corrective Move
1970s
  • Détente
  • Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
  • Black September
  • Alcora Exercise
  • Corrective Movement (Syria)
  • Western Sahara conflict
  • Cambodian Civil War
  • Vietnam War
  • Koza riot
  • Realpolitik
  • Ping-pong diplomacy
  • 1971 JVP insurrection
  • Corrective Revolution (Egypt)
  • 1971 Turkish military memorandum
  • 1971 Sudanese coup d'état
  • Four Power Agreement on Berlin
  • Bangladesh Liberation War
  • 1972 Nixon visit to China
  • North Yemen-South Yemen Border conflict of 1972
  • Yemenite War of 1972
  • Munich massacre
  • Communist insurgency in Bangladesh
  • Eritrean Civil Wars
  • 1973 Uruguayan coup d'état
  • 1973 Afghan coup d'état
  • 1973 Chilean coup d'état
  • Yom Kippur War
  • 1973 oil crisis
  • Carnation Revolution
  • Spanish transition to democracy
  • Metapolitefsi
  • Strategic Arms Limitation Talks
  • Second Iraqi–Kurdish War
  • Turkish invasion of Cyprus
  • Angolan Civil War
  • Mozambican Civil War
  • Oromo conflict
  • Ogaden War
  • 1978 Somali coup d'état attempt
  • Western Sahara War
  • Ethiopian Civil War
  • Lebanese Civil War
  • Sino-Albanian split
  • Cambodian–Vietnamese War
  • Operation Condor
  • Dirty War (Argentina)
  • 1976 Argentine coup d'état
  • Libyan–Egyptian War
  • German Autumn
  • Korean Air Lines Flight 902
  • Nicaraguan Revolution
  • Uganda–Tanzania War
  • NDF Rebellion
  • Chadian–Libyan conflict
  • Yemenite War of 1979
  • Grand Mosque seizure
  • Iranian Revolution
  • Saur Revolution
  • Sino-Vietnamese War
  • New Jewel Movement
  • 1979 Herat uprising
  • Seven Days to the River Rhine
  • Struggle against political abuse of psychiatry in the Soviet Union
1980s
  • Salvadoran Civil War
  • Soviet–Afghan War
  • 1980 and 1984 Summer Olympics boycotts
  • Gera Demands
  • Peruvian Revolution
  • Eritrean Civil Wars
  • 1980 Turkish coup d'état
  • Ugandan Bush War
  • Gulf of Sidra incident
  • Casamance conflict
  • Falklands War
  • 1982 Ethiopian–Somali Border War
  • Ndogboyosoi War
  • United States invasion of Grenada
  • Able Archer 83
  • Star Wars
  • 1985 Geneva Summit
  • Iran–Iraq War
  • Somali Rebellion
  • Reykjavík Summit
  • 1986 Black Sea incident
  • South Yemen Civil War
  • Toyota War
  • 1987 Lieyu massacre
  • 1987–1989 JVP insurrection
  • Lord's Resistance Army insurgency
  • 1988 Black Sea bumping incident
  • 8888 Uprising
  • Solidarity (Soviet reaction)
  • Contras
  • Central American crisis
  • RYAN
  • Korean Air Lines Flight 007
  • People Power Revolution
  • Glasnost
  • Perestroika
  • First Nagorno-Karabakh War
  • Afghan Civil War
  • United States invasion of Panama
  • 1988 Polish strikes
  • 1989 Tiananmen Square protests
  • Revolutions of 1989
  • Fall of the Berlin Wall
  • Fall of the inner German border
  • Velvet Revolution
  • Romanian Revolution
  • Peaceful Revolution
1990s
  • Mongolian Revolution of 1990
  • Min Ping Yu No. 5540 incident
  • Gulf War
  • Min Ping Yu No. 5202
  • German reunification
  • Yemeni unification
  • Fall of communism in Albania
  • Breakup of Yugoslavia
  • Dissolution of Czechoslovakia
  • Dissolution of the Soviet Union 
    • 1991 August Coup
Frozen conflicts
  • Abkhazia
  • China-Taiwan
  • Korea
  • Kosovo
  • Nagorno-Karabakh
  • South Ossetia
  • Transnistria
  • Sino-Indian border dispute
  • North Borneo dispute
Foreign policy
  • Truman Doctrine
  • Containment
  • Eisenhower Doctrine
  • Domino theory
  • Hallstein Doctrine
  • Kennedy Doctrine
  • Peaceful coexistence
  • Ostpolitik
  • Johnson Doctrine
  • Brezhnev Doctrine
  • Nixon Doctrine
  • Ulbricht Doctrine
  • Carter Doctrine
  • Reagan Doctrine
  • Rollback
  • Kinmen Agreement
Ideologies
Capitalism
  • Liberalism
  • Chicago school
  • Keynesianism
  • Libertarianism
  • Monetarism
  • Neoclassical economics
  • Reaganomics
  • Supply-side economics
  • Democratic capitalism
Socialism
  • Communism
  • Marxism–Leninism
  • Castroism
  • Eurocommunism
  • Guevarism
  • Hoxhaism
  • Juche
  • Ho Chi Minh Thought
  • Maoism
  • Trotskyism
  • Naxalism
  • Stalinism
  • Titoism
Other
  • Imperialism
  • Anti-imperialism
  • Nationalism
  • Ultranationalism
  • Chauvinism
  • Ethnic nationalism
  • Racism
  • Zionism
  • Fascism
  • Neo-Nazism
  • Islamism
  • Totalitarianism
  • Authoritarianism
  • Autocracy
  • Liberal democracy
  • Illiberal democracy
  • Guided democracy
  • Social democracy
  • Third-Worldism
  • White supremacy
  • White nationalism
  • White separatism
  • Apartheid
Organizations
  • NATO
  • SEATO
  • METO
  • EEC
  • Warsaw Pact
  • Comecon
  • Non-Aligned Movement
  • ASEAN
  • SAARC
  • Safari Club
Propaganda
Pro-communist
  • Active measures
  • Izvestia
  • Pravda
  • TASS
Pro-democratic
  • Amerika
  • Crusade for Freedom
  • Voice of America
  • Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
  • Radio Free Asia
  • Red Scare
  • Soviet Life
Technological
competition
  • Arms race
  • Nuclear arms race
  • Space Race
Historians
  • Gar Alperovitz
  • Thomas A. Bailey
  • Michael Beschloss
  • Archie Brown
  • Warren H. Carroll
  • Adrian Cioroianu
  • John Costello
  • Michael Cox
  • Nicholas J. Cull
  • Willem Drees
  • Robert D. English
  • Herbert Feis
  • Robert Hugh Ferrell
  • André Fontaine
  • Anneli Ute Gabanyi
  • John Lewis Gaddis
  • Lloyd Gardner
  • Timothy Garton Ash
  • Gabriel Gorodetsky
  • Fred Halliday
  • Jussi Hanhimäki
  • John Earl Haynes
  • Patrick J. Hearden
  • Tvrtko Jakovina
  • Tony Judt
  • Harvey Klehr
  • Gabriel Kolko
  • Walter LaFeber
  • Walter Laqueur
  • Melvyn Leffler
  • Geir Lundestad
  • Mary Elise Sarotte
  • Vojtech Mastny
  • Jack F. Matlock Jr.
  • Thomas J. McCormick
  • Timothy Naftali
  • Marius Oprea
  • David S. Painter
  • William B. Pickett
  • Ronald E. Powaski
  • Yakov M. Rabkin
  • Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.
  • Ellen Schrecker
  • Giles Scott-Smith
  • Shen Zhihua
  • Athan Theoharis
  • Andrew Thorpe
  • Vladimir Tismăneanu
  • Patrick Vaughan
  • Alex von Tunzelmann
  • Odd Arne Westad
  • William Appleman Williams
  • Jonathan Reed Winkler
  • Rudolph Winnacker
  • Ken Young
Espionage and
intelligence
  • List of Eastern Bloc agents in the United States
  • Soviet espionage in the United States
  • Russian espionage in the United States
  • American espionage in the Soviet Union and Russian Federation
  • CIA and the Cultural Cold War
  • CIA
  • SS (MI5)
  • SIS (MI6)
  • KGB
  • Stasi
See also
  • Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War
  • Soviet Union–United States relations
  • USSR–USA summits
  • Russia–NATO relations
  • War on terror
  • Brinkmanship
  • Second Cold War
  • Russian Revolution
  • Category
  • Commons
  • Timeline
  • List of conflicts
Authority control: National libraries Edit this at Wikidata
  • United States
Categories: 
  • 1959 Tibetan uprising
  • Conflicts in 1959
  • 1959 in Tibet
  • Military history of Tibet
  • Tibetan independence movement
  • Protests in China
  • Rebellions in China
  • Urban warfare
  • Proxy wars
  • March 1959 events
  • March observances
  • 1959 protests
  • History of Lhasa

Navigation menu


  • This page was last edited on 20 June 2021, at 17:03 (UTC).
Posted by Vasundhra at 8:05 AM No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: DALAI LAMA, REBELLIONS CHINA, TIBET, TIBET FREE
Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Comments (Atom)
Chat Software

Search This Blog

Followers

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2025 (1)
    • ▼  January (1)
      • INDIA’S QUEST FOR AN INDIGENOUS NAVAL FIGHTER
  • ►  2024 (10)
    • ►  October (1)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (8)
  • ►  2023 (161)
    • ►  December (63)
    • ►  November (15)
    • ►  October (22)
    • ►  August (1)
    • ►  April (3)
    • ►  March (2)
    • ►  February (25)
    • ►  January (30)
  • ►  2022 (356)
    • ►  December (49)
    • ►  November (42)
    • ►  October (36)
    • ►  September (31)
    • ►  August (25)
    • ►  July (17)
    • ►  June (42)
    • ►  May (46)
    • ►  April (53)
    • ►  March (14)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2021 (66)
    • ►  October (7)
    • ►  September (1)
    • ►  August (2)
    • ►  July (33)
    • ►  June (4)
    • ►  March (1)
    • ►  February (6)
    • ►  January (12)
  • ►  2020 (186)
    • ►  December (12)
    • ►  November (19)
    • ►  October (15)
    • ►  September (15)
    • ►  August (26)
    • ►  July (3)
    • ►  June (4)
    • ►  May (5)
    • ►  April (31)
    • ►  March (43)
    • ►  February (12)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2019 (64)
    • ►  November (7)
    • ►  October (8)
    • ►  September (21)
    • ►  August (8)
    • ►  June (2)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  April (3)
    • ►  February (3)
    • ►  January (11)
  • ►  2018 (71)
    • ►  December (11)
    • ►  November (8)
    • ►  September (1)
    • ►  August (5)
    • ►  July (7)
    • ►  June (2)
    • ►  May (3)
    • ►  April (2)
    • ►  March (6)
    • ►  February (9)
    • ►  January (17)
  • ►  2017 (249)
    • ►  December (22)
    • ►  November (30)
    • ►  October (13)
    • ►  September (10)
    • ►  August (10)
    • ►  July (21)
    • ►  June (17)
    • ►  May (21)
    • ►  April (31)
    • ►  March (31)
    • ►  February (18)
    • ►  January (25)
  • ►  2016 (349)
    • ►  December (44)
    • ►  November (31)
    • ►  October (18)
    • ►  September (41)
    • ►  August (27)
    • ►  July (17)
    • ►  June (18)
    • ►  May (25)
    • ►  April (24)
    • ►  March (37)
    • ►  February (34)
    • ►  January (33)
  • ►  2015 (758)
    • ►  December (56)
    • ►  November (66)
    • ►  October (77)
    • ►  September (117)
    • ►  August (100)
    • ►  July (77)
    • ►  June (68)
    • ►  May (42)
    • ►  April (86)
    • ►  March (61)
    • ►  February (2)
    • ►  January (6)
  • ►  2014 (22)
    • ►  December (3)
    • ►  November (5)
    • ►  October (6)
    • ►  September (5)
    • ►  August (2)
    • ►  May (1)
  • ►  2013 (14)
    • ►  December (4)
    • ►  November (1)
    • ►  September (1)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (6)
  • ►  2012 (14)
    • ►  December (8)
    • ►  September (6)
Simple theme. Theme images by gaffera. Powered by Blogger.