Poems and News from Richard Gere for Tibet

Woes of a Wounded Wanderer (TibetNet)
TibetNet
Reviewed by Tenzin Dechen
Conflict of Duality
By Bhuchung D. Sonam
TibetWrites, Dharamshala,
80 pages, Rs.150

THIS COLLECTION OF POEMS BY BHUCHUNG D. Sonam is an outpouring of the heart. His verses read like pages from a diary, revealing the poet’s frustrations, his desires, and his hopes… His words are “a raw and unpolished burst of energy that springs from a deeply wounded soul”. The poems reflect a sense of loneliness, the sorrow of being in exile and a longing for home.
Four Seasons Wailing describes the agony of waiting, waiting as time passes by our door, leaving us behind. “I writhe and retch through a thousand scorched nights”, he writes in Freedom Eludes. But he must hang on to his faith, and he takes refuge in the Buddha, finding peace in prayer.
Then sometimes he indulges in despair, drowning in grief and talking of death when a lifetime of struggles and dreams must end unfulfilled. Despair is followed by bitterness and the feeling of futility of the quest for freedom. In Perforation and Last Resort, we see the warrior tired of war, numbed by the constant pain—
I forgot my tears somewhere
Along life’s tortuous path”.
However, it cannot break his spirit. In 1000th Day in Drapchi Solitary Confinement the poet describes the fate of a political prisoner in Tibet, beaten yet defiant with a biting sarcasm. In Duel, we see the resilience of a phoenix as he writes with renewed vigour-
With truth running through me I will fight
With every ounce of my strength I will fight
With my last dying breath I will fight.
However, it is the occasional poignant verse like Wish of a Dead Tibetan that tugs at the heartstrings, bringing tears to the eyes. Here we see a glimmer of hope in a dead man who wishes that he might be born again as a little fish in a brook in Tibet. The most memorable poems are A Room without a Door, which brings out the quiet angst of the poet and I Saw a Chinese Man, in which he marvels that a Chinese man looks just like him, so unlike the beastly enemy he had imagined.
The poet runs the entire gamut of emotions in his verses. His words are the window to his room without a door. And what we find inside echoes the feelings of an entire generation of exiled Tibetan youth. In the title poem, he shows us the paradoxes of life, alluding to his own personal conflicts as he longs for the peace that can only be found in his own land, in the land full of icy white peaks.
Other books of poems by Bhuchung D.Sonam are Dandelion of Tibet and Muses In Exile: An Anthology of Tibetan Poetry. His forthcoming book: Crazy Diligence: Life and Works of Thangton Gyalpo.
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China-Tibet: Railroad to perdition (IHT)
By Richard Gere
Internatonal Herald Tribune
July 17, 2006

The opening this month of the final segment of world’s highest railway, from Beijing to Lhasa, Tibet, is a staggering engineering achievement and a testimony to the developing greatness of China. But it is also the most serious threat by the Chinese yet to the survival of Tibet’s unique religious, cultural and linguistic identity. In the words of a well-known Tibetan religious teacher who died after many years in a Chinese prison, the railway heralds “a time of emergency and darkness” for Tibet.

This railway across the roof of the world will result in an expanded Chinese military presence in Tibet, accelerate the already devastating exploitation of its natural resources and increase the number of Chinese migrants, marginalizing the Tibetan people still further. In the capital, Lhasa, Tibetans are already a minority.

In the years after China’s invasion of Tibet in 1950, thousands of Tibetan Buddhist monasteries and convents were destroyed, and hundreds of thousands of Tibetans perished. Today the suppression of religion is more subtle and less visible to outsiders. Many of the monasteries have been partly rebuilt, but often they are simply showplaces for tourists. Obtaining a complete religious education in Tibet is usually impossible. Even having a photograph of the Dalai Lama is a criminal offense.

Many Tibetans lost their land to make way for the railway, and Tibetan nomads are being forced to settle in cities. Without land and religion, cultures disappear. This is particularly true in Tibet, where the land itself is regarded as sacred.

And even as their culture is undermined by the railway, most Tibetans are unlikely to enjoy any economic benefits from it. With a price tag of more than $4 billion, the Tibet railway is the most ambitious and costly element of China’s current drive to develop its western regions, known as the Great Leap West. But its construction was based upon the Communist Party’s old strategic and political objectives, and its main beneficiaries will be the Chinese military units stationed there, Chinese companies and Chinese settlers. Most Tibetans don’t have access to education that would allow them to compete in the economic environment created by China’s policies, nor are they welcome to share the fruits of its success.

The opening of the railway to Tibet could not have a greater symbolic importance to the Communist elite – it is the achievement of a goal set by Mao more than 40 years ago as part of a strategy to complete Tibet’s integration into China. And sadly, the opening of the railway takes place in an environment of intensified political repression. The new Communist Party chief in Tibet, Zhang Qingli, has said that the party is engaged in a “fight to the death struggle” against the Dalai Lama and his supporters.

China’s president, Hu Jintao, formally opened the railway on July 1. In the late 1980s, when he was party chief of the region, he presided over the torture and imprisonment of thousands of Tibetans through the imposition of martial law in Lhasa. The Tibetans have not forgotten Hu’s role in the oppression of their people. Hu was also personally involved in drafting the fast-track development policies that have been such a disaster for most Tibetans. They are based upon an urban Chinese model and do not take into account Tibetans’ needs, views or the way of life that has sustained them on the high plateau for centuries. The Dalai Lama has spoken frequently about the urgent need to involve Tibetans in the development of their land.

A true “great leap” would make room for a Tibetan role in economic development, protect Tibetan religious culture and identity, and welcome the involvement of the Dalai Lama in decision-making on Tibet’s future. Since 2002, there have been several rounds of dialogue between Beijing and the Dalai Lama’s representatives, following a decade-long diplomatic stalemate, but at present China’s commitment to the process is uncertain.

Tibet’s precious culture and religion, with its principles of wisdom and compassion and its message of interdependence and nonviolence, are rooted in the Tibetan landscape and Tibetan hearts.

The survival of Tibetan Buddhist knowledge in its own land is vital for the world, as well as the Tibetan people. China’s journey toward greatness must not include the further destruction of this heritage.

Richard Gere, an actor, is the chairman of the International Campaign for Tibet.

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