City
Epaper

Culture, religion at stake in Tibet under Chinese regime, says Deputy Speaker of Tibetan Parliament-in-Exile

By ANI | Published: November 12, 2021 6:31 AM

Culture, religion, and the way of life which is based on Buddhism are at the stake in Tibet under the Chinese regime, said Deputy Speaker of Tibetan Parliament-in-Exile Dolma Tsering.

Open in App

Culture, religion, and the way of life which is based on Buddhism are at the stake in Tibet under the Chinese regime, said Deputy Speaker of Tibetan Parliament-in-Exile Dolma Tsering.

This comes after Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama on Wednesday slammed the Chinese leadership, saying they "don't understand the variety of different cultures."

"Chinese say that they have 56 minorities in altogether but they are not ready to give the traditional sanctity of those minorities. In Tibet, the culture itself is at stake, the religion is at stake, the way of life which is based on Buddhism is also stake," Dolma Tsering toldon Thursday.

She also said that the Chinese want everything to be melted into the communist style. "So be it Buddhism or anything they want everything to be changed into them."

Speaking over the so-called freedom in Tibet, the Deputy Speaker said: "If there is any freedom in Tibet, why don't the Chinese let world media go there and see for themselves.

"When they shy away from world media that shows that they are hiding something. Why do they have to give all the time white paper on Tibet? This shows that all is not well there," she said.

Tenzin Lekshay, spokesperson of Tibetan government-in-exile said that China oppressed many nationalists including Tibetian, Uyghurs, and Mongolians, over the 60-70 years under the party regime.

"Chinese leaders always believe that the hunt rules, and then all the other people (minorities) are the ones who should serve, therefore they look at Tibentian as well," he said.

Talking about the leadership for the Tibetans, he said: "If you see, all the official websites do not even have Tibetan language scripts. All are written in Chinese, so for whom they are working. Are they working for Tibetan?"

He added that the Chinese need to be more compassionate, they need to look into the aspirations of those people. "It is the issue of six million Tibetan, therefore the China-Tibet conflict needs to be resolved pending for over 50 60 years," he said.

The Dalai Lama, along with his followers, fled to India from Tibet in 1959 during an invasion by the Chinese forces. China calls the Buddhist monk a 'separatist', seeking to secede Tibet from China.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Dalai LamaDruba das
Open in App

Related Stories

National"We Tibetans became refugees in our own country, but in India we have freedom": Dalai Lama

InternationalChina forces monks to denounce ties to Dalai Lama: Report

InternationalSri Lankan University organises symposium on 88th birthday of Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama

InternationalFrench senator Jacqueline Eustache-Brinio praises Dalai Lama, expresses support for Tibetan culture

InternationalTibetans-in-exile celebrate 88th birthday of Dalai Lama, hope to go back to Tibet

International Realted Stories

InternationalProtests continue in Balochistan against new check posts

InternationalImran Khan's party expresses displeasure over Pakistan Chief Justice's conduct on meddling by intelligence agencies in judicial affairs

InternationalChina: Death Toll Rises to 36 After Motorway Collapse

International'Not connected' : US Police denies reports of Goldy Brar shot dead in California

InternationalNorth Korea dismantles South Korean building near shuttered Kaesong complex