Not so long ago a reader dropped by this website and suggested that Beijing allowed Tibetans freedom of religion and culture. They cited the presence of many monasteries in Tibet as evidence of this, and voiced that if Beijing were as bad as everybody says it is then they surely it would have simply shut the monasteries.
ACB responded by voicing that things weren't quite as simple as all that because Beijing was actively interfering with the monasteries, and was attempting to modify monastic teachings so that they could be used to change Tibetan culture into a more Beijing centric form.
Now it would appear that this topic has hit the headlines in the West care of Britain's Times news groups and respected journalist and China watcher Jane Macartney.
Original version available
Here China tries to teach Tibet a lesson that the monks have refused to learn
From civil servants to yak herders, barley farmers and street traders, the residents of the Tibetan capital and surrounding countryside are being subjected to a two-month re-education campaign to combat anti-Chinese sentiment.
Under the latest drive to instil a sense of patriotism — titled “Oppose splittism, protect stability, encourage development” — those involved in the anti-Chinese Lhasa riots of March 14 will be asked to denounce their actions and condemn others who took part.
China says that 22 people died when Tibetans rampaged through Lhasa, stabbing and stoning ethnic Han Chinese and burning shops and offices.
For thousands of monks across the restive Himalayan region and in adjacent provinces, such campaigns have become part of life in the monasteries.
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Reminiscent in tone and rhetoric of the Cultural Revolution, patriotic lessons attack the “wrongs” of taking part in anti-Chinese protests or demonstrations in support of the Dalai Lama as China tries to persuade Tibetans to renounce their exiled spiritual leader.
Political education, an occasional if unwelcome interruption into monastic life, has become a daily ritual for monks such as Wangchuk — not his real name — who no longer have the freedom to watch the latest DVD, surf the internet or chat with friends on their mobile phones.
Wangchuk's monastery has been his home since he was a child. He gets up at dawn, offers holy water and lights a yak butter lamp to honour the Buddha protector of his temple and the Dalai Lama — in all his 14 reincarnations.
Under more peaceable circumstances Wangchuk's afternoon would have comprised an array of different activities, from saying prayers for the dead “to help their soul reach Heaven” to debates with his fellow monks or time spent with his teacher.
Now, the monasteries have been closed to the public and a very different study session forms part of his timetable: patriotic education:
“This is compulsory. There's no excuse for not attending — unless you're ill and then you have to have a note from doctor.”
The sessions used to be called for a week once every two or three months. They now take place almost daily. “We gather in the main hall and Communist Party officials deliver a speech telling us to be patriotic and they give each monk a paper to read.”
This session takes place in the morning; in the afternoon the monks are summoned to answer questions. “Usually it's pretty relaxed. If I can't remember my answers then I just repeat the same as the monk in front of me.
“Sometimes it turns more serious. That is when the police arrive. They stand beside each monk listening carefully to make sure each answer is correct. If the police come we have to lie. We have to say, ‘I love the Motherland. I don't love him'. They don't require you to explain who ‘him' is, because we all know.”
Beijing has blamed the recent violence on the Dalai Lama and his followers. “We learn from the patriotic education that many things are banned. For example, we can't have pictures of the Dalai Lama and we mustn't listen to what people outside China tell us.”
In the past few weeks groups of Tibetan monks have staged highly publicised protests, including hijacking official tours of the region put on for foreign journalists.
The latest re-education campaign, which will include films and television programmes, suggests that China fears the spread of the discontent.
When people talk about brainwashing by China, this is what immediately springs to my mind. Not the subtle (and often not so subtle) media manipulations and strategic exclusions found in the wider Chinese society, but the direct enforcement of "Political Education" on those whom Beijing fears.
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