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By TENZING SONAM
TIME Asia
August 2002
More than two years have passed since a 14-year-old monk from Tibet made his
dramatic escape over the Himalayas to India and caught the imagination of
the world. He was the 17th Gyalwa Karmapa, one of Tibet's most important
religious leaders. To me, a Tibetan born and brought up in exile in India,
news of his escape came like a reviving gust of fresh air that blew away the
cloud of confusion and inertia that seemed to have descended upon our
decades-old freedom struggle. With that one act of desperation and courage,
the Karmapa exposed the Chinese lie that Tibetans were happy and prospering
under their rule and that they were free to practice their religion.
Every year, more than a thousand Tibetans continue to risk their lives,
defying Chinese-imposed restrictions on travel by secretly making the
arduous and dangerous Himalayan crossing into Nepal and India. The Karmapa's
escape was different. He was communist China's most prized stooge in Tibet,
the highest reincarnate lama under Beijing's control to have the Dalai
Lama's official recognition, the head of one of the four sects of Tibetan
Buddhism-and by tradition, the third most important lama in its religious
hierarchy.
For some time, the Chinese had realized that the greatest threat to their
rule in Tibet came from the country's deep-rooted Buddhist culture. The
enduring faith of Tibetans in their exiled leader, the Dalai Lama, despite a
sustained and vitriolic official campaign to discredit him was a continuing
source of bafflement and irritation. So, avowedly atheist communist
functionaries suddenly found enthusiasm not only in supporting the
institution of reincarnate lamas but in actually approving their selection.
Their strategy was to control and indoctrinate the future religious leaders
of Tibet and to deploy them in their efforts to neutralize any opposition
and legitimize China's occupation of the country.
Ever since his state-authorized enthronement at the age of seven in 1992,
the Karmapa had been carefully groomed to assume the role of Chinese puppet.
But something went wrong with the plans. Despite the Chinese authorities'
best efforts at brainwashing him and despite his youth, the Karmapa grew up
with a strong sense of his own convictions; his spiritual training proved
stronger and more profound than the Chinese could have imagined. When the
contradictions between his beliefs and the public role he was expected to
perform-especially when it came to denouncing the Dalai Lama-became
irreconcilable, he decided to flee.
This was a repudiation of everything the Chinese claimed to have achieved in
Tibet, a slap on the face by someone they considered a handpicked
lieutenant. The Karmapa's escape was a loud wake-up call to those of us who
have spent a lifetime in exile. It reminded us forcefully that the cause we
are fighting for is alive and just and as desperate as ever.
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May the supreme jewel bodhicitta
that has not arisen, arise and grow.
And may that which has arisen not diminish,
but increase more and more.
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