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TIBET: massive protests met with bullets and tear gas

Posted on Mar 14th, 2008 by Chaiwallah : Chaiwallah Chaiwallah

HH the Dalai Lama's statement today

Contacts:       
 
Chhime R. Chhoekyapa, Secretary            Mobile + 91 (09816021879)
Tenzin Taklha, Joint Secretary                   Mobile + 91 (09816021813)
 
 
 
 
PRESS RELEASE
 
 
I am deeply concerned over the situation that has been developing in Tibet following peaceful protests in many parts of Tibet, including Lhasa, in recent days.  These protests are a manifestation of the deep-rooted resentment of the Tibetan people under the present governance. 
 
As I have always said, unity and stability under brute force is at best a temporary solution.  It is unrealistic to expect unity and stability under such a rule and would therefore not be conducive to finding a peaceful and lasting solution. 
 
I therefore appeal to the Chinese leadership to stop using force and address the long-simmering resentment of the Tibetan people through dialogue with the Tibetan people.  I also urge my fellow Tibetans not to resort to violence.
 
 
THE DALAI LAMA
 
 
 
Dated: March 14, 2008
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TIBET PROTESTS: ICT PRESS RELEASE

Posted on Mar 14th, 2008 by Chaiwallah : Chaiwallah Chaiwallah
FROM THE INTERNATIONAL CAMPAIGN FOR TIBET; USA

Update from NY: 6 Tibetans have been arrested for staging a peaceful
sit-in outside the United Nations in solidarity with Tibetans inside
Tibet. We will post more details shortly.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 14, 2008

Contact: Tenzin Dorjee in New York, +646-724-0748
Lhadon Tethong in Dharamsala, India, +91-9805-237-015
Kate Woznow in New York +917-601-0069

PROTESTS RAGE ACROSS TIBET AS CHINA RESPONDS WITH BRUTE FORCE
Tibetans Clash with Chinese Troops in Lhasa; Unprecedented Unrest
Throughout Tibet

Dharamsala/New York– Chinese authorities have responded with brute force
today to ongoing protests in Lhasa and across Tibet. Sources inside
Tibet say that Chinese tanks rolled into Lhasa this morning and
thousands of armed troops have sealed off the three major monasteries
where the protests were initiated on Monday. Following a police
crackdown on a protest staged by monks from Ramoche Monastery in central
Lhasa, dozens of monks and lay people clashed with armed police in the
streets, overturning police vehicles and lighting them on fire. Police
fired live ammunition into the crowd of protesters and at least two
people and up to 33 are reported dead.

“At great risk, Tibetans across Tibet are rising up against China’s
occupation of our homeland to show the world that, five months out from
the Beijing Olympics, the situation in Tibet is critical and demands
international attention,” said Lhadon Tethong, Executive Director of
Students for a Free Tibet. “Years of China’s repressive policies,
repeated denunciations of the Dalai Lama, and the violent response to
peaceful demonstrations by monks earlier this week have aggravated the
tensions and desperation felt by Tibetans throughout Tibet."

In Labrang, eastern Tibet (present-day Gansu Province), 3,000 people
converged in the streets today while The Tibetan Center for Human Rights
and Democracy is reporting widespread unrest throughout the Kham
(present-day Sichuan province) and Amdo (Qinghai province) provinces of
Tibet. The U.S. Embassy in Beijing said it has “received firsthand
reports from American citizens in the city who report gunfire and other
indications of violence.” Foreign governments are calling on the Chinese
government to show restraint and have issued travel advisories for the
Tibetan Autonomous Region.

“China has swamped Tibet with Chinese settlers, poured money into
colonialist mega-projects like the railway that solidify its control,
and ruthlessly attacked Tibetan culture and religion," said Tenzin
Dorjee, Deputy Director of Students for a Free Tibet. “As the Olympics
approach and the world’s eyes turn to Beijing, this outpouring of
frustration is the natural consequence.”

The Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan leader, appealed to the Chinese
leadership to “stop using force and address the long-simmering
resentment of the Tibetan people.” In concert with Tibetan exiles around
the world, Tibetans inside Tibet launched the protests on Monday to mark
the 49th anniversary of the Tibetan National Uprising.

“The timing and scale of this unrest throughout Tibet indicate a truly
national Tibetan uprising taking place against China’s illegal
occupation of Tibet,” added Mr. Dorjee.
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TIBET DEATHS

Posted on Mar 17th, 2008 by Chaiwallah : Chaiwallah Chaiwallah
Amidst widespread reports from within Tibet, one fact is emerging. The Chinese authorities are using massive force against Tibetan demonstrators.

Media footage shows violence on both sides, but the only killing appears to have been the shooting of Tibetans by Chinese troops.

During a demonstration in Dublin, Ireland, the day before yesterday, one of our small Tibetan community was receiving phone calls from within Tibet. Tibetans estimate the number of Tibetans killed by the Chinese security forces in the last few days to be many hundreds.

What can you do?

Follow the links posted by Jenny re.Tibet on the "God" thread.

Practise "tonglen" on Tibet and China (if you're a Tibetan Buddhist meditator. HH the Dalai Lama does this daily.) If you're an activist, enter a dialogue with your local politicians, and media people. For example, there's a discussion going on worldwide at the UK TimesOnline newswebsite: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article3566647.ece?Submitted=true.

You could also join International Campaign for Tibet, Campaign Free Tibet, or Students for a Free Tibet (google any of those names for the links.) Or start a local Tibet Support Group if there isn't one.

This is a good time for Dharma bums to get off their bums and support the home of the Dharma.

If you need any info, feel free to ask me.

Cheers.

Chaiwallah

Bod Rangzen
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AN EXPERT'S VIEW OF TIBET

Posted on Mar 18th, 2008 by Chaiwallah : Chaiwallah Chaiwallah
RECLAIMING THE STREETS IN TIBET.
WHO'S BEHIND THE UPRISING AND WHY

BY GABRIEL LAFITTE
(Former Environmental adviser to HH the Dalai Lama's Govt-in-Exile. )

The monks and nuns leading the protest in Tibet know they will die - and they're ready for it, writes adviser to the Tibetan Government-in-exile, Gabriel Lafitte
The Tibetan revolt, like those of two and five decades ago, will be crushed by the overwhelming might of the Chinese military. No match could be more unequal: maroon-clad nuns and monks versus the machinery of oppression of the global rising power. In recent months, fast-response mobile tactical squads whose sole purpose is to quell the masses have been overtly rehearsing on the streets of Tibetan towns for just what they are now doing.

What is the point of revolt if it is almost certainly suicidal?

This uprising has many uniquely Tibetan characteristics. At street level, a favourite item seized from Chinese shops was toilet rolls - hardly the usual target of looters. Not that Tibetans, over millennia, have felt much need for the paper rolls, or even for the basics of the Chinese cuisine such as soy sauce. What the Tibetans did with the loo paper was to hurl it over power lines, instantly making Lhasa, and other Tibetan towns, Tibetan again. Right across the 25 per cent of China that is ethnically and culturally Tibetan, the unrolled toilet paper looks like wind horses, the white silken scarf khadags with which Tibetans greet and bless each other. As all Tibetans know, they carry their message on the wind: Victory to the gods!

That is what this revolt is about: making Tibet Tibetan once more. The white scarves also protected Tibetan shopkeepers from attack as the streets filled, for a short and costly moment of freedom, with Tibetans smashing the businesses of immigrant Chinese traders.

Even in the most intoxicating moment of reclaiming the streets no Tibetan could have forgotten the ever present security cameras, and the network of informers penetrating deeply into urban Tibetan private lives. No Tibetan could have been unmindful that the full repressive power of a modernised, high-tech tyranny would hunt them down, and show no mercy. All Tibetans know of former friends who, on release from prison and torture, now shun old acquaintances because they are under such intense pressure by their torturers to regularly name names of those who privately voice thoughts that do not conform to the Party line. These informers live in fear of being hauled in again, for further torture, and of betraying their friends.

That is what makes this revolt uniquely Tibetan. It is no accident that from the outset the protests were led by those who have already renounced all ties to kin, dedicating their lives to serve all of humanity, unconditionally. The nuns and monks of Tibet have taken vows to work for the liberation of all sentient beings from all sources of suffering - in the mind and in the external world. From the Dalai Lama through to the newest novice, they train in meditation to cut attachment to existence, to the existence of me ahead of all others.

They know they will die, and are ready for it. Just as in the great Tibetan revolts of 1959 and 1987, many will die in secret prison cells, after torture. When the world is no longer watching, or able to see, Tibetans who risked all so as to focus the world - in this Olympic year - on China's shame, will die.

What do Tibetans find so objectionable about today's China? Why is it that Tibetans and Chinese, neighbours for thousands of years, cannot get on?

Media coverage focuses on immediate causes, but there is a deeper story. Having worked with Tibetans for 30 years, having seen Chinese development projects in Tibet for myself, and having been briefly imprisoned for it, I can share what my Tibetan friends tell me. Contemporary Chinese capitalist modernity is as problematic for Tibetans as past State violence and repression. China today pours money, overwhelmingly State money, into Tibet, into railways, highways, tourist infrastructure and a top-heavy administrative elite. Glass towers, shopping malls, enormous brothels masquerading as discos, towering offices, now dominate urban Tibetan skylines which only 20 years ago were a sacred landscape of prayer flags, temples and meditation.

On the face of it, that's progress. If Lhasa now looks like any Chinese boomtown, that's just the price of modernity - or so many outsiders say. But Tibetans find themselves excluded from the material benefits of modernity, watching powerlessly as gangs of non-Tibetan immigrants take over even the unskilled jobs on construction sites and driving taxis. Tibetans remain poor, socially excluded, on the margins of a State-funded construction boom that reduces Tibetans to a minority meant to smile for the tourist cameras as they try to focus on their spiritual pilgrimage. The holy city of Lhasa, and all the big monasteries where the protests began, have been swamped by mass Chinese tourism, poking lenses into the most private devotions of those on the path to enlightenment.

The new railway to Lhasa, less than two years in operation, accelerated the tourism boom, the brothels and discos, and the marginalisation of Tibetans. Most Tibetans live in a countryside as big as western Europe, with their herds of yak, sheep and goats, eking an existence on land rigidly allocated decades ago by Chinese bureaucrats who refuse to re-divide land as families grow and new families form. Poverty among Tibetans is endemic, even as statistics averaged for entire provinces, bundling urban boom and rural neglect, proclaim rising standards of living.

The latest threat to Tibetan ways of life comes wrapped in an ideology of environmentalism. In the name of protecting the Tibetan upper reaches of China's great rivers - both the Yangtze and the Yellow - thousands of Tibetan nomads are being forced off their land, and resettled in miserable new towns in the middle of nowhere. Instantly, their livelihoods and intimate knowledge of the land and sustainable management, are useless - but they are seldom given training in new skills or even compensation beyond a grain survival ration.

Now the nomads, in a huge and rapidly expanding area, are ecological refugees, on the mistaken assumption that they are ignorantly and carelessly to blame for degradation of a vast grassland second in size only to Australia's pastoral inland. The nomads, compulsorily voiceless, not allowed to form any NGOs of their own, have no opportunity to show how deeply they care for the land, having sustained its productivity and its wildlife over millennia. China's urban-based Party elite regards nomads as stupid, uneducated, unscientific, greedy and destructive - everything China is trying to get away from. There is no partnership between authority and those on the land, because they are of different races, with very different worldviews.

This is the bedrock of the revolt. The Chinese authorities hold rural Tibetans in contempt, while urban educated Tibetans are viewed with suspicion, their exclusive loyalty to China and the Party forever tested by extreme "patriotic education" campaigns that make it compulsory to denounce the most revered lamas.

To be a Tibetan in Tibet is a lot like being black in Mississippi 50 years ago. Travel within Tibet, migration from country to city, number of livestock permitted, number of children permitted, all are rigidly and oppressively controlled by an invasive bureaucracy. Meanwhile health care and education, strictly on a capitalist user-pays basis, are concentrated in urban areas. Only if you have the money upfront, and connections, do you even get in the door of a hospital.

The monks and nuns, who devote their lives to clarifying and purifying the mind, draw inspiration from the example of their teachers, and the teachers of their teachers, the highest of all being the Dalai Lama. China's Party leaders, including President Hu Jintao, who imposed martial law the last time Tibet revolted, never seem to learn that insisting on monks trampling or spitting on an image of the Dalai Lama is only going to deepen Tibetan alienation.

The China the world glimpses briefly today is a China that has not, in Tibet, changed as much as we would all hope. Tibet is stuck in a time warp, of Marxist anti-religion propaganda, mass campaigns of denunciation and thought reform. China's policies in Tibet are deeply contradictory and self-defeating. China wants Tibetans to embrace and love the motherland and the Party, but the punitive insistence on stability always undermines the uneven, often exclusionary, progress towards development.

China needs to be told by its friends that an empire cannot be made into a nation by force. Australia, as a close friend and with a Prime Minister fluent in Chinese, is uniquely placed to remind the isolated and fearful Party leaders that they can gain much by listening to the message of the rioters: give us a break. Australia could teach China much about landcare, about rural communities and government working as partners to repair long term damage, and about discovering the hard way how to respect and reconcile with the Indigenous peoples.

As the Dalai Lama has always said: Tibetans and Chinese have gotten on well in the past, and can do so again, but only if there is mutual respect for fellow human beings who differ in their sources of happiness.

Tibetan monks and nuns are now dying, usually with equanimity and no hatred, in order to maintain that difference.
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HELP TIBET AND CHINA: WITH TONGLEN

Posted on Mar 18th, 2008 by Chaiwallah : Chaiwallah Chaiwallah
Tonglen, which means “giving and taking,” is a Tibetan Tantric Buddhist technique for energy transformation. It is very simple, based on breathing and visualisation. (My empowerment came from Ringu Tulku.)

Tonglen can be practised on the most personal level, to deal with sickness and negative emotional energy in your own body. It can be used between two people for the same reasons. You can use it to help another person to heal. You can use it between you and any source of threatening or negative energy.

Here's how.

Take a moment to be quiet in the face of the energy source (sitting, or standing, even in traffic, I've done it to deal with frustration and fear while cycling in the city on my bicycle!)

1) Visualise the negative energy ( physical pain, anger, fear, craving, etc.etc.) as a thick cloud of greasy black smoke.
2) Inhale deeply, drawing the visualised smoke into your very Being.
3) There, it will dissolve automatically, exploding into its essential emptiness. As it does so, your own ego's attachment to that energy is dissolved, and the black smoke becomes the fuel which burns to create a fire of intense light and compassion. This happens instantly. You don't need to work at it.
4) Exhale the light and compassion as a stream of positive energy, back to the source of pain, fear, etc.

That's it. It's very powerful, as I know from using it to deal with what appeared to be a life-threatening disease. Tonglen dissolves fear, pain, anger, craving.

For Tibet and China, maybe start by looking at a map, or Google Earth, just so you have a mental picture of where the energy source is. Actually, you can do tonglen for Planet Earth. Easy to visualise the Earth as a small blue ball surrounded by black smoke.

If you're into mantras or prayers, you can use a simple mantra on the inbreath and outbreath to energise your practice. Something as simple as “am-ma” divided between the inbreath and outbreath.(Gai-a would make a good Earth-healing mantra!)
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DALAI LAMA'S STATEMENT

Posted on Mar 19th, 2008 by Chaiwallah : Chaiwallah Chaiwallah
HH THE DALAI LAMA THREATENS TO RESIGN

Background:

In the face of ever-growing reports of uprisings all over Tibet, HH the Dalai Lama has appealed to Tibetans to refrain from violent protests.

Many young Tibetans are frustrated by the non-violent approach which has produced no change in the lives of Tibetans under Chinese rule.

The Chinese have imposed a complete media black-out in Tibet. Foreign journalists have been expelled from all parts of Tibet. News is coming from the cell phones of individual Tibetans.

The latest news this morning is that trucks full of Chinese armed troops, accompanied by tanks, have rolled into several Tibetan towns in the Chinese provinces  of Qinghai, Gansu and Yunnan (formerly parts of the Tibetan provinces of Amdo and Kham)

DALAI LAMA'S STATEMENT

*PRESS RELEASE*
I would like to take this opportunity to express my deep gratitude to
world leaders and the international community for their concern over the
recent sad turn of events in Tibet and for their attempts to persuade
the Chinese authorities to exercise restraint in dealing with the
demonstrations.
Since the Chinese Government has accused me of orchestrating these
protests in Tibet, I call for a thorough investigation by a respected
body, which should include Chinese representatives, to look into these
allegations. Such a body would need to visit Tibet, the traditional
Tibetan areas outside the Tibet Autonomous Region, and also the Central
Tibetan Administration here in India. In order for the international
community, and especially the more than one billion Chinese people who
do not have access to uncensored information, to find out what is really
going on in Tibet, it would be of tremendously helpful if
representatives of the international media also undertook such
investigations.
Whether it was intended or not, I believe that a form of cultural
genocide has taken place in Tibet, where the Tibetan identity has been
under constant attack. Tibetans have been reduced to an insignificant
minority in their own land as a result of the huge transfer of
non-Tibetans into Tibet. The distinctive Tibetan cultural heritage with
its characteristic language, customs and traditions is fading away.
Instead of working to unify its nationalities, the Chinese government
discriminates against these minority nationalities, the Tibetans among
them.
It is common knowledge that Tibetan monasteries, which constitute our
principal seats of learning, besides being the repository of Tibetan
Buddhist culture, have been severely reduced in both in number and
population. In those monasteries that do still exist, serious study of
Tibetan Buddhism is no longer allowed; in fact, even admission to these
centres of learning is being strictly regulated. In reality, there is no
religious freedom in Tibet. Even to call for a little more freedom is to
risk being labeled a separatist. Nor is there any real autonomy in
Tibet, even though these basic freedoms are guaranteed by the Chinese
constitution.
I believe the demonstrations and protests taking place in Tibet are a
spontaneous outburst of public resentment built up by years of
repression in defiance of authorities that are oblivious to the
sentiments of the local populace. They mistakenly believe that further
repressive measures are the way to achieve their declared aim of
long-term unity and stability.
On our part, we remain committed to taking the Middle Way approach and
pursuing a process of dialogue in order to find a mutually beneficial
solution to the Tibetan issue.
With these points in mind, I also seek the international community’s
support for our efforts to resolve Tibet’s problems through dialogue,
and I urge them to call upon the Chinese leadership to exercise the
utmost restraint in dealing with the current disturbed situation and to
treat those who are being arrested properly and fairly.
Dalai Lama
Dharamsala
March 18, 2008
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1 million signatures for Tibet: Avaaz appeal petition

Posted on Mar 19th, 2008 by Chaiwallah : Chaiwallah Chaiwallah
 Dear Gaia friends,

We believe in peace, love and reconciliation, in non-violent solutioons to ancient fears and animosities. Here's a chance to take direct non-violent action to promote a peaceful solution to the situation in Tibet.

Please act now and circulate the link to all your friends.

Shanti, shanti, shanti,

Chaiwallah

In just 36 hours, 253,553 of us have supported the Dalai Lama's call for dialogue and human rights in Tibet. This is an incredible response--if each of us can get 4 more of our friends to sign the petition, we'll hit 1 million this week! Just quickly forward the email below to your friends and family with a personal note from you-

---------------------------

Dear friends,

After decades of suffering, the Tibetan people have burst onto the streets in protests and riots. The spotlight of the upcoming Olympic Games is now on China, and Tibetan Nobel peace prize winner the Dalai Lama is calling to end all violence through restraint and dialogue--he urgently needs the world's people to support him.

China's leaders are lashing out publicly at the Dalai Lama--but we're told many Chinese officials believe dialogue is the best hope for stability in Tibet. China's leadership is right now considering a crucial choice between crackdown and dialogue that could determine Tibet's--and China's--future.

We can affect this historic choice--China does care about its international reputation, and we can help them choose the right path. China's President Hu Jintao needs to hear that the 'Made in China' brand and the upcoming Olympics in Beijing will succeed only if he makes the right choice. But it will take an avalanche of global people power to get his attention. Click below now to join 250,000 others and sign the petition--and tell absolutely everyone you can right away--our goal is 1 million voices united for Tibet:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/tibet_end_the_violence/19.php
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HH THE DALAI LAMA WEPT/TONGLEN

Posted on Mar 22nd, 2008 by Chaiwallah : Chaiwallah Chaiwallah
In a recent interview with Melinda Liu of Newsweek, HH the Dalai Lama admitted he wept at the news from Tibet, but practises "giving and taking,"...in a word, tonglen.

Newsweek:Some images of the recent casualties have been graphic and disturbing. Have you seen them? What was your reaction? We heard you wept.

HH the Dalai Lama:Yes I cried once. One advantage of belonging to the Tibetan Buddhist culture is that at the intellectual level there is a lot of turmoil, a lot of anxiety and worries but at the deeper, emotional level there is calm. Every night in my Buddhist practice I give and take. I take in Chinese suspicion. I give back trust and compassion. I take their negative feeling and give them positive feeling. I do that everyday. This practice helps tremendously in keeping the emotional level stable and steady. So during the last few days, despite a lot of worries and anxiety, there is no disturbance in my sleep. (Laughs).
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TIBET: THE TORCH OF SHAME

Posted on Mar 23rd, 2008 by Chaiwallah : Chaiwallah Chaiwallah


THE TORCH OF SHAME

The Olympic torch is bleeding
In a harsh and cruel hand
As it crushes Tibetan voices
Spilling blood upon the land.

If we all say "Yes" to China
Who will be to blame
When the torch of hope and beauty
Has become the Torch of Shame.

Chaiwallah
Easter Sunday. 23rd March 2008
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BUDDHA FOR TIBETANS

Posted on Mar 23rd, 2008 by Chaiwallah : Chaiwallah Chaiwallah
"The Communist Party is like the parent to the Tibetan people, and it is always considerate about what the children need. The Central Party Committee is the real Buddha for Tibetans."

Quoye from Zang Qingli, Communist Party boss in Tibet.
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TIBET PETITION 751,472 SIGNED

Posted on Mar 24th, 2008 by Chaiwallah : Chaiwallah Chaiwallah
 Dear Gaia friends,

Nearly there.


LET'S TRY TO REACH 1 MILLION BY MARCH 31ST

The global outcry over Tibet is rising fast - In just 5 days, 751,472 of us from 192 countries have come together to call for restraint and dialogue with the Dalai Lama. Even more amazing, we have told over 5 million of our friends about this important campaign - that's 1 million people per day!

A personal email from a friend is a powerful thing – it is helping to drive the global tide of concern. Let's push now to tell 5 million more friends, get over 1 million signatures this week, and deliver the largest global online petition in history to the Chinese government. Just forward the email below to a few more friends and family with a personal note from you…

------------------

Dear friends,

After decades of repression, the Tibetan people are crying out to the world for change. The spotlight of the upcoming Olympic Games is now on China, and Tibetan Nobel peace prize winner the Dalai Lama is calling to end all riots and violence through restraint and dialogue--he urgently needs the support of the world's people.

China's hardliners are lashing out publicly at the Dalai Lama--but we're told that President Hu Jintao may believe dialogue is the best hope for stability in Tibet. China's leadership is right now considering a crucial choice between repression and dialogue that could determine Tibet's--and China's--future.

We can affect this historic choice – for President Hu, China's global reputation matters. He needs to hear from us that the 'Made in China' brand and the upcoming Olympics in Beijing will succeed only if he chooses dialogue over the hardliners' repression. An avalanche of global people power is moving to get his attention. We're closing on our goal of 1 million signatures and the largest global online petition in history - click below to join the global outcry, and then forward this email to friends and family right away:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/tibet_end_the_violence/39.php?cl=65939797
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952,000 SIGN FOR TIBET

Posted on Mar 25th, 2008 by Chaiwallah : Chaiwallah Chaiwallah
Here's an update. 952,000 people have signed the petition. It would be brilliant to get it up to 1 million before the World Day of Action for Tibet, next Monday, March 31st. That's also the day that the Olympic torch arrives in Beijing. If you can think of anyone who might not have signed the petition, please forward this email to them again.

If you have already signed and circulated this petition, thank you so much. News of this will bring hope and joy to thousands of Tibetans who are imprisoned right now for resisting Chinese oppression, who are being physically tortured for their Buddhist beliefs, for their loyalty to HH the Dalai Lama.

http://www.avaaz.org/en/tibet_end_the_violence/

BTW some of you may feel by this stage that my blog has become a bit too strident and politic al, not quite laid back enough for a confessed advaitin. Remember Krishna's advice to Arjuna on the battlefield of the Kurus and Pandavas,"Established in Being, perform action!"

It's so easy for us in the West not only to venerate, but actually to meet HH the Dalai Lama, and other spiritual luminaries, Tibetan, Zen, Vedic etc.   In Tibet, to carry a photo of HH the Dalai Lama is to risk arrest, imprisonment without trial, torture, even death. In China, to pronounce belief in "Truth, Forbearance and Compassion" will get you arrested as a Falun Gong "evil-cultist". Same fate as the Tibetans.

We owe it to their courage to support them in their hour of need. Which is what is happening now.

Cheers,

Chaiwallah
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CONGRATULATIONS AND THANKS

Posted on Mar 26th, 2008 by Chaiwallah : Chaiwallah Chaiwallah

1,058,716 have signed - 1 million target reached in just 7 days!


BRILLIANT. CONGRATULATIONS AND THANKS TO ALL WHO HELPED.

2 MILLION BY MARCH 31ST?????
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1,329,894 SIGNED FOR TIBET...DID YOU?

Posted on Mar 29th, 2008 by Chaiwallah : Chaiwallah Chaiwallah

1,329,894 SIGNED FOR TIBET, DID YOU?

Monday 31st. March Global Action Day for Tibet, and petition handing-in day. It's not too late to help Tibet.


http://www.avaaz.org/en/tibet_end_the_violence/

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