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Southasian Tibet

In March this year, an unprecedented series of demonstrations erupted across Tibet. Forty-nine years after the escape of the Dalai Lama into exile following their country’s takeover by China

BLACK ANNALS: Goldstein and the Negation of Tibetan History (Part II) – Jamyang Norbu

In Marxist inspired narratives of feudal (or capitalist) states collapsing of their inherent contradictions, there should fittingly be a role for a revolutionary movement and perhaps even

Into the dragon’s den I went and came out unscathed!

In the third week of June this year I entered the outer fringes of Tibet (Sichuan Province) and stayed in the area for twenty days. From what I heard from people there and later from news items

BLACK ANNALS: Goldstein & The Negation Of Tibetan History (Part I)

When Oscar Wilde declared that "the one duty we owe to history is to rewrite it", he was probably attempting to provoke — épater les bourgeois, as the French might say

Feingold, Baldwin and human rights in Tibet

The visit of the Dalai Lama to Madison offers a reminder that U.S. policy toward China has played a critical role in strengthening the regime that oppresses the people of Tibet.

TIBET, A YEAR AFTER

In order to commemorate the 73rd birthday of HH the Dalai Lama, a group of former TIPA artistes based in San Francisco Bay area presented the play, ‘Tibet: A year after’ to the public. It is

Running-Dog Propagandists – Jamyang Norbu

In response to my recent piece Barefoot Experts some readers wrote in to say that Tibetans should not fritter away their energy picking on experts and journalists in the West but should focus on

The illusion of calm in Tibet

After a botched response to bloody riots in Tibet in March, the Chinese authorities have ruthlessly restored order. But anti-Chinese resentment is deep-seated

Dalai Lama tells us to ‘reprioritize, revalue’

"He urges people to rethink what they want and how to get what they want, and with so much misery and unhappiness in the world, the way to happiness will not come from doing things as we are used to doing them."

Feeling their homeland’s pain

During the height of the recent protests in Tibet, a 49-year-old Tibetan American living in Massachusetts called his mother in Tibet. "How are you?" he asked

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