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----- Original Message -----
From: The Infamous Vinnie Gangbox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, May 23, 2001 11:07 PM
Subject: [cpusa] Fwd : Fw: When the Dalais Ruled:



On Wed, 23 May 2001 17:19:10 -0400, Louis R Godena wrote:


  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Louis R Godena
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Cc: Louis R Godena
  Sent: Wednesday, May 23, 2001 5:10 PM
  Subject: When the Dalais Ruled:


  Hi Connie;
  Yes, I loathe all forms of religious bigotry and superstition, whether it
emanates from some bogus "Chosen People", "Master Race", or some guy wearing
a Don Rickles costume telling us he flies through the air.  In 1996, I stood
inside the Blue Mosque in Istanbul, and, silhouetted against the august
architecture of that imposing monument, I thought of all the suffering
occasioned by Believers such as yourself.  "God Damn all religions," I
remember saying to myself, "Christianity, Judaism, Islam, whatever."

  I have taken the liberty of forwarding an article from some brainwashed
idiots from Revolutionary Communist Party, USA., one of those minute sects
of morose, dysfunctional adults who will do anything to start a revolution
except reach out to the masses.  They had a fairly good pamphlet on Tibet,
though.  I know forwarding this screws with your serenity, but then, you
didn't mind screwing with mine.

  Sorry.

  Louis Godena,
  Cumberland, Rhode Island


  When the Dalai Lamas Ruled:
  Hell on Earth
  Revolutionary Worker #944, February 15, 1998


  Hard Climate, Heartless Society
  Tibet is one of the most remote places in the world. It is centered on a
high mountain plateau deep in the heart of Asia. It is cut off from South
Asia by the Himalayas, the highest mountains in the world. Countless river
gorges and at least six different mountain ranges carve this region into
isolated valleys. Before all the changes brought about after the Chinese
revolution of 1949, there were no roads in Tibet that wheeled vehicles could
travel. All travel was over winding, dangerous mountain trails--by mule, by
foot or by yaks which are hairy cow-like mountain animals. Trade,
communications and centralized government were almost impossible to
maintain.

  Most of Tibet is above the tree-line. The air is very thin. Most crops and
trees won't grow there. It was a struggle to grow food and even find fuel
for fires.

  At the time of the revolution, the population of Tibet was extremely
spread out. About two or three million Tibetans lived in an area half the
size of the United States--about 1.5 million square miles. Villages,
monasteries and nomad encampments were often separated by many days of
difficult travel.

  Maoist revolutionaries saw there were "Three Great Lacks" in old Tibet:
lack of fuel, lack of communications, and lack of people. The
revolutionaries analyzed that these "Three Great Lacks" were not mainly
caused by the physical conditions, but by the social system. The Maoists
said that the "Three Great Lacks" were caused by the "Three Abundances" in
Tibetan society: "Abundant poverty, abundant oppression and abundant fear of
the supernatural."

  Class Society in Old Tibet
  Tibet was a feudal society before the revolutionary changes that started
in 1949. There were two main classes: the serfs and the aristocratic serf
owners. The people lived like serfs in Europe's "Dark Ages," or like African
slaves and sharecroppers of the U.S. South.

  Tibetan serfs scratched barley harvest from the hard earth with wooden
plows and sickles. Goats, sheep and yaks were raised for milk, butter,
cheese and meat. The aristocratic and monastery masters owned the people,
the land and most of the animals. They forced the serfs to hand over most
grain and demanded all kinds of forced labor (called ulag). Among the serfs,
both men and women participated in hard labor, including ulag. The scattered
nomadic peoples of Tibet's barren western highlands were also owned by lords
and lamas.

  The Dalai Lama's older brother Thubten Jigme Norbu claims that in the
lamaist social order, "There is no class system and the mobility from class
to class makes any class prejudice impossible." But the whole existence of
this religious order was based on a rigid and brutal class system.

  Serfs were treated like despised "inferiors"--the way Black people were
treated in the Jim Crow South. Serfs could not use the same seats,
vocabulary or eating utensils as serf owners. Even touching one of the
master's belongings could be punished by whipping. The masters and serfs
were so distant from each other that in much of Tibet they spoke different
languages.

  It was the custom for a serf to kneel on all fours so his master could
step on his back to mount a horse. Tibet scholar A. Tom Grunfeld describes
how one ruling class girl routinely had servants carry her up and down
stairs just because she was lazy. Masters often rode on their serfs' backs
across streams.

  The only thing worse than a serf in Tibet was a "chattel slave," who had
no right to even grow a few crops for themselves. These slaves were often
starved, beaten and worked to death. A master could turn a serf into a slave
any time he wanted. Children were routinely bought and sold in Tibet's
capital, Lhasa. About 5 percent of the Tibetan people were counted as
chattel slaves. And at least another 10 percent were poor monks who were
really "slaves in robes."

  The lamaist system tried to prevent any escape. Runaway slaves couldn't
just set up free farms in the vast empty lands. Former serfs explained to
revolutionary writer Anna Louise Strong that before liberation, "You could
not live in Tibet without a master. Anyone might pick you up as an outlaw
unless you had a legal owner."

  Born Female--Proof of Past Sins?
  The Dalai Lama writes, "In Tibet there was no special discrimination
against women." The Dalai Lama's authorized biographer Robert Hicks argues
that Tibetan women were content with their status and "influenced their
husbands." But in Tibet, being born a woman was considered a punishment for
"impious" (sinful) behavior in a previous life. The word for "woman" in old
Tibet, kiemen, meant "inferior birth." Women were told to pray, "May I
reject a feminine body and be reborn a male one."

  Lamaist superstition associated women with evil and sin. It was said
"among ten women you'll find nine devils." Anything women touched was
considered tainted--so all kinds of taboos were placed on women. Women were
forbidden to handle medicine. Han Suyin reports, "No woman was allowed to
touch a lama's belongings, nor could she raise a wall, or 'the wall will
fall.'... A widow was a despicable being, already a devil. No woman was
allowed to use iron instruments or touch iron. Religion forbade her to lift
her eyes above the knee of a man, as serfs and slaves were not allowed to
life the eyes upon the face of the nobles or great lamas."

  Monks of the major sects of Tibetan Buddhism rejected sexual intimacy (or
even contact) with women, as part of their plan to be holy. Before the
revolution, no woman had ever set foot in most monasteries or the palaces of
the Dalai Lama.

  There are reports of women being burned for giving birth to twins and for
practicing the pre-Buddhist traditional religion (called Bon). Twins were
considered proof that a woman had mated with an evil spirit. The rituals and
folk medicine of Bon were considered "witchcraft." Like in other feudal
societies, upperclass women were sold into arranged marriages. Custom
allowed a husband to cut off the tip of his wife's nose if he discovered she
had slept with someone else. The patriarchal practices included polygyny,
where a wealthy man could have many wives; and polyandry, where in land-poor
noble families one woman was forced to be wife to several brothers.

  Among the lower classes, family life was similar to slavery in the U.S.
South. (See The Life of a Tibetan Slave.) Serfs could not marry or leave the
estate without the master's permission. Masters transferred serfs from one
estate to another at will, breaking up serf families forever. Rape of women
serfs was common--under the ulag system, a lord could demand "temporary
wives."

  The Three Masters
  The Tibetan people called their rulers "the Three Great Masters" because
the ruling class of serf owners was organized into three institutions: the
lama monasteries possessed 37 percent of the cultivated land and pasture in
old Tibet; the secular aristocracy 25 percent; and the remaining 38 percent
was in the hands of the government officials appointed by the Dalai Lama's
advisors.

  About 2 percent of Tibet's population was in this upper class, and an
additional 3 percent were their agents, overseers, stewards, managers of
estates and private armies. The ger-ba, a tiny elite of about 200 families,
ruled at the top. Han Suyin writes: "Only 626 people held 93 percent of all
land and wealth and 70 percent of all the yaks in Tibet. These 626 included
333 heads of monasteries and religious authorities, and 287 lay authorities
(including the nobles of the Tibetan army) and six cabinet ministers."

  Merchants and handicraftsmen also belonged to a lord. A quarter of the
population in the capital city of Lhasa survived by begging from religious
pilgrims. There was no modern industry or working class. Even matches and
nails had to be imported. Before the revolution, no one in Tibet was ever
paid wages for their work.

  The heart of this system was exploitation. Serfs worked 16- or 18-hour
days to enrich their masters--keeping only about a quarter of the food they
raised.

  A. Tom Grunfeld writes: "These estates were extremely lucrative. One
former aristocrat noted that a 'small' estate would typically consist of a
few thousand sheep, a thousand yaks, an undetermined number of nomads and
two hundred agricultural serfs. The yearly output would consist of over
36,000 kg (80,000 lbs.) of grain, over 1,800 kg (4,000 lbs.) of wool and
almost 500 kg (1,200 lbs.) of butter... A government official had 'unlimited
powers of extortion' and could make a fortune from his powers to extract
bribes not to imprison and punish people.... There was also the matter of
extracting monies from the peasantry beyond the necessary taxes."

  The ruling serf owners were parasites. One observer, Sir Charles Bell,
described a typical official who spent an hour a day at his official duties.
Upper class parties lasted for days of eating, gambling and lying around.
The aristocratic lamas also never worked. They spent their days chanting,
memorizing religious dogma and doing nothing.

  The Monasteries: Strongholds of Feudalism
  Defenders of old Tibet portray Lamaist Buddhism as the essence of the
culture of the people of Tibet. But it was really nothing more or less than
the ideology of a specific oppressive social system. The lamaist religion
itself is exactly as old as feudal class society. The first Tibetan king,
Songsten-gampo, established a unified feudal system in Tibet, around 650
A.D. He married princesses from China and Nepal in order to learn from them
the practices used outside Tibet to carry out feudalism. These princesses
brought Tantric Buddhism to Tibet, where it was merged with earlier animist
beliefs to create a new religion, Lamaism.

  This new religion had to be imposed on the people over the next century
and a half by the ruling class, using violence. King Trosong Detsen decreed:
"He who shows a finger to a monk shall have his finger cut off; he who
speaks ill of the monks and the king's Buddhist policy shall have his lips
cut off; he who looks askance at them shall have his eyes put out..."

  Between the 1400s and the 1600s, a bloody consolidation of power took
place, the abbots of the largest monasteries seized overall power. Because
these abbots practiced anti-woman celibacy, their new political system could
not operate by hereditary father-to-son succession. So the lamas created a
new doctrine for their religion: They announced that they could detect
newborn children who were reincarnations of dead ruling lamas. Hundreds of
top lamas were declared "Living Buddhas" (Bodhisattvas) who had supposedly
ruled others for centuries, switching to new bodies occasionally as old host
bodies wore out.

  The central symbol of this system, the various men called Dalai Lama, was
said to be the early Tibetan nature-god Chenrezig who had simply reappeared
in 14 different bodies over the centuries. In fact, only three of the 14
Dalai Lamas actually ruled. Between 1751 and 1950, there was no adult Dalai
Lama on the throne in Tibet 77 percent of the time. The most powerful abbots
ruled as "regent" advisors who trained, manipulated and even assassinated
the child-king Dalai Lamas.

  Tibetan monasteries were not holy, compassionate Shangrilas, like in some
New Age fantasy. These monasteries were dark fortresses of feudal
exploitation--they were armed villages of monks complete with military
warehouses and private armies. Pilgrims came to some shrines to pray for a
better life. But the main activity of monasteries was robbing the
surrounding peasants. The huge idle religious clergy grew little
food--feeding them was a big burden on the people.

  The largest monasteries housed thousands of monks. Each "parent" monastery
created dozens (even hundreds) of small strongholds scattered through the
mountain valleys. For example, the huge Drepung monastery housed 7,000 monks
and owned 40,000 people on 185 different estates with 300 pastures.

  Monasteries also made up countless religious taxes to rob the
people--including taxes on haircuts, on windows, on doorsteps, taxes on
newborn children or calves, taxes on babies born with double eyelids...and
so on. A quarter of Drepung's income came from interest on money lent to the
serf-peasantry. The monasteries also demanded that serfs hand over many
young boys to serve as child-monks.

  The class relations of Tibet were reproduced inside the monasteries: the
majority of monks were slaves and servants to the upper abbots and lived
half-starved lives of menial labor, prayer chanting and routine beatings.
Upper monks could force poor monks to take their religious exams or perform
sexual services. (In the most powerful Tibetan sect, such homosexual sex was
considered a sign of holy distance from women.) A small percent of the
clergy were nuns.

  After liberation, Anna Louise Strong asked a young monk, Lobsang Tel?, if
monastery life followed Buddhist teachings about compassion. The young lama
replied that he heard plenty of talk in the scripture halls about kindness
to all living creatures, but that he personally had been whipped at least a
thousand times. "If any upper class lama refrains from whipping you," he
told Strong, "that is already very good. I never saw an upper lama give food
to any poor lama who was hungry. They treated the laymen who were believers
just as badly or even worse."

  These days, the Dalai Lama is "packaged" internationally as a
non-materialist holy man. In fact, the Dalai Lama was the biggest serf owner
in Tibet. Legally, he owned the whole country and everyone in it. In
practice, his family directly controlled 27 manors, 36 pastures, 6,170 field
serfs and 102 house slaves.

  When he moved from palace to palace, the Dalai Lama rode on a throne chair
pulled by dozens of slaves. His troops marched along to "It's a Long Way to
Tipperary," a tune learned from their British imperialist trainers.
Meanwhile, the Dalai Lama's bodyguards, all over six-and-a-half feet tall,
with padded shoulders and long whips, beat people out of his path. This
ritual is described in the Dalai Lama's autobiography.

  The first time he fled to India in 1950, the Dalai Lama's advisors sent
several hundred mule-loads of gold and silver bars ahead to secure his
comfort in exile. After the second time he fled, in 1959, Peking Review
reported that his family left lots of gold and silver behind, plus 20,331
pieces of jewelry and 14,676 pieces of clothing.

  Bitter Poverty, Early Death
  The people lived with constant cold and hunger. Serfs endlessly gathered
scarce wood for their masters. But their own huts were only heated by small
cooking fires of yak dung. Before the revolution there was no electricity in
Tibet. The darkness was only lit by flickering yak-butter lamps.

  Serfs were often sick from malnutrition. The traditional food of the
masses is a mush made from tea, yak butter, and a barley flour called
tsampa. Serfs rarely tasted meat. One 1940 study of eastern Tibet says that
38 percent of households never got any tea--and drank only wild herbs or
"white tea" (boiled water). Seventy-five percent of the households were
forced at times to eat grass. Half of the people couldn't afford butter--the
main source of protein available.

  Meanwhile, a major shrine, the Jokka Kang, burned four tons of yak butter
offerings daily. It has been estimated that one-third of all the butter
produced in Tibet went up in smoke in nearly 3,000 temples, not counting the
small alters in each house.

  In old Tibet, nothing was known about basic hygiene, sanitation, or the
fact that germs caused disease. For ordinary people, there were no
outhouses, sewers or toilets. The lamas taught that disease and death were
caused by sinful "impiety." They said that chanting, obedience, paying monks
money and swallowing prayer scrolls was the only real protection from
disease.

  Old Tibet's superstition, feudal practices and low productive forces
caused the people to suffer terribly from disease. Most children died before
their first year. Even most Dalai Lamas did not make it to 18 years old and
died before their coronations. A third of the population had smallpox. A
1925 smallpox epidemic killed 7,000 in Lhasa. It is not known how many died
in the countryside. Leprosy, tuberculosis, goiter, tetanus, blindness and
ulcers were very common. Feudal sexual customs spread venereal disease,
including in the monasteries. Before the revolution, about 90 percent of the
population was infected--causing widespread sterility and death. Later,
under the leadership of Mao Tsetung, the revolution was able to greatly
reduce these illnesses--but it required intense class struggle against the
lamas and their religious superstitions. The monks denounced antibiotics and
public health campaigns, saying it was a sin to kill lice or even germs! The
monks denounced the People's Liberation Army for eliminating the large bands
of wild, rabies-infested dogs that terrorized people across Tibet. (Still
today, one of the "charges" against the Maoist revolution is that it "killed
dogs"!)

  The Violence of the Lamas
  In old Tibet, the upper classes preached mystical Buddhist nonviolence.
But, like all ruling classes in history, they practiced reactionary violence
to maintain their rule.

  The lamaist system of government came into being through bloody struggles.
The early lamas reportedly assassinated the last Tibetan king, Lang Darma,
in the 10th century. Then they fought centuries of civil wars, complete with
mutual massacres of whole monasteries. In the 20th century, the 13th Dalai
Lama brought in British imperialist trainers to modernize his national army.
He even offered some of his troops to help the British fight World War I.

  These historical facts alone prove that lamaist doctrines of "compassion"
and "nonviolence" are hypocrisy.

  The former ruling class denies there was class struggle in old Tibet. A
typical account by Gyaltsen Gyaltag, a representative of the Dalai Lama in
Europe, says: "Prior to 1950, the Tibetans never experienced a famine, and
social injustices never led to an uprising of the people." It is true that
there is little written record of class struggle. The reason is that Lamaism
prevented any real histories from being written down. Only disputes over
religious dogma were recorded.

  But the mountains of Tibet were filled with bandit runaways, and each
estate had its armed fighters. This alone is proof that constant
struggle--sometimes open, sometimes hidden--defined Tibetan society and its
power relations.

  Revolutionary historians have documented uprisings among Tibetan serfs in
1908, 1918, 1931, and the 1940s. In one famous uprising, 150 families of
serfs of northern Tibet's Thridug county rose up in 1918, led by a woman,
Hor Lhamo. They killed the county head, under the slogan: "Down with
officials! Abolish all ulag forced labor!"

  Daily violence in old Tibet was aimed at the masses of people. Each master
punished "his" serfs, and organized armed gangs to enforce his rule. Squads
of monks brutalized the people. They were called "Iron Bars" because of the
big metal rods they carried to batter people.

  It was a crime to "step out of your place"--like hunting fish or wild
sheep that the lamaist declared were "sacred." It was even a crime for a
serf to appeal his master's decisions to some other authority. When serfs
ran away, the masters' gangs went to hunt them down. Each estate had its own
dungeons and torture chambers. Pepper was forced under the eyelids. Spikes
were forced under the fingernails. Serfs had their legs connected by short
chains and were released to wander hobbled for the rest of their lives.

  Grunfeld writes: "Buddhist belief precludes the taking of life, so that
whipping a person to the edge of death and then releasing him to die
elsewhere allowed Tibetan officials to justify the death as 'an act of God.'
Other brutal forms of punishment included the cutting off of hands at the
wrists, using red-hot irons to gouge out eyes; hanging by the thumbs; and
crippling the offender, sewing him into a bag, and throwing the bag in the
river."

  As signs of the lamas' power, traditional ceremonies used body parts of
people who had died: flutes made out of human thigh bones, bowls made out of
skulls, drums made from human skin. After the revolution, a rosary was found
in the Dalai Lama's palace made from 108 different skulls. After liberation,
serfs widely reported that the lamas engaged in ritual human
sacrifice--including burying serf children alive in monastery
ground-breaking ceremonies. Former serfs testified that at least 21 people
were sacrificed by monks in 1948 in hopes of preventing the victory of the
Maoist revolution.

  Using Karma to Justify Oppression
  The central belief of lamaism is reincarnation and karma. Each living
being is said to be inhabited by an immortal soul that has been born and
reborn many times. After each death, a soul is supposedly given a new body.

  According to the dogma of karma, each soul gets the life it deserves:
Pious behavior leads to good karma--and with that comes a rise in the social
status of the next life. Impious (sinful) behavior leads to bad karma and
the next life could be as an insect (or a woman).

  In reality, there is no such thing as reincarnation. Dead people do not
return in new bodies. But in Tibet, the belief in reincarnation had terrible
real consequences. People intrigued by Tibetan mysticism need to understand
the social function served by these lamaist beliefs inside Tibet: Lamaist
Buddhism was created, imposed and perpetuated to carry out the extreme
feudal oppression of the people.

  Lamaists today tell the story of an ancient Tibetan king who wanted to
close the gap between rich and poor. The king asked a religious scholar why
his efforts failed. "The sage is said to have explained to him that the gap
between rich and poor cannot be closed by force, since the conditions of
present life are always the consequences of actions in earlier lives, and
therefore the course of things cannot be changed at will."

  Grunfield writes: "From a purely secular point of view, this doctrine must
be seen as one of the most ingenious and pernicious forms of social control
ever devised. To the ordinary Tibetan, the acceptance of this doctrine
precluded the possibility of ever changing his or her fate in this life. If
one were born a slave, so the doctrine of karma taught, it was not the fault
of the slaveholder but rather the slaves themselves for having committed
some misdeeds in a previous life. In turn, the slaveholder was simply being
rewarded for good deeds in a previous life. For the slave to attempt to
break the chains that bound him, or her, would be tantamount to a
self-condemnation to a rebirth into a life worse than the one already being
suffered. This is certainly not the stuff of which revolutions are made..."

  Tibet's feudalist abbot-lamas taught that their top lama was a single
divine god-king-being--whose rule and dog-eat-dog system was demanded by the
natural workings of the universe. These myths and superstitions teach that
there can be no social change, that suffering is justified, and that to end
suffering each person must patiently tolerate suffering. This is almost
exactly what Europe's medieval Catholic church taught the people, in order
to defend a similar feudal system.

  Also like in medieval Europe, Tibet's feudalists fought to suppress
anything that might undermine their "watertight" system. All observers agree
that, before the Maoist revolution, there were no magazines, printed books,
or non-religious literature of any kind in Tibet. The only Tibetan language
newspaper was published in Kalimpong by a converted Christian Tibetan. The
source of news of the outside world was travelers and a couple of dozen
shortwave radios that were owned only by members of the ruling class.

  The masses created folklore, but the written language was reserved for
religious dogma and disputes. The masses of people and probably most monks
were kept completely illiterate. Education, outside news and experimentation
were considered suspect and evil.

  Defenders of lamaism act like this religion was the essence of the culture
(and even the existence) of the Tibetan people. This is not true. Like all
things in society and nature, Lamaist Buddhism had a beginning and will have
an end. There was culture and ideology in Tibet before lamaism. Then this
feudal culture and religion arose together with feudal exploitation. It was
inevitable that lamaist culture would shatter together with those feudal
relations.

  In fact, when the Maoist revolution arrived in 1950, this system was
already rotting from within. Even the Dalai Lama admits that the population
of Tibet was declining. It is estimated there were about 10 million Tibetans
1,000 years ago when Buddhism was first introduced--by the time of the
Maoist revolution there were only two or three million left. Maoists
estimate that the decline had accelerated: the population had been cut in
half during the last 150 years.

  The lamaist system burdened the people with massive exploitation. It
enforced the special burden of supporting a huge, parasitic, non-reproducing
clergy of about 200,000--that absorbed 20 percent or more of the region's
young men. The system suppressed the development of productive forces:
preventing the use of iron plows, the mining of coal or fuel, the harvesting
of fish or game, and medical/sanitary innovation of any kind. Hunger, the
sterility caused by venereal disease, and polyandry kept the birthrate low.

  The mystical wrapping of lamaism cannot hide that old Tibetan society was
a dictatorship of the serf owners over the serfs. There is nothing to
romanticize about this society. The serfs and slaves needed a revolution!

  In Part 2:
  Tibet Meets the Maoist Revolution
  Through the 1930s and '40s, a revolutionary people's war arose among the
peasants of central China. Under the leadership of the Communist Party and
its Chairman Mao Tsetung, the revolution won overall state power in the
heavily populated areas of eastern China in 1949. By then, U.S. intrigues
were already starting at China's northern border with Korea, and French
imperialists were launching their colonialist invasion of Vietnam along
China's southern border. Clearly, the Maoist revolutionaries were eager to
liberate the oppressed everywhere in China, and to drive foreign intriguers
from China's border regions.

  But Tibet posed a particular problem: In 1950, this huge region had been
almost completely isolated from the revolutionary whirlwind that swept the
rest of China. There were almost no Tibetan communists. There was no
communist underground among Tibet's serfs. In fact, the serfs of Tibet had
no idea that a revolution was happening elsewhere in their country, or even
that such things as "revolutions" were possible.

  The grip of the lamaist system and its religion was extremely strong in
Tibet. It could not be broken simply by having revolutionary troops of the
majority Han nationality march in and "declare" that feudalism was
abolished! Mao Tsetung rejected the "commandist" approach of "doing things
in the name of the masses." Maoist revolution relies on the masses.

  In Part 2 of this series, we will discuss how Maoist revolution got its
foothold in Tibet, and how the revolution grew into great mass storms that
blew away the lamaist oppression.


  Sources:

  a.. The Anguish of Tibet, ed. Petra Kelly, Gert Bastian and Pat Aeillo,
Parallax Press, Berkeley, 1991. A collection of pro-lamaist essays.
  b.. Avedon, John F. "In Exile from the Land of Snows," in The Anguish of
Tibet. Avedon, an author and Newsweekjournalist, is a prominent apologist
for lamaism.
  c.. Dalai Lama, Freedom in Exile--The Autobiography of the Dalai Lama,
Harper Collins, N.Y., 1990.
  d.. Grunfeld, A. Tom, The Making of Modern Tibet, Zed Books, 1987.
  e.. Grunfeld, A. Tom, "Tibet: Myths and Realities," New China, Fall 1975.
  f.. Gyaltag, Gyaltsen, "An Historical Overview," an essay published in The
Anguish of Tibet. Gyaltsen Gyaltag is a representative of the Dalai Lama in
Europe.
  g.. Han Suyin; Lhasa, the Open City--A Journey to Tibet, Putnam, 1977.
  h.. Hicks, Roger, Hidden Tibet--The Land and Its People, Element Books,
Dorset, 1988.
  i.. China Reconstructs, "Tibet--From Serfdom to Socialism," March 1976.
  j.. Peking Review, "Tibet's Big Leap--No Return to the Old System," July
4, 1975.





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