-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.zolatimes.com/V3.27/pageone.html
<A HREF="http://www.zolatimes.com/V3.27/pageone.html">Laissez Faire City Times
</A>-----
Laissez Faire City Times
July 5, 1999 - Volume 3, Issue 27
Editor & Chief: Emile Zola
------------------------------------------------------------------------
On the Road in Tibet

by Richard S. Ehrlich


(On his third visit during the past 15 years, Richard S. Ehrlich
recently spent one month in Tibet, including three weeks in Lhasa and a
week in Gyantse and Xigatse. The following is his second report from the
trip.--Zola)

ON THE FRIENDSHIP HIGHWAY, China -- The filth-encrusted Tibetan mother
repeatedly slaps her baby's forehead, trying to smash a fly.

Failing to squash the bug, the mother pinches her wrinkled breast and
shoves it into the baby's mouth, as they speed along on a public bus
through central Tibet.

The Chinese-built, double-lane, paved Friendship Highway takes them
across dramatic flatlands two miles high, wedged between gigantic,
upthrusted mountains of geological trauma, along the turbulent
Brahmaputra River.

The mother checks her infant's blackened T-shirt for lice, and scratches
away tiny, hardened clusters of dirt from his nose, until a nostril
bleeds.

Most of the bus passengers are also idling away the eight hours or so it
takes to travel from Tibet's second-biggest city, Xigatse (Shigatse), to
the capital, Lhasa.

Passengers' conversations are split according to race: the handful of
Chinese men and women speak Mandarin Chinese among themselves or when
they talk to a Tibetan, such as to the bus driver, because most of
China's migrants to this "roof of the world" speak no Tibetan.

Tibetans, who overwhelmingly pack the bus, merrily chat in Tibetan
language. Occasionally, they burst into soft devotional singing –
vaguely reminiscent of American-Indian Navajo chants.

When the bus crosses a bridge over the river, near the journey's
mid-point, they gasp the famous Buddhist prayer, "Om mani padme hum."

Some Tibetans fling pieces of colored, square tissue paper adorned with
woodblock-printed prayers out of the bus windows, so the wind can spiral
their pleas down the steep stone gorge and into the river, and beyond.

Prayers and Popcorn

Those passengers were the ones who bought inch-thick stacks of the
colored tissue paper -- in large squares or small, depending on budget
-- from a Tibetan woman covered in sweaters who sold the prayers that
morning along with popcorn, soft drinks and other treats for the long
bus journey.

Traffic, meanwhile, is light on The Friendship Highway.

A rumbling convoy of about a dozen, Chinese Peoples' Liberation Army
vehicles pass in the opposite direction every once in a while, mostly
big dull-green trucks covered with tarpaulin, and followed by a couple
of fuel tankers.

The highway's pit stops include small, rectangular, military garrisons
where uniformed Chinese troops do calisthenics in front of bleak
buildings topped by a satellite dish and China's red flag.

At the start of the bus journey, hotels in Xigatse bore posters in
English warning "independent" foreign travellers not to travel by public
bus, otherwise they would suffer a huge fine and expulsion from Tibet
--and cause severe punishment to bus drivers who disobeyed the ban.

As a result, many foreigners apply for a "permit" to cruise Tibet in an
official "group," inside expensive, hired Landrovers driven by Tibetans
from travel agencies. Some foreigners do try their luck on public
busses, hitch rides on trucks, or bravely set out on bicycles or on
foot.

The bus charges about five US dollars for the 250-kilometer, 7 a.m. to 3
p.m. ride northeast from Xigatse to Lhasa.

The driver of this bus, worried when he saw a taboo foreigner climb
aboard in Xigatse, blurted, "No, no! Police."

When his warning was ignored, however, he simply shifted into gear. His
apparent lack of real worry was similar to the security forces who never
closely scrutinized the bus or its passengers during the trip.

Confident Control

Chinese security forces, who allegedly killed one million Tibetans
during the past 40 years, instead appear extremely confident about their
control over Tibet, reflecting their ever-stregthening position since
crushing a bloody 1959 anti-Chinese uprising.

Today the only visible weapons displayed in Xigatse and Lhasa are a
scattering of Chinese-made AK-47 assault rifles -- some fitted with a
bayonet blade -- which are held by young, green-uniformed soldiers who
guard military bases, bridges, banks and other key installations.

On a bridge near Lhasa, some Chinese troops appear bored by the lack of
threat, so they giggle and goosestep in bright sunshine while crossing
the road, for their own amusement.

The only potential violence on the bus erupts when one loud, uniformed
Chinese soldier threatens to kick his camouflaged tennis shoe into the
face of the Tibetan bus conductor, apparently because of a missed stop.

Many Tibetans in the cities and countryside, however, are armed with
knives.

The rugged, extroverted Khampa tribe's men, who appear to average six
feet tall, are especially keen on carrying a traditional dagger or
machete, often stashed in an ornately hammered silver sheath, worn on
their belt or sash.

Khampas are infamous for their drunken knife fights, sometimes as a
result of bad gambling, and were the tribe of choice during the 1960s
when the US Central Intelligence Agency brought Tibetans to Colorado,
trained them as anti-Chinese rebels, gave them weapons and other
equipment, and inserted them back into Tibet.

That secret, multi-million dollar, US-backed guerrilla war sputtered
along with minimal success and scattered bloodshed, until it was
canceled by US President Richard Nixon who met Chinese Chairman Mao
Zedong in 1972 in Beijing to improve US-Chinese relations.

Yak Manure

All through those years, however, China continued to destroy Tibet.

The passing countryside still reveals the rubble of priceless
monasteries obliterated by the Chinese, especially during their
disastrous 1965 to 1976 Cultural Revolution.

Many of Tibet's enormous, white-washed, fortress-like, stone monasteries
are now little more than stubby piles of deteriorating brown bricks,
stubbornly clinging to craggy mountaintops or along the river.

Other monasteries are being painstakingly reconstructed, and rise from
the rubble as reborn outposts of Tibetan Buddhism.

Impoverished Tibetans who survived China's purges, crackdowns and
communist experiments, now struggle just to survive.

Many of the Tibetan villages along this route are protected by walls
covered with hand-pressed yak manure, which is dried to be burned as
fuel for cooking and warmth, because firewood is scarce.

One fierce-eyed Tibetan woman on the bus has brought with her a stack of
the valuable dish-sized dung disks in a big woolen bag.

All of the passengers are delighted when the bus stops for lunch. Some
Tibetans use their right hand to scoop up moistened "tsampa" barley
flour, and gnaw big chunks of dried yak meat.

Chinese passengers prefer fried vegetables, meat and rice.

Potala Palace

In the afternoon, the bus finally barrels into Lhasa's valley. The huge,
1,000-room Potala Palace suddenly appears in the distance, rising on an
isolated, prehistoric plateau above the surrounding flatland. No longer
home to the Dalai Lama, the Potala Palace is now a museum run by the
Chinese government.

But the palace's approaching silhouette awes passengers who point and
feel thankful that their journey will soon safely end.

The Friendship Highway ribbons about 725 kilometers, linking Lhasa with
Tibet's southern neighbor, Nepal, where a Friendship Bridge allows
further travel to and from Kathmandu.

After the bus eventually arrives in Lhasa, at the main station alongside
the Kyi Chu River, some Tibetan passengers decide to pilgrimage to the
Potala Palace to kowtow in prayer.

Both Tibetan and Chinese might also pose for snapshots in front of the
Potala Palace, where the Chinese have built a tacky, smaller version of
Beijing's Tiananmen Square.

While the Potala Palace provides a magnificent backdrop, the square in
front is bordered by shops selling Kodak and Fuji film, Coca-Cola and
Pabst Blue Ribbon beer. A big neon-lit discotheque, "JJ's," dominates
the square in the evening.

For many of the bus passengers, Lhasa is bright lights, big city.



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

Richard S. Ehrlich has a Master's Degree in Journalism from Columbia
University, and is the co-author of the classic book of epistolary
history, Hello My Big Big Honey!—Love Letters to Bangkok Bar Girls and
Their Revealing Interviews. His web page is located at
http://members.tripod.com/~ehrlich.

-30-

from The Laissez Faire City Times, Vol 3, No 27, July 5, 1999
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Published by
Laissez Faire City Netcasting Group, Inc.
Copyright 1998 - Trademark Registered with LFC Public Registrar
All Rights Reserved
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to