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Full text of ' CO u5 CO the revoll' in tibet FRANK MORAES the macmillan company new york 1960 Frank Moraes 1960 All rights reserved no part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a re- viewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review written for inclusion in magazine or newspaper. First Printing The Macmillan Company, New York Brett-Macmillan Ltd., Gait, Ontario Printed in the United States of America Library of Congress catalog card number: 60-6644 for peter and lily foreword Communist China's brutal seizure of Tibet has roused re- vulsion and indignation throughout the free countries of Asia and in the democratic world. This book deals with the events in Tibet which led finally to the Dalai Lama's flight, and with the relations between China and Tibet. It also offers a brief survey of Tibet's history and people, together with an assessment of the impact made by the Communist aggres- sion in Asia, particularly on India. FRANK MORAES contents ONE Flight from Lhasa i TWO Roof of the World 32 THREE The Dragon Leaps Forward 64 FOUR Land of Lamas 94 FIVE India, China, and Tibet 117 SIX The World Outside 144 SEVEN Han Imperialism 172 EIGHT Agonizing Reappraisal 197 With the Dalai Lama (A Postscript) 220 the revolt in tibet THE FLIGHT OF THE DALAI LAMA BHUTAN OTawang Right from lhasa CHAPTER ONE A gray-brown mist of swirling sand enveloped the Nor- bulingka, summer abode of the Dalai Lama at Lhasa. It was the evening of March 17, 1959. All that morning, while the Kashag * and the Tsongdu f debated whether the twenty-four-year-old God-king should leave Lhasa, the sun had shone brightly on the tiled roofs of the massive gateways and on the poplars in the gay green park and gardens surrounding the palace.

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Inside the palace the members of the Tsongdu and the Kashag had been debat- ing since March i ith whether Tibet's stability and the Dalai * The Tibetan Cabinet comprising six ministers, two of them monks. They are appointed by the Dalai Lama, and outwardly the Kashag is the supreme administrative body. The six ministers are known as shapes or kalons, but the monks who are the senior members are called Kalon Lamas.

The four lay members are nobles. FThe Tsongdu is the National, or Grand, Assembly, a nominated body comprising 350 high officials, including the abbots of the three Great Monas- teries of Drepung, Sera, and Ganden, whose views have great authority. The Tsongdu meets whenever important matters are referred to it by the Dalai Lama or the Kashag. Minitool power data recovery full. 2 The Revolt in Tibet Lama's safety lay in yielding to the increasingly peremptory threats of the Chinese or in flight.

The crisis, simmering for some months, had boiled over on March loth. About four weeks earlier the Dalai Lama had agreed to attend a cultural show in the auditorium of the Chinese military headquarters at Lhasa.

This was in no way abnormal; for, although relations between him and the Chinese authorities had grown cool since he had evaded their demand to deploy his bodyguard of five thousand men against the rebellious Khamba tribesmen, who had been en- gaged in intermittent guerrilla warfare against the Chinese for over three years, their dealings with each other had been polite and even superficially cordial. By February the war- like Khambas, whose revolt began late in 1955 * n *he dis- trict of Kanze in the border region of Szechwan, had spilled over the Sino-Tibetan frontier, and were harassing Chinese outposts within less than fifty miles of Lhasa. Chinese efforts to inveigle the Living Buddha into moving his troops against them had failed. A showdown was inevitable. It came early in the first week of March when a letter from Lieutenant General Tan Kuan-san, political commissar of the Chinese Army units in Tibet, was delivered with calcu- lated indifference to Tibetan protocol, directly to the Dalai Lama. It curtly called on the God-king to present himself un- escorted at the Chinese military headquarters of General Chang Ching-wu, the Peking Government's representative in Tibet. There was consternation at the Norbulingka when the contents of the letter became known.