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Forty
years ago, in March 1959, Tibetans revolted against Chinese
rule, resulting in Beijing using massive force to crush the
uprising. The then 24-year-old Dalai Lama had to escape to
India to seek refuge. Thousands of Tibetans followed him into
what was to become their new homeland.
Then prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru offered Dharamsala to
house the Dalai Lama and some of his people who would start
work on both rehabilitating the refugees and working for their
country's freedom.
The
location was ideal. Up in the lower Himalayas, at a cool 1700
metres, it was ideal for the Tibetans not used to the oppressive
heat of the plains. However, the vast majority of Tibetans
would settle down in Karnataka where the state government
gave them land to cultivate, get used to the heat, and prosper.
When
the Dalai Lama set up his office and residence in Mcleodganj,
it was just another hill station left behind by the British,
who would march up every year in summer. A small chapel, the
St John's Church in the Wilderness, was mute testimony to
their presence in a bygone era.
"It
was all jungle then, trees after trees and very few people,"
said Tsultrim Palden, head, environmental desk, Tibetan Central
Administration, the official name of the Tibetan government-in-exile.
Few people visited the place, and the Tibetan government in
exile was still working overtime to gain legitimacy and acceptance
in the eyes of the world. Tourism to India was still not very
big, and the little that did come preferred the better known
hill stations of Kullu Manali in Himachal Pradesh.
Mcleodganj
was a Tibetan locality, with most Indians preferring the main
town of Dharamsala. Tibet's unique culture, language, and
lifestyle continued as it had for centuries on the high Tibetan
plateau -- in splendid isolation, cut off from the rest of
the world. They thrived.
Then,
from the mid-1980s onwards, Tibet and Buddhism became causes
celebre! The David against Goliath China, lambs massacred
by Communist wolves. Artists, celebrities, politicians (usually
the ones out of power), you name it, all spoke of Tibet. And
of Buddhism. The Dalai Lama winning the Nobel for Peace in
1989 only fuelled the drive. Big names -- Richard Gere, Goldie
Hawn, Roberto Baggio -- converted to Buddhism and proclaimed
the Dalai Lama their spiritual guru.
A
visit to the Namgyal monastery of the Dalai Lama is also a
must (a site advertised in the Himachal Pradesh tourist brochure)
though a meeting with His Holiness requires a three-month
notice. However, every year, the Dalai Lama holds classes
on meditation in the month of March, and hundreds land up
in Mcleodganj only to hear him. "There is no doubt that the
interest of these tourists is what has given the Tibetan case
so much interest worldwide and we welcome it," said a Tibetan
Central Administration official. Many of the Western tourists
are in one way luckier than the Tibetans whom they meet in
Mcleodganj: they have been to Tibet which most Tibetans find
impossible to do, given the reluctance of the Chinese embassy
to issue visas to them.
It
is this interest in the Dalai Lama, Buddhism, and Tibet (not
necessarily in that order) that keeps alive the Tibetan dream
of seeing their country acquire freedom from the Chinese yoke
and of their triumphant return. And if and when that happens,
Mcleodganj will always be revered for the small role it played
in keeping alive Tibetan culture and for popularising it throughout
the world. It will be a debt of gratitude owed by succeeding
generations of Tibetans.
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