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Why China is frightened of horses

Lindsey Hilsum

Published 07 August 2008

The Communist Party doesn't believe in anything - not in God, nor ghosts, nor spirits - so why are they so afraid of a picture?

As Beijing prepared for the Olympics, I set off for Rongwu, in the Chinese province of Qinghai, where last spring's Tibetan uprising started. The roadblocks which had stopped journalists from reporting events have been dismantled, and we evaded the security forces by never staying more than one night in the same place.

The police and soldiers may have withdrawn, but we saw one monk who still had handcuff marks on his wrists. He was too scared to speak. Another told us that the abbot of Rongwu is released from custody during the daytime, but is still held by the police at night.

"They came with pistols and told us not to move and not to talk," said a monk, looking around nervously - the monasteries are full of spies. "We're very afraid. It happened to us before, so it could happen again."

On 11 February, on the hills above their monastery, monks from Rongwu held an incense-burning ceremony which - according to the Tibetan writer Woeser - was disrupted by the police. Monks started shouting independence slogans and calling for the return of the Dalai Lama. Many were arrested, and unrest spread throughout the region, culminating in the 14 March riots in Lhasa and subsequent protests across the Tibetan parts of China.

The Chinese government blames what it calls the "Dalai clique", and continues to accuse the Dalai Lama of instigating violence, even while trying to appease international opinion by holding low-level talks with his aides. The "working groups" took down pictures of the man Tibetan Buddhists revere, but in the monasteries we visited, the monks had put them back up again.

"The Communist Party doesn't believe in anything - not in God, nor ghosts, nor spirits - so why are they so afraid of a picture?" asked one.

"In my heart, the Dalai Lama is as precious as the stars and the moon in the sky," explained another. "Without him, the world would be dark. I'm willing to give up my life for him."

Chinese government officials frequently say that foreign critics do not understand the complexity of the historical relationship between China and Tibet, but the "patriotic education" campaign in Qinghai appears to have been crude, to say the least.

"The government handed out a survey, asking people to choose between 'A: Dalai Lama is good' and 'B: Dalai Lama is bad'. Many returned it blank," said one man. "It's hard to choose. If we choose A, we get into trouble with the government, but we can't choose B, because he's great."

More than anything, the Chinese government fears that Tibetans will air their grievances during the Olympic Games. The annual summer horse festivals have been banned - ast August, a Tibetan called Ronggyal Adrak leapt on stage at the Litang Horse Festival demanding independence and the return of the Dalai Lama. Tens of thousands of Tibetans gathering this year would mean an even greater potential for protest. Only small, local festivals are allowed.

At one, I watched half a dozen little boys gallop bareback across the grasslands, their horses decorated with the silky scarves known as hadas. They raced different horses through the day, watched by admiring families of Tibetans, the women wearing traditional, heavy, coral-and-turquoise necklaces, often over cheap, mass-produced Chinese T-shirts.

The modern world has impinged on the grasslands, with nearly as many motorbikes as horses at the festival. Roads are good, people eat packaged noodles as well as the traditional tsampa, mobile phones work even in nomadic summer pastures. The Beijing government, and many Han Chinese people, cannot understand why the Tibetans are not happy to see such progress.

A monk tried to explain: "The party secretary of the county came and called for a meeting. He said: 'Life is so good and you still rioted. It's your own fault.' I don't agree. We have our own thoughts. All Tibetans want our own country."

They're not going to get it: the Chinese government is too strong and too determined. But its project to make the Tibetan people reject the Dalai Lama is futile. You cannot force people to hate what they love more than anything.

At a recent meeting, a senior Chinese official grew angry about western reporting on Tibet. "We, the Chinese, are the victims!" he spat out angrily. "We are the victims of the Dalai Lama's campaign and the western media!"

It's hard to see a nuclear power with the largest army in the world as a victim - especially as 80 heads of state arrive to celebrate its big Olympic party - but the sentiment shows the Chinese government's defensiveness and feelings of vulnerability over Tibet. The only hope is that one day China will be confident enough to relax and allow Tibetans genuine autonomy and to worship as they wish.

Lindsey Hilsum is the China correspondent for Channel 4 News

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5 comments from readers

David Edenden
07 August 2008 at 12:25

Why is China afraid of horses?

laygpot
07 August 2008 at 12:31

The article is great. Just a factual correction. The Tibetan uprising did not begin at Rongwu. It started on March 10 at Lhasa, where monks and nuns tried to protest but were beaten up and arrested. March 10 is the anniversary of the Tibetan uprising in Lhasa in 1959. Thanks for writing this article anyway.

Lewis B
10 August 2008 at 03:16

I believe Hilsum was making an arcane analogy. The oldest most intractable problem in Chinese foreign relations was the various dynasties relations with the horsemen from Central Asia--the temporal boundaries of this problem was 1150BCE-1750CE. It was only ended with the Qing and Russian conquest of the area and its subsequent division between them that provided a solution. Regardless of ideology Chinese revolutionary nationalists have loved the imperial boundaries established by the last dynasty and would, in their heart of hearts like to extend it to its former extent beyond the Ussuri River.

linkagewell
13 August 2008 at 06:34

Ms Hilsum, you quote the saying of a monk : "The party secretary of the county came and called for a meeting. He said: 'Life is so good and you still rioted. It's your own fault.' I don't agree. We have our own thoughts. All Tibetans want our own country."

I do not know if this monk said these words or not.

But I know that Tibet and Dalai Lama is only a chess between China and Western countries.

To let Tibet independent from China, to deter the development of China is in the interest of them. But to keep Tibet in Chinese territory is in the interest of China. The saying to respect human rights and to respect Tibetan's religious freedom etc is only your protext use to cheat innocent people. In fact, western countries never respected people's freedom or human rights or they would not invade Iraq. So in fact, the Tibet problem is a problem of the interest, or money.

Guy Bellairs
13 August 2008 at 13:46

Nobody in the West has heard of the Western Development Project, which channels taxation from prosperousEastern Chinese provinces to the poor, backward Western ones. Tibet receives its fair share of this bounty, which is helping its economy emerge from its previous poverty-ridden and illiterate state. Tibet pays no taxes to China - in fact it is a financial burden on Beijing. Independence would be an absolue economic and social disaster. The Panchung (?) Lama, traditionally responsible for Tibet's economic and logistic aspects, realises this and is friendly with the Chinese Government. Guy Bellairs

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About the writer

Lindsey Hilsum

Lindsey Hilsum is China Correspondent for Channel 4 News. She has previously reported extensively from Africa, the Middle East, the Balkans and Latin America.

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