Far, far from the China Sea, it seems like I just landed in North America. BUT, as you can read, nearly two months have passed. Life's tidal movement pulled me forward and soon the travels in China and Tibet moved further and further into memory. Today, I write from Chattanooga, Tennessee where the leaves of Fall are just beginning to turn and Wal-Mart is big. I carry my great-niece and hope that she too will experience the fullness of life as I have.
Since returning to the U.S. I have traveled to the other edge of the Pacific Ocean in Oregon and California, been wine tasting in the Anderson Valley of Mendocino County (California; highly recommended), traveled through San Francisco and Marin County, been to the retreat center of Chagdud Gonpa in Northern California, a wonderful few days in Portland, Oregon. Many people have been interested in wanting to know what I experienced. Some wanted to know about the Tibetan experience, some about China; but most just want the 5 minute sound bite. What is amazing is the lack of curiosity. Sometimes I think it is a desire to respect my privacy and not be too intrusive; at other other times I think it is indicative of our time and cultural: self-focused and not interested in the greater world.
A friend of mine has made a couple of trips to Tibet and made an interesting comment that I'd like you to consider. He said that half of the monks in some of the monasteries aren't really monks, but employees of the Chinese government that are spying for the government. This seems like a preposterous statement and feeds into the image from the Cultural Revolution of a despotic and genocidal government. But even if this isn't true, what does this type of thinking do? It creates doubt. Given the history, if there was even a chance that this was true, what would people's actions be? It creates doubt and doubt restricts our actions. We become our own censors.
Then the Chinese government does things that makes me wonder what is really going on there. If you want an interesting read at about a recent event, go to Mikhel Dunham's blog at http://www.mikeldunham.blogs.com/. You'll need to page about a third the way down to read the piece Samye Monastery as Disneyworld.
Or what about them denying lamas visas to return to Tibet? Or the fact that I could post but not read my blog in China. Many little pieces to remind us that they have a different socio-political world that they operate within. As people from the U.S., we are known as people who share their thoughts and feelings more openly than many people. We have not had the repercussions that the Tibetans, Mongolians, or others have experienced. (There is another book that you might want to read: A Tibetan Revolutionary: The Political Life and Times of Bapa Phuntso Wangye b
Thursday, October 11, 2007
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