Tashi Tsering (educator)
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Tashi Tsering (), born in 1929 in Guchok,
Namling County Namling County (; zh, s=南木林县) is a county of Shigatse in the Tibet Autonomous Region, China. Geography Namling is the current administrative name given to the valleys of Oyuk, Tobgyet, and Shang ... ssociated.. with both Buddhism a ...
,
Shigatse prefecture Shigatse, officially known as Xigazê () or Rikaze ( zh, s=日喀则, p=Rìkāzé), is a prefecture-level city of the Tibet Autonomous Region of the People's Republic of China. Its area of jurisdiction, with an area of , corresponds to the histo ...
, and died on in
Lhasa Lhasa, officially the Chengguan District of Lhasa City, is the inner urban district of Lhasa (city), Lhasa City, Tibet Autonomous Region, Southwestern China. Lhasa is the second most populous urban area on the Tibetan Plateau after Xining ...
, is a
Tibet Tibet (; ''Böd''; ), or Greater Tibet, is a region in the western part of East Asia, covering much of the Tibetan Plateau and spanning about . It is the homeland of the Tibetan people. Also resident on the plateau are other ethnic groups s ...
an of peasant origin, author of the autobiography, ''My fight for a modern Tibet, Life story of Tashi Tsering'', where he describes the life he led successively in pre-communist Tibet, in exile in India and the United States, and finally back in China during the
Cultural Revolution The Cultural Revolution, formally known as the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, was a Social movement, sociopolitical movement in the China, People's Republic of China (PRC). It was launched by Mao Zedong in 1966 and lasted until his de ...
, between Tibet and Eastern China in the decades that followed.


Early life


In the village

Tashi Tsering was the son of a poor peasant family living outside Lhasa. They live in a village stone house, the first and second floors are used as living space and the ground floor accommodates the animals. They grow barley and lentils and raise yaks, goats and sheep. The family makes its clothing by spinning wool and weaving it on wooden looms. She uses barter to obtain products like salt. Tashi Tsering's father is a scholar.


At the dance school

In 1939, at the age of 10, he was designated to become a ''gadrugba'' (), a young dancer of the
Gar Gars are an ancient group of ray-finned fish in the family Lepisosteidae. They comprise seven living species of fish in two genera that inhabit fresh, brackish, and occasionally marine waters of eastern North America, Central America and Cuba ...
, traditional dance troupe of the
Dalai Lama The Dalai Lama (, ; ) is the head of the Gelug school of Tibetan Buddhism. The term is part of the full title "Holiness Knowing Everything Vajradhara Dalai Lama" (圣 识一切 瓦齐尔达喇 达赖 喇嘛) given by Altan Khan, the first Shu ...
, also called the dance society of the Tibetan government. It is a servitude traditionally owed by his village and abhorred by all because it almost amounts, for parents, to losing a son. Young Tashi, however, is not unhappy with this situation, even if his mother is desperate: it is in fact the opportunity for him to learn to read and write, his dearest wish. At the dance school the method used by the masters to stimulate the students is to hit them for each mistake they make, as has been done for centuries. Tashi still bears the marks of almost daily corrections. At the age of 13, in 1942, he was whipped in front of the entire troupe for having been absent from a performance: his skin tore, the pain became unbearable. The young dancer makes his way by becoming the ''drombo'' (, literally the 'guest'), that is to say, euphemistically, the “ passive homosexual companion" and according to Goldstein "sex toy"Presentation of the book , taken from ''Publishers Weekly'', on page 4 of the cover: by Wangdu, a monk with
interpersonal skills A social skill is any competence facilitating interaction and communication with others where social rules and relations are created, communicated, and changed in verbal and nonverbal ways. The process of learning these skills is called socia ...
who treats him gently and promotes his intellectual training. But he was kidnapped and sequestered for a few days by a
dob-dob A dob-dob ( or in some sources ''ldab ldob'') is a member of a type of Tibetan Buddhist monk fraternity that existed in Gelug monasteries in Tibet such as Sera Monastery and are reported to still exist in Gelug monasteries today, although possibl ...
and managed to escape, no one having been able to do anything to help him, this ''dob-dob'' being known for his ferocity had always a dagger on him. (according to Jean-Pierre Barou and Sylvie Crossman, these warrior-monks could go so far as to fight among themselves to possess the favors of a cute) Tashi is surprised that such behavior can be tolerated in monasteries: "When I spoke about 'dob-dob' to other monks and monastic leaders, they shrugged their shoulders and simply said that it was the course of things".
Patrick French Patrick Rollo Basil French (28 May 1966 – 16 March 2023) was a British writer, historian and academician. He was the author of several books including: ''Younghusband: the Last Great Imperial Adventurer'' (1994), a biography of Francis Young ...
, who met Tashi Tsering in Lhasa in 1999, where French noted the oppressive atmosphere linked to the massive presence of security forces, indicates that he is not homosexual but that he took advantage of this relationship for personal purposes.Patrick French, ', translated from English by William Oliver Desmond, Albin Michel, 2005, p. 253. During his interview, Tashi Tsering told him that in hindsight, he saw the "sexual practices of ancient Tibet, as a matter of habits and conventions, the accepted social consequence of people exploiting the loopholes of religious rules.". Tashi's mother arranges her son's loveless marriage to Tsebei, a fairly wealthy girl. Tashi therefore goes to live with his in-laws but refuses to be commanded by his father-in-law and his brothers-in-law, who have nothing but contempt for him because of his humble origins. After three months, he left home. As this marriage could not take place without the permission of the head of Gadrugba, Tashi must, to be untied, undergo twenty-five blows of the
whip A whip is a blunt weapon or implement used in a striking motion to create sound or pain. Whips can be used for flagellation against humans or animals to exert control through pain compliance or fear of pain, or be used as an audible cue thro ...
.André Lacroix
Summary of ''The Struggle for Modern Tibet''
In 1947 Tashi, who was eighteen years old, applied for a position as secretary to the treasury of the Potala Palace. Passing the entrance exam, he is assigned to an office headed by two monks and a nobleman. He stayed there for about a year.


In the 1950s

Of the Chinese troops present in Lhasa in 1952, he noted the efficiency and autonomy, declaring that the soldiers would not even have borrowed a needle from the inhabitants. He is fascinated by their practices, which are different from those of the Tibetans: they fish in rivers with a worm on the end of a hook, they collect dog and human droppings to serve as fertilizer in their search for food autonomy, practices that Tashi finds repulsive. He also remembers that a loudspeaker was installed in the heart of the city and broadcast propaganda in the Tibetan language. He is impressed by the achievements of the Chinese: opening of the first primary schools, a hospital and various public buildings in Lhasa. In a short period of time, he sees more improvement than he has seen in his life, or even than Tibet has seen in centuries. Tashi has an affair with a noble girl named Thondrup Dromala. The opposition of the latter's family and the young man's limited resources ultimately got the better of their couple despite the birth of a boy in 1953.Calum MacLeod
2Farchive%2Fold%3Fy%3D2000%26m%3D10%26p%3D10_1 Enter the Dragon: The invasion of Tibet
''The Independent'', 10 October 2000.


Studies


In India (1957–1959)

Resourceful, in 1957 he managed to raise the necessary funds to study in India. He was abroad when the
1959 Tibetan uprising The 1959 Tibetan uprising or Lhasa uprising began on 10 March 1959 as a series of protests in the Tibetan capital of Lhasa, fueled by fears that the Chinese government planned to arrest the Dalai Lama. Over the next ten days, the demonstratio ...
. Robert Barnett
Lhasa: Streets with Memories
p. 18.
He worked closely with exiled Tibetan resistance leaders, in particular an older brother of 14th Dalai Lama
Tenzin Gyatso The 14th Dalai Lama (born 6 July 1935; full spiritual name: Jetsun Jamphel Ngawang Lobsang Yeshe Tenzin Gyatso, shortened as Tenzin Gyatso; ) is the incumbent Dalai Lama, the highest spiritual leader and head of Tibetan Buddhism. He served a ...
,
Gyalo Thondup Gyalo Thondup (; ; – 8 February 2025) was a Tibetan political operator in exile. The second-oldest brother of the 14th Dalai Lama, he was his closest advisor. From 1952 onward, he was based in India. Through the 1950s and 1960s, he worked wi ...
(" Gyalola as we called him"), with whom he befriended. He assists him in welcoming the
Tibetan refugees Tibetan may mean: * of, from, or related to Tibet * Tibetan people, an ethnic group * Tibetan language: ** Classical Tibetan, the classical language used also as a contemporary written standard ** Standard Tibetan, the most widely used spoken diale ...
, without knowing that Gyalo Thondup is financed by the CIA and that he has significant financial resources. One of his tasks is to collect stories of atrocities from refugees. He found very few and most of the refugees he interviewed were illiterate and unable to present their experience in an orderly and logical manner. Many have not even seen the battles waged by the Chinese army in Lhasa. They were caught up in the fear panic that had gripped the entire country. They have no story to tell other than the suffering they endured during their march across the mountain but not at the hands of the Chinese. Ultimately, the accounts recorded by him, along with those from other refugee camps, would be presented by the
International Commission of Jurists The International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) is an international human rights non-governmental organization. It is supported by an International Secretariat based in Geneva, Switzerland, and staffed by lawyers drawn from a wide range of jurisdi ...
in its 1960 report accusing China of atrocities. In 1959, he was charged by his friend Gyalo Thondrup with taking care of part of the Dalai Lama's treasure which had been secured in 1950 in the reserves of
Tashi Namgyal Tashi Namgyal ( Sikkimese: ; Wylie: ''Bkra-shis Rnam-rgyal'') (26 October 1893 – 2 December 1963) was the ruling Chogyal (King) of Sikkim from 1914 to 1963. He was the son of Thutob Namgyal. He was the first independent king of Sikkim. Bio ...
,
maharaja Maharaja (also spelled Maharajah or Maharaj; ; feminine: Maharani) is a royal title in Indian subcontinent, Indian subcontinent of Sanskrit origin. In modern India and Medieval India, medieval northern India, the title was equivalent to a pri ...
of the
Sikkim Sikkim ( ; ) is a States and union territories of India, state in northeastern India. It borders the Tibet Autonomous Region of China in the north and northeast, Bhutan in the east, Koshi Province of Nepal in the west, and West Bengal in the ...
. After the Dalai Lama fled, the Chinese government demanded its return, claiming that it was not the Dalai Lama's property but that of the country, which they now considered as theirs. When Tashi Tsering intervenes, the treasure has just been transported by truck from
Gangtok Gangtok (, ) is the capital and the most populous city of the Indian state of Sikkim. The seat of East Sikkim district, eponymous district, Gangtok is in the eastern Himalayas, Himalayan range, at an elevation of . The city's population of 100 ...
, the capital of
Sikkim Sikkim ( ; ) is a States and union territories of India, state in northeastern India. It borders the Tibet Autonomous Region of China in the north and northeast, Bhutan in the east, Koshi Province of Nepal in the west, and West Bengal in the ...
, to
Siliguri Siliguri (, ; ), also known as Shiliguri, is a major Tier ii cities in india, tier-II city in West Bengal. It forms the twin cities, Twin Cities with the neighbouring city of Jalpaiguri. The city spans areas of the Darjeeling district, Darjeel ...
further south. While the gold is sent by cargo plane to
Calcutta Kolkata, also known as Calcutta (List of renamed places in India#West Bengal, its official name until 2001), is the capital and largest city of the Indian States and union territories of India, state of West Bengal. It lies on the eastern ba ...
, where it is entrusted to banks, the silver is kept with a trusted Tibetan trader, where Tashi must keep it for almost a month before participating in its melting into ingots.


In the United States (summer 1960 – end of 1963)

Tashi Tsering then meets an American student in India, thanks to whom he will be able to study in the United States. Before leaving, he meets the 14th Dalai Lama, who invites him to "be a good Tibetan", to "study seriously" and to "put his education at the service of his people and his country". In July 1961, he arrived in Seattle after spending a year studying English at Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts. He would become one of the interpreters of
Dezhung Rinpoche Dezhung Rinpoche Kunga Tenpai Nyima (), born Kunchok Lhundrup (February 26, 1906 – 1987), was a Tibetan lama of the Sakya school. Sakya is one of four major schools of Tibetan Buddhism, the others being the Nyingma, Kagyu, and Gelug. In 1960 h ...
after the departure of
Thupten Jigme Norbu Thubten Jigme Norbu () (August 16, 1922 – September 5, 2008), recognised as the 16th Taktser Rinpoche, but he was married to a woman in 1960.https://web.archive.org/web/20130401130413/http://globalview.cn/ReadNews.asp?NewsID=15145 达赖的 ...
in June 1962 and would also collaborate with
E. Gene Smith E. Gene Smith (August 10, 1936 – December 16, 2010) was a scholar of Tibetology, specifically Tibetan literature and Tibetan history, history. Life and career Ellis Gene Smith was born in Ogden, Utah to a traditional Mormon family. He stud ...
. He studied on the East Coast then in
Seattle Seattle ( ) is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Washington and in the Pacific Northwest region of North America. With a population of 780,995 in 2024, it is the 18th-most populous city in the United States. The city is the cou ...
in
State of Washington Washington, officially the State of Washington, is a state in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. It is often referred to as Washington State to distinguish it from the national capital, both named after George Washington ...
: his historical readings made him establish a parallel between the Western Middle Ages and the Tibetan society he came from. to leave. It turns out that Tsejen Wangmo Sakya, a young Tibetan (from the important Sakya family) from Seattle, is impregnated by a monk, who refuses to marry her. The young woman's brother asks Tashi to marry Tsejen and recognize the child. The marriage takes place and, a few months later, a boy named Sonam Tsering is born. Despite the incomprehension of his Tibetan friends in exile and his American classmates (including
Melvyn Goldstein Melvyn C. Goldstein (born February 8, 1938) is an American social anthropologist and Tibet scholar. He is a professor of anthropology at Case Western Reserve University and a member of the National Academy of Sciences. His research focuses on T ...
), he decides to return to Tibet to serve the Tibetans who remained in the country. Gyalo Thondrup tries to dissuade him, by promising him material advantages, but in vain. On 10 December 1963, Tashi left Seattle, leaving behind Tsejen and Sonam.


Return to Tibet (1964)

In 1964, he was the first Tibetan exiled in the West to return to Lhasa. He sees himself participating in the creation of a new and modern Tibet. Upon his arrival in China, he was sent some km northwest of Guangzhou, to the Xianyang Tibetan Minority Institute, which houses students. He is part of a class of 40 Tibetans destined to become teachers in Tibet. He accepts Spartan conditions and indoctrination, because he sincerely believes in the merits of communism and hopes that his training will allow him to return to Tibet to teach.


Under the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976)

In 1966, the
Cultural Revolution The Cultural Revolution, formally known as the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, was a Social movement, sociopolitical movement in the China, People's Republic of China (PRC). It was launched by Mao Zedong in 1966 and lasted until his de ...
began.


Revolutionary activism (June 1966 – October 1967)

Convinced that Tibet can only evolve towards a modern society based on egalitarian socialist principles by collaborating with the Chinese, Tashi Tsering becomes
red guard The Red Guards () were a mass, student-led, paramilitary social movement mobilized by Chairman Mao Zedong in 1966 until their abolition in 1968, during the first phase of the Cultural Revolution, which he had instituted.Teiwes According to a ...
. He participated in his first thamzing in June 1966, the leaders of the Xianyang school were humiliated in public by the students. He was one of the students chosen to march in Beijing in front of chairman Mao in September 1966. Residing in Lhasa from December 1966 to March 1967, he then wondered about the progress of the cultural revolution in Tibet. Then he returned to Xianyang in March.


Arrest at the Xianyang school (October 1967 – December 1970)

However, in November 1967, he was in turn denounced as a "counter-revolutionary" and a spy in the pay of the United States. After public humiliations and a conviction without real trial, he found himself in prison among intellectuals and officials, both Han and Tibetan. His stay in a prison in central China is appalling. On 23 March 1970 Tashi was formally accused of treason. In November 1970 he was incarcerated in
Changwu Changwu County () is a county in the central part of Shaanxi province, China, bordering Gansu province to the north, west, and southwest. It is under the administration and occupies the northwest corner of Xianyang City. Administrative divisions ...
prison in
Shaanxi Shaanxi is a Provinces of China, province in north Northwestern China. It borders the province-level divisions of Inner Mongolia to the north; Shanxi and Henan to the east; Hubei, Chongqing, and Sichuan to the south; and Gansu and Ningxia to t ...
. At the beginning of December, he was transferred for three days to Xiangwu prison and then again for three days to Chengdu prison.


Lhasa Prison (December 1970 – May 1973)

He was eventually transferred, in December 1970, to Sangyib Prison in Lhasa, in the Tibet Autonomous Region. He remained there for two and a half years until May 1973. The conditions of detention and the food are improving: each cell is lit by a light bulb, the walls and floor are concrete and dry, he is entitled to three meals a day, butter tea, tsampa, sometimes a little meat. He even has the right to newspapers in Tibetan and Chinese.


Liberation (1973–1976)

In May 1973, Tashi Tsering was released. Always suspicious, he is assigned to manual work that does not suit him. In the fall of 1974, he went to Lhasa to see his parents. There he married Sangyela, a long-time Tibetan friend, very religious, with whom he formed a very united couple. During his long absence, his brother starved to death in prison, while his parents barely managed to survive in a half-destroyed monastery.


Rehabilitation (1977–1978)

Taking advantage of the relaxation of the regime after Deng Xiaoping came to power in 1977, he went to Beijing to demand, and obtain, his complete rehabilitation. Officially rehabilitated in 1978, he began a new life at the age of fifty.


The university professor and the school builder

Tashi Tsering was allowed to return to Tibet in 1981 and became a professor of English at the University of Tibet in Lhasa. He was able to begin writing a trilingual Tibetan-Chinese-English dictionary (which would be published in Beijing in 1988). For her part, his wife obtained a license to sell Chhaang, chang, Tibetan cereal beer. With the Open Door economic policy of Deng Xiaoping, businessmen and tourists arrived in Lhasa, creating a need for English-speaking guides.


Creation of a private English course

Noting that there was no teaching of English in Tibetan schools, he had the idea of opening evening classes in English in Lhasa in September 1985. Success was achieved, he made significant profits which he decided to use to open schools in his region of origin where there was no educational structure.


The schools of the plateau

He then fought to obtain the creation, in his village, of a primary school, which opened its doors in 1990. Building on this success, and to finance the opening of other schools in the canton of Namling, he set up a business in carpets and handicraft items which prospered thanks to foreign visitors. In 1991, a second school opened, in . This is how around fifty primary schools will be founded on the high plateau at his initiative and in collaboration with the county school authorities who distribute the funds, choose the locations, define the size of the schools, as well as with residents who voluntarily provide labor. According to Tsering Woeser who interviewed him, Tashi Tséring is very concerned about the current state of the Tibetan language, but says "if we emphasize the importance of the Tibetan language, we will be accused of narrow nationalism, because according to official government guidelines, the higher the level of Tibetanness, the stronger the level of religious consciousness, and consequently the stronger the reactionary behavior".Woeser
"If Tibetans Took To The Streets For The Tibetan Language"
11 August 2010.


His autobiography

In 1992, having reconnected with Melvyn Goldstein, he returned to the United States to work on his autobiography with his former classmate. His memoirs were finally published in 1997 under the title ''The Struggle for Modern Tibet. The Autobiography of Tashi Tsering'', and under the co-signature of Melvyn Goldstein, William Siebenschuh and Tashi Tsering. When it was released, the book was the only English-language text that could be said to come from a Tibetan living in Tibet (and not in exile). For P. Christiaan Klieger, just as the refugee stories of 1959 had to be reshaped to be understandable and coherent, when Tashi Tsering gave the story of his life in the 1990s, it was in turn shaped but by two interlocutors (Melvyn Goldstein and William Siebenschuch) who believed the world needed to hear another message about Tibet. The castigation inflicted on Tashi Tsering by his Tibetan dance master, his elevation to the rank of official lover of a high-ranking monk, and his desire to work within the framework of Chinese Tibet serve to disrupt the idealized representation of Tibet in vogue among Westerners. For Jamyang Norbu, the impression that emerges from reading Tashi Tsering's biography is that of extreme naivety.


Second audience with the Dalai Lama

In 1994 (at age 65), he met the Dalai Lama again, at the University of Michigan, thirty years after their last meeting. Tashi tells the Dalai Lama that he respects his commitment to non-violence, but also suggests that Tibetans need to know how to oppose the Chinese when their policies seem unreasonable, but that Tibetans also need to learn how to live with them. Tashi further told the Dalai Lama that he believed he was in a unique situation to negotiate an agreement with the Chinese that could be favorable to both the Chinese and the Tibetans, and that both the Chinese and the Tibetans would listen to him. Tashi ardently wished that the Dalai Lama would once again unify his people, end the government in exile and return to Tibet. After listening attentively to Tashi Tsering, the Dalai Lama replied that he himself had thought of most of the ideas that Tashi had just expressed and that he appreciated his advice, but that he did not believe not that the timing is right. Tashi Tsering was neither surprised nor discouraged, but satisfied that he was able to express what he had in mind and that the Dalai Lama listened attentively.


The struggle for education and defense of the Tibetan language

In 2003, Tashi Tsering published his second work, co-authored by William Siebenschuch, on his struggle for education, under the title ''The struggle for education in modern Tibet: the three thousand children of Tashi Tsering''. In 2007, he spoke to the deputies of the autonomous region of Tibet to protest the too little place given to the Tibetan language in higher education and in the administration. In his opinion, schools in Tibet should teach all subjects, including modern science and technology, in Tibetan, to preserve the language. In his official statement submitted to the Tibet Autonomous Region People's Congress in 2007, he wrote: .


Death

Tashi Tsering died on 5 December 2014, in Lhasa, at the age of 85.-tashi-tsering-exemplar-dilemmas-modern-tibet-died-december-5th-aged-85-between Obituary: Tashi Tsering – Between two worlds. Tashi Tsering, exemplar of the dilemmas of modern Tibet, died on December 5th, aged 85
''The Economist'', 20 December 2014.


Works

* With William Siebenschuh, and Melvyn Goldstein,
The Struggle for Modern Tibet: The Autobiography of Tashi Tsering
' , Armonk, N.Y., M. E. Sharpe, Inc., 1997, xi + 207 p. – ''Chinese Edition of The Struggle for a Modern Tibet: the Life of Tashi Tsering'', Mirror Books, Carle Place, N.Y., 2000. * With William Siebenschuch, ''The struggle for education in modern Tibet: the three thousand children of Tashi Tsering'', Volume 88 of Mellen studies in education, E. Mellen Press, 2003,


References


External links


Summary
by André Lacroix, from ''The Struggle for Modern Tibet''
Review of ''The Struggle for Modern Tibet'' and comparative study of various editions
by Xiaoxiao Huang
chapter 10 (''in extenso'') of ''The Struggle for Modern Tibet''
* Jamyang Norbu
ii/ BLACK ANNALS: Goldstein & The Negation Of Tibetan History (Part II)
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tsering, Tashi 1929 births 2014 deaths Tibetan writers Tibetan emigrants to India Washington University in St. Louis alumni Amnesty International prisoners of conscience held by China Victims of the Cultural Revolution People from Lhasa Red Guards Political prisoners in China