[There are skeptics of this
approach. Global Times, a nationalistic, state-run newspaper, ran an article in its English edition citing an
expert based in Tibet who said, in the newspaper’s
words, that “it’s hard to identify such people because separatism is an ideological
issue and is usually difficult to spot during recruitment simply through their
words and deeds.”]
The Dalai Lama, the Tibetan spiritual leader, in Credit Ashwini Bhatia/Associated Press |
BEIJING — The Chinese Communist Party in
central Tibet is aiming to peer into the hearts of
its members to hunt down secret worshipers of theDalai Lama or people who secretly hold religious
beliefs.
That seemingly difficult
mission was laid out by the party chief of the Tibet Autonomous Region, Chen
Quanguo, in a question-and-answer published online by the party’s
central anticorruption and discipline agency.
“We must severely punish those
party members and cadres who don’t have firm beliefs and ideals, who don’t
share the same mind with the party and the people, who have ‘two faces’ when it
comes to the important question of what’s right and wrong,” Mr. Chen said,
according to the transcript of the question-and-answer session that was
published on Monday.
Mr. Chen said it was important
to go after party members who “pretend not to be religious but indeed are” and
those who “follow the clique of the 14th Dalai Lama.” He emphasized that party
investigators should seek out members who have gone to India , where the Dalai Lama lives,
to “worship” him or ones who send their children or other relatives to schools
run by the Dalai Lama.
There are skeptics of this approach. Global Times, a
nationalistic, state-run newspaper, ran an article in its English edition citing an
expert based in Tibet who said, in the newspaper’s
words, that “it’s hard to identify such people because separatism is an ideological
issue and is usually difficult to spot during recruitment simply through their
words and deeds.”
The expert also said, again in the newspaper’s words, that the
Dalai Lama “has been deodorizing his image, and local governments should
provide more information of his activities in a transparent and open manner.”
Global Times did not name the expert.
The party has vilified the widely revered Dalai Lama, 80, the
Tibetan spiritual leader, since he fled to India in 1959, saying he is plotting
Tibetan independence even though he has insisted he wants only self-autonomy
for the Tibetans, as guaranteed in the Chinese Constitution. The Dalai Lama’s
image is generally banned from mainland China and Tibetan regions, though local
officials occasionally allow people to openly display it.
Each year, many Tibetans and even some ethnic Han, the dominant
group in China , try to go to Dharamsala , India , to seek the Dalai Lama’s
blessing or to hear him speak. Many Buddhist institutions of learning have been
established by Tibetans in Dharamsala.
Since a widespread uprising of
Tibetans in 2008, Chinese officials have tried to clamp down on the border
between Tibet and Nepal to prevent most Tibetan
pilgrims from leaving via a popular route. In 2012, security officers in Tibet detained hundreds of people returning from a Kalachakra religious
teaching ceremony in India over which the Dalai Lama had
presided. The ceremony is sometimes held in India , and officials had turned a
blind eye to some Tibetans seeking to attend, but the 2012 mass detention
showed that Mr. Chen, an ethnic Han, and other regional leaders were intent on
taking a harder line.
Mr. Chen said in the question-and-answer transcript that officials in the Tibet
Autonomous Region, which includes Lhasa and the central Tibetan
plateau, had uncovered 19 cases of violations of political discipline and had
punished 20 people. “In 2015, not one person from the Tibet Autonomous Region
has gone to the 14th Dalai Lama’s prayer sessions,” he said.
In August, an official
publication of the party’s Organization Department, which manages postings for
party members, said the party in central Tibet was tightening discipline. The
publication, China
Organization and Human Resources News, said the party there had
issued a policy called the “six absolutely don’t-use,” which described criteria
for rejecting potential party members or officials. Those include people who
have gone abroad to “worship” the Dalai Lama or to prayer sessions and
teachings, as well as ones who “intentionally manufacture ethnic conflict or
disrupt ethnic unity.”
Though the party denounces the Dalai Lama, it has insisted that he must reincarnate after his
death, rebutting declarations by the current Dalai Lama that he may be the last
one. The party is seeking to control the reincarnation process so it can give
the title of Dalai Lama to someone whom it can control, as it has done with the
Panchen Lama.
Two decades ago, officials took a 6-year-old boy, Gendun Choekyi Nyima, from his home in Tibet after the Dalai Lama said he
was the reincarnation of the Panchen Lama, the second-ranking figure in the
Gelugpa school of Tibetan Buddhism . The party then installed its
own boy as the reincarnation.
In September, an official in
the party’s United Front Work Department in Tibet , Norbu Dunzhub, made a rare reference to the boy who had vanished in 1995,
now 26. The official said he “is being educated, living a normal life, growing
up healthily and does not wish to be disturbed.”
Mia
Li contributed research.