Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company
The New York Times
December 8, 2004 Wednesday
Late Edition - Final
SECTION: Section A; Column 3; Foreign Desk; LETTER FROM ASIA; Pg. 4
LENGTH: 990 words
HEADLINE: Shangri-La No More: The Dragons Have Settled In
BYLINE: By Howard W. French
DATELINE:
BODY:
They string brilliantly colored flags from the mountaintops here in this land
of impossibly crisp blue skies.
Here and there, one finds mounds of smooth, flat rocks, lovingly piled, each
inscribed with its own Buddhist scriptural narrative. Water wheels are planted
in fast-moving streams, not to harness energy but to turn wooden cylinders
laden with scripture. Old women sit on doorsteps in the fading evening light
kneading and turning their prayer beads.
Visitors to
But after driving for a week, covering nearly 1,000 miles across the region,
the largest expanse of high altitude territory in the world, a traveler could
see clearly that new influences are being felt in this ancient land.
Some are on display at the cream and toffee colored
Three days a week, Tibetans arrive by the thousands, just as they always have,
dressed in crimson robes or, more often, well-worn rags, leaning on walking
sticks or clutching babies. Many of them have journeyed a week or more in order
to make the pilgrimage, often traveling from villages so remote they are not
served by roads, yet they wear looks of beatitude upon arrival at the palace.
But these days the palace is choked with other, untraditional visitors, Chinese
tourists from the east, armed with noisy cellphones
and flashing cameras. On the sidewalk in front of the palace these days sit two
large concrete dragons, symbols of
They are the vanguard of an invasion of commercialism that has raised a
pressing question: can an ancient and distinctive culture steeped in religion
maintain its life style and identity in the face of an onslaught of Chinese
bearing what Tibetans regard as godless materialism and chauvinism backed by
the power of the state?
It would seem to be no contest, this struggle between cultures, faiths and
peoples. On one side are
Everywhere one turns in
The Chinese government is well practiced in the phrases of fraternal harmony
and cooperation. In Bayi, county seat of 26,000
nestled amid 15,000-foot peaks near the Indian border in eastern
In the center of town, smart new apartment towers are going up, too, a
duplicate in miniature of the urban development under way almost everywhere in
eastern
For visitors and settlers from the east, maintaining the pretense that ethnic
Tibetans and Han Chinese constitute one nation, never mind one people, requires
too much effort to sustain. When a foreigner showed interest in a Tibetan
prayer wheel at a souvenir shop on one of Bayi's main
streets, the Han shopkeeper began spinning it the wrong way, counterclockwise.
Told of his error, he snorted: ''That's a Tibetan thing. I'm from
Another day, on a long hike in the mountains with a Chinese television crew in
tow, a Beijing TV reporter, frustrated at the inability of even young villagers
to speak Chinese, turned to an American and said in her language, with no irony
intended, ''It seems as if they are even more foreign than you!''
For now, off the beaten path, signs of Han cultural dominance still fade
quickly. The riot of Chinese characters omnipresent on billboards and signs
throughout
In one tiny village, Xiuba, a cluster of 15 Tibetan
farming families atop a bluff overlooking a new highway, not a soul could
comfortably hold an extended conversation in Chinese. The village was home to
five towering stone pillars, religious monuments said to be more than 1,000
years old.
While girls looked on giggling, Zhaxi, a 22-year-old
junior high school graduate, wore a pained look as he struggled to answer
potentially perilous questions from a stranger: How was your history being
taught and your culture preserved?
''There are some differences between our own beliefs and the way we are
taught,'' he said, diplomatically. ''You could say we have many legends and
tales which are not taught to us in school.''
URL: http://www.nytimes.com
GRAPHIC: Photos: The scene outside the
Under the heavy Chinese influence, cellphones have
caught on with Tibetans, too. (Photo by Peter Parks/Agence
France-Presse--Getty Images)
LOAD-DATE: December 8, 2004