• Article: After 75 years, the Dalai Lama is more important than ever.

    From Peter Terpstra@21:1/5 to All on Tue Apr 19 08:56:16 2016
    XPost: hk.politics, soc.culture.china, soc.culture.indian
    XPost: soc.culture.usa, talk.politics.tibet

    After 75 years, the Dalai Lama is more important than ever
    February 24, 2015 1.31am EST

    It is three quarters of a century since the Dalai Lama’s coronation as
    the temporal and spiritual leader of Tibet. He is now almost 80-years-old
    and still presents a dilemma for Western leaders, who routinely come under pressure from Beijing not to meet him whenever he visits their countries.

    His appearance with Barack Obama at the US’s National Prayer Breakfast on February 5 2015 was a perfect example. The media coverage and scholarly exchanges that swirled around the event focused on whether the White
    House should receive the Dalai Lama at all – and what the costs of a presidential meeting with the Tibetan leader might ultimately be.

    There was also naturally a reassessment of the Dalai Lama’s goals and achievements, and the same old criticisms of him surfaced once again.

    Under attack

    The Dalai Lama’s critics principally point to his failure to change
    Chinese policies on Tibet. This is superficially accurate: even after two drawn-out dialogue processes (1979-1986 and 2002-2009) and an international campaign run by Tibetan exiles since 1987, Beijing has not let go of
    its demand that the Dalai Lama simply accept the status quo. The only flexibility was on whether he could live in Beijing or Lhasa, as opposed
    to his current exile in Dharamshala, in India.

    But blaming him for the lack of a breakthrough is also intellectually
    lazy. If we were being honest, we would lay the blame primarily at China,
    with its the colonialist hardline stance, and hypocritical Western “champions” of freedom and human rights who do all too little to
    protect them.

    And while a breakthrough with Beijing has eluded the Dalai Lama, he has
    done nothing to make some future reconciliation less likely. His positions
    have been anything but uncompromising: since discarding independence
    as a goal in the late 1970s, he has three times redefined his vision
    of autonomy for Tibet (a Hong Kong-style “One Country, Two System”
    status) in the early 1980s, 1988 and 2008. Each time, it was the Dalai
    Lama who climbed down on the scope of autonomy, and converged more and
    more with existing Chinese constitutional provisions.

    He also has not alienated the Chinese mainstream by presiding over a bloody intifada against them, and has so forcefully counselled non-violence to
    the Tibetans that many inside Tibet now promote it as an essential norm
    of being Tibetan.

    Ultimately, the Dalai Lama will leave the Tibetans as a nation in a far
    better place than they were when he took the helm. He has also behind a
    less poisoned politics for future generations, and the full impact of his legacy will be felt if ever a less conservative regime comes to power in Beijing – a big ask, obviously, but hardly inconceivable.

    Fear not

    There are those who believe that the Dalai Lama’s meetings with foreign leaders encourage naive Tibetans to carry out self-defeating protests, provoking China into hardening its policies. But there is no hard
    causal evidence for this, outside of weak correlations and unconvincing anecdotes. And while these meetings do hold symbolic political value for
    the Tibetans, they are only a part of the Dalai Lama’s agenda.

    He has all manner of cultural, economic, social, educational projects
    underway, including resettlement and scholarships for Tibetan refugees
    and financial assistance for their cultural, educational, health and
    social projects. These are all the more important since as things stand,
    any top-level political rapprochement is clearly a long way off.

    The combination of economic troubles at home and China’s greater assertiveness, backed up by its fantastically deep pockets, has led a
    number of Western leaders, including even the Pope, to avoid contact with
    the Dalai Lama altogether.

    But the evidence shows that their fears of Chinese retaliation are mostly unfounded. Recent academic studies of the “Dalai Lama effect” have
    found that the economic penalty for meeting the Dalai Lama is small and fleeting or non-existent – and that there is no dividend for compliance
    with Beijing either.

    Given the costs are minimal, there is no real reason why Western leaders
    should defy China and meet with the Dalai Lama. And there are a number
    of pressing reasons why they should.

    Stand up and be counted

    Beijing’s realpolitik is based on a bet that whichever party buckles
    first will find itself under diplomatic pressure on a broader range of
    issues. This explains why weaker and divided European states have come
    under more pressure for hosting the Dalai Lama than the US and India have: China simply sees them as easier diplomatic marks.

    But for the many European nations jealously guarding their sovereignty
    against what they see as the excesses of the EU, it makes no sense to
    let Beijing’s preferences dictate who they can or cannot meet.

    These meetings and other types of support also give Western governments
    some leverage over the political goals and strategies of the Tibetans,
    which in turn provides another check against Chinese-Tibetan relations descending into open conflict. As the eruptions of 2008 showed, these
    third parties could find themselves on the horns of a far deadlier
    dilemma than the current one, forced to pick sides in a dispute marked
    by out-and-out violence.

    But the biggest reason of all to keep engaging with the Dalai Lama is
    that the liberal values he defends are under attack almost everywhere.

    Putin’s Russia is perverting democracy at home and rampaging across the former Soviet world, while China unabashedly boasts about the supposed superiority and dynamism of its authoritarian model. Much of Asia has
    spent two decades deploying different versions of the nebulous concept
    of “Asian values” to reject or deform liberal principles. The “Arab Spring” has turned into a nightmare.

    Meanwhile, many Western leaders are using their own rights and freedoms to trample those of others, cheering on dictators elsewhere and restricting liberties at home.

    Given this onslaught, Western leaders have to stand by the Dalai Lama. By unabashedly promoting the universal application of human rights and
    democracy, he is a rarity among not just Asian leaders but in the
    world at large. It is vital to support such rare people, even if only symbolically. And Western governments should either show some backbone
    when it matters or give up the entire charade of protecting fundamental
    rights altogether.


    https://theconversation.com/after-75-years-the-dalai-lama-is-more-important-than-ever-37499

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