The NYRB China Archive
08.22.11

China’s ‘Liberation’ of Tibet: Rules of the Game

Robert Barnett
from New York Review of Books

Much of the talk about Vice President Joe Biden’s four-day visit to China last week centered on the man who hosted him: Xi Jinping, expected to become the country’s next president in 2012. Biden’s office has said that the principal purposes of...

The NYRB China Archive
05.26.11

Will There Be a ‘Duel of Dalai Lamas’?

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

On March 10 the Fourteenth Dalai Lama made front-page news throughout the world by saying,

As early as the 1960s, I have repeatedly stressed that Tibetans need a leader, elected freely by the Tibetan people, to whom I can

...
The NYRB China Archive
05.24.10

Talking About Tibet: An Open Dialogue Between Chinese Citizens and the Dalai Lama

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

Following is an English translation of an Internet dialogue between the Dalai Lama and Chinese citizens that took place on May 21. The exchange was organized by Wang Lixiong, a Chinese intellectual known for his writing on Tibet and for...

The NYRB China Archive
10.21.09

Obama’s Bad Bargain with Beijing

Perry Link
from New York Review of Books

As the echoes of China’s spectacular military parade on October 1 were subsiding, officials in the Obama administration, in quieter settings in...

The NYRB China Archive
04.09.09

‘A Hell on Earth’

Pico Iyer
from New York Review of Books

“The situation inside Tibet is almost like a military occupation,” I heard the Dalai Lama tell an interviewer last November, when I spent a week traveling with him across Japan. “Everywhere. Everywhere, fear, terror. I cannot remain indifferent...

The NYRB China Archive
07.17.08

How He Sees It Now

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

It is open season on the Dalai Lama and not just for Beijing, for whom he is “a monk in wolf’s clothing,” or for Rupert Murdoch, who dismissed him as a “very old political monk shuffling around in Gucci shoes.” During his trip to London in May,...

Tibet: Problems, Prospects, and U.S. Policy

Congressional Research Service

On March 10, 2008, a series of demonstrations began in Lhasa and other Tibetan regions of China to mark the 49th anniversary of an unsuccessful Tibetan uprising against Chinese rule in 1959. The demonstrations appeared to begin peacefully with...

The NYRB China Archive
05.29.08

Thunder from Tibet

Robert Barnett
from New York Review of Books

1.

Every so often, between the time a book leaves its publisher and the time it reaches its readers, events occur that change the ways it can be read. Such is the case with Pico Iyer’s account of the fourteenth Dalai Lama, the exiled...

The NYRB China Archive
05.15.08

Twelve Suggestions for Dealing with the Tibetan Situation, by Some Chinese Intellectuals

Wang Lixiong
from New York Review of Books
  1. At present the one-sided propaganda of the official Chinese media is having the effect of stirring up inter-ethnic animosity and aggravating an already tense situation. This is extremely detrimental to the long-term goal of safeguarding

  2. ...
The NYRB China Archive
04.27.00

A Lamas’ Who’s Who

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

A one-l lama, he’s a priest.
A two-l llama, he’s a beast.
And I will bet a silk pajama,
There isn’t any three-l lllama.
—Ogden Nash

The only Tibetan lama...

The NYRB China Archive
06.10.99

The Dalai Lama on Succession and on the CIA

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

This year is the fortieth anniversary of the Dalai Lama’s flight from Tibet into Indian exile. He is sixty-five and some day even god-kings must die. But in the eyes of Tibetans he is also the fourteenth incarnation of the first Dalai Lama, who...

The NYRB China Archive
04.08.99

Message from Shangri-La

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

On October 6, 1939, on the outskirts of Lhasa, the capital of Tibet, Hugh Richardson, who is now ninety-three and the West’s foremost living Tibetanist, saw the arrival in the city of the five-year-old boy who in early 1940 would be installed as...

The NYRB China Archive
01.15.98

Lost Horizons

Pico Iyer
from New York Review of Books

Tibet has always cast a dangerously strong spell upon visitors from abroad. When the first major European expedition marched on Lhasa in 1904, led by Colonel Younghusband at the behest of his old friend Lord Curzon, it ended up slaughtering in...

The NYRB China Archive
06.12.97

Peking’s Choice

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

The recent sentence to six years in prison of one of Tibet’s supreme monks shows Peking’s determination to dominate all events in the region and bring to an end a period of intense confusion within the Chinese Communist Party. For a brief time...

The NYRB China Archive
12.20.90

Lost Horizons

Jonathan Mirsky
from New York Review of Books

Except for the Chinese Communists, who call him names like “the wolf in monk’s robes,” or “the criminal Dalai,” virtually everyone speaks well of the Dalai Lama. The latest incarnation is the Fourteenth in a line that began in 1351 and exists...

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