In Tibet, A
Long-Banned Buddhist Rite Takes Place, But Not Everyone's
Pleased
July 24, 2016
ANTHONY KUHN
WAMU 88.5
The Panchen Lama — the second highest figure in
Tibetan Buddhism after the Dalai Lama —
is performing
an important ritual that has not taken place in
Tibet for half a century, Chinese state media are reporting this
week.
In this elaborate, 12-day event, known as the
Kalachakra Initiation, some devotees visualize themselves exploring
a five-story palace. At the center of
the palace is a green lotus petal, and on it is said to reside the
Kalachakra deity, with blue skin, four faces and 24
arms.
On Friday, China's official Xinhua News Agency reported that some
50,000 faithful are expected to attend the Kalachakra Initiation at
the Tashi Lhunpo monastery in Xigaze, Tibet, the traditional seat
of the Panchen Lama.
The ritual, which ends on July 24, is apparently
being conducted with the blessing of China's ruling Communist
party, despite the fact that the government is officially atheist
and has traditionally held the Marxist view that religion is the
"opium of the people." Previously, the ritual was forbidden to take
place in Tibet but had taken place in Tibetan areas outside
Tibet.
The Panchen Lama, selected by Beijing, is a
controversial figure among Tibetans. Those living in exile in India
and elsewhere are denouncing this month's ritual as a sham. They see it as an
attempt by Beijing to legitimize this Panchen Lama as the
government's proxy and cement its grip on Tibet and its main
religion.
Tensions between Tibet and the Chinese government
have simmered since the 1950s and sometimes boiled over, as Tibet
has sought independence from China or rebelled against its
heavy-handed rule. Robert
Barnett, director of Columbia
University's Modern Tibet Studies Program, sees Beijing's move to
hold the ritual this month in Tibet as part of "a long-term
strategic plan by the Chinese authorities to try to outmaneuver the
Dalai Lama by creating some sort of replacement figure."
Beijing sees the Dalai Lama, now 81, as a dangerous enemy, working
under the cover of religion to split Tibet from China — which has
ruled the Himalayan territory since 1950.
Historically, the Dalai Lama and Panchen Lama have
played roles in selecting each other's reincarnations. The Chinese
government insists that after the Dalai Lama dies, his incarnation
can only be found inside China's borders.
Observers believe that Beijing is preparing the
Panchen Lama to help select the next incarnation of the Dalai Lama,
who would be subservient to Beijing.
The Dalai Lama has mentioned the possibility
that he
will stop reincarnating. Beijing says
that would go against Buddhist rules and tradition.
To be sure, the politics of the transmigration of
souls is mind-boggling stuff. But what Barnett finds even more
incredible is that China's leadership, it seems, "can't rule Tibet
without a lama who is their proxy leader."
Nobody in Beijing, he says, seems to be asking the
question: "Well, couldn't we manage without having a
lama?"
One problem with trying to rule by proxy, Barnett
points out, is that so far it simply hasn't worked.
Tibetan Buddhism's three highest clerics — the Dalai
Lama, the previous incarnation of the Panchen Lama
and the Karmapa
— were all initially persuaded to cooperate with Beijing in the
1950s and 1960s. And in the cases of the top two, to hold symbolic
posts in the Chinese government.
But all three eventually changed their minds. The
Dalai Lama fled to India after a failed Tibetan uprising in 1959
and two incarnations of the Karmapa fled Tibet in 1959 and 1999,
respectively. The previous Panchen Lama was jailed or kept under
house arrest for nearly 15 years. All became critical of Chinese
rule in Tibet.
The Chinese government has not succeeded in keeping
any top lama loyal for longer than the current Panchen Lama, who
was selected 21 years ago.
Many Tibetans who remain loyal to the Dalai Lama
consider this Panchen Lama an impostor.
In 1995, representatives of the Dalai Lama and
Beijing at first cooperated on selecting the current incarnation of
the Panchen Lama. The Dalai Lama's representatives named their
candidate first. Then Beijing declared its own choice, a boy named
Gyaincain Norbu, as the true reincarnation.
The Dalai Lama's pick disappeared and has never been
seen in public since. Beijing insists he's just an ordinary young
man who is living a normal life and does not want to be bothered by
the public. Critics say he is a political prisoner. The Dalai Lama
has never recognized Beijing's choice.
Analysts point out, however, that other Tibetans'
attitudes toward the Panchen Lama are complex. Many believe that
whether or not he is the true incarnation of the Panchen Lama, he
is at least an important lama, and therefore worthy of
respect.
Last year, some Tibetans thought the Panchen Lama
might be having second thoughts about his role when he publicly
called for the government to relax restrictions on the number of
monks and nuns allowed to live in Buddhist temples and monasteries
in Tibet.
Beijing has limited the number of monks and nuns who
are allowed to reside in temples. As of 2015, there were 46,000
lamas in Tibet, according to Qin Yongzhang, a Tibet expert at the
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing. That's less than
half of the number in 1950.
While it's impossible to tell what the Panchen Lama
really thinks about his role, Barnett says it's clear that "this
man himself has no say at all, it seems, in whether he gets to play
that role. He's a prisoner in a gilded cage."
Qin says that the government realizes that some
monasteries are short of monks, and has begun to recruit and train
more of them. He argues that the shortage of monks is due to the
fact that many young Tibetans "want to enjoy the fruits of
modernization," rather than entering a monastery.