Tibet: Perspectives and Prospects, a publication of Vivekananda International Foundation, was launched on 6th November 2013, by His Holiness the 17th
Gyalwang Karmapa, Ogyen Trinley Dorje. Shri Ajit Doval KC, Director
VIF, Ambassador P P Shukla, Joint Director VIF and Editor of the book,
Shri Vijay Kranti, noted Tibet expert, and Vikas Arya, the publisher of
the book.
In his opening remarks, Shri Doval highlighted the strong bonds of
fraternity India has always shared with Tibet. He pointed out that that
despite events of modern history, for India, Tibet has always remained
an individual and single entity. Maintaining that nothing stays
constant, he expressed hope that the sad state of affairs that engulfs
Tibet today will certainly improve and the people of Tibet will see a
bright and peaceful future.
Ambassador Shukla, the editor of the book, highlighted two major
aspects which the book deals with. Firstly, it reflects the sense among
the authors of having let down the Tibetans in their hour of greatest
difficulty. It is a mea culpa on the part of the contributors to
the book. Second, he referred to the dimension of India’s security
concerns. For India, Tibet is not just a civilisational peer, but also a
safeguard against unfriendly foreign forces. It was bewildering, he
said, to note that India in the late 1940s and early 1950s, keeping the
thousand year old friendship with Tibet at stake, allowed the Chinese
invasion in Tibet to consolidate itself without challenge – to the point
where we actually blocked UN discussion of the issue. Disturbingly,
India also became the first nation to recognize Chinese sovereignty over
Tibet. However, it was not too late even now to take up the Tibetan
cause and to join in the struggle of Tibetans. The issues which the
international community could take up today are those of the
deteriorating human right situation, water-related issues in Tibet which
affect many of the lower riparians in Asia, and the right to
self-determination for the people of Tibet, enshrined in a UN General
Assembly Resolution of 1961.
His Holiness expressed his gratitude towards the Vivekananda
International Foundation for publishing a book that holistically takes
up the cause of Tibet and its people. He strongly emphasized on the
relationship that people of India and Tibet share. This relation, His
Holiness maintained, is deeper than mere political or economic. The
relation is spiritual and cultural and it goes so deep that it becomes
the basis of Tibetan identity. He argued that despite all the mistakes
that Tibet and India did half a century ago, Tibetans realize the fact
that India is the mother from where the Tibetan culture originated and
like a mother, India has helped and nurtured the people of Tibet in
recent times of struggle and difficulties.
The session then opened up for the participation from the audience
who expressed their views and shared their views, which included the
call for a national debate on the cause of Tibet and also the need to
introduce India’s Tibet policy as separate from its China policy.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.