作者npchen (426)
看板IA
标题(转帖)一个澳大利亚人对西臧问题的看法
时间Tue Apr 8 14:18:48 2008
※ [本文转录自 CrossStrait 看板]
作者: npchen (426) 看板: CrossStrait
标题: (转帖)一个澳大利亚人对西臧问题的看法
时间: Tue Apr 8 14:18:37 2008
http://www.bullogger.com/blogs/drunkpiano/archives/125568.aspx
drunkpiano @ 2008-4-7 0:15:36 阅读(3411) 分类: 讲政治
另一个西臧问题的英文帖。读後感想一﹕但凡做过一点独立历史或调查“功课”的人
﹐而不仅仅是跟着媒体走的人(此点同时适用於中国人、西方人、西臧人)﹐都愿意
承认西臧问题并非“非黑即白”的卡通世界﹐而有着复杂的根源和多方的责任。西方
主要的西藏问题专家﹐A. Tom. Grunfeld, Melvyn Goldstein, Barry Sautman 以及
下文中提到的一些学者﹐都对西藏流亡政府持有或多或少的批评态度﹐当然对中国政
府更是如此。感想二﹕多研究点事实和史实比匆匆忙忙做价值或政治判断更重要。虽
然人对事实的观察往往受制於价值观念﹐但哪怕价值观念影响下的事实研究和陈述也
还是比干喊口号更有意义。
有人针对我上一篇转帖说“你不会因为作者是老外就觉得文章客观吧”。答﹕如果我
认为作者是老外文章就客观﹐那我应该觉得西方媒体在西臧问题上的报道都很客观了
。我觉得那篇文章客观是因为它涉及很多事实讨论﹐而不仅仅是价值判断。当然这也
仅仅是“我认为 ”而已﹐我的判断当然受我的价值观影响。我转贴那篇以及这篇文
章的另一个原因﹐是因为有人说﹕“为什麽全世界都‘误解’我们呢﹖难道我们不应
该反思自己吗﹖”我想展示﹕并不是中国之外的“全世界”在西臧问题上看法都高度
一致。事实上﹐西方政界/新闻界和西方学界在西臧问题上出现的观点分化(前者多
“一边倒”﹐後者多强调复杂性)就耐人寻味。当然﹐不管西方在西臧问题上看法是
不是铁板一块﹐中国都要反思自己的民族政策。
还有这样的留言: “以你近来的进化﹐估计有一天北大清华会来请你去当个教授院长
之类的了。” 答﹕滚。
此文是pbs论坛的一个主贴﹐後面还有很多跟贴﹐讨论涉及很多牛博博主也讨论到的
问题﹐而且质量比较高﹐有兴趣可以去这里读。
--------------------------
In response to Tony Martin (in relation to the Tibet issue)
I’m becoming quite adept at turning the other cheek, though whether of the
upper or lower anatomy must remain a matter for fascinating conjecture,
for as all good readers of Plato will know, all ideal phenomena of the upper
kind have their imperfect (indeed, sometimes odiferous) counterparts in
the world below.
So now it's time to deal with sundry affairs: Tony Martin, you begin your
critique of my position by personally insulting me, before launching into
a vitriolic ramble, and one that is based on a misreading of my position
. “Your whole theory relating to Tibet is very similar to all of the other
respondents supporting the continued illegal Chinese occupation of a sovereign
nation,” you say. “Your position appears to be similar to other invaders
of land in our history, or to the various slave trading states over the
years. Namely, don’t look at how badly off Tibetans are now in comparison
to the rest of China and the world, but rather look at how well off they
are compared to how they might be if their invading masters weren’t so
benevolent and here to help them.”
I have presented no theories whatsoever relating to Tibet, nor have I ever
justified the Chinese invasion and occupation of Tibet.
I did, however, point out that life for the majority of Tibetans has been
improving under Chinese governance since the 1980s, and I did so because
the weight of empirically verifiable evidence shows this to be the case.
Let us look at the evidence. If Tibetans were so fiercely suppressed, and
if Chinese leaders in Beijing were really out to Sinocize Tibet by increasing
the ethnic ratio of Han to Tibetan, then why are all Tibetan families permitted
to have up to three children, and are only fined small amounts of money
if they exceed this number? Tibetan families in Tibet average 3.8 children
, larger than Tibetan families in India. In fact, the population of Tibet
in 1959 was only about 1.19 million. Today however, the population of Greater
Tibet is 7.3 million, of which, according to the 2000 census, 6 million
are ethnic Tibetans. If we consider the Tibet Autonomous Region only, then
according to the census conducted in 2000, as referred to in [i]Wikipedia
[/i], “there were 2,616,300 people in Tibet, with Tibetans totalling 2,411
,100 or 92.2% of the current regional population. The census also revealed
that the Tibetan's average lifespan has increased to 68 due to the improving
standard of living and access to medical services.” In 1950 the average
lifespan was only 35, and “infant mortality has dropped from 43% in 1950
to 0.661% in 2000.”
As Barry Sautman, who is Associate Professor of Social Science at the Hong
Kong University of Science and Technology points out in his study on [i]
Tibet and the (Mis-)Representation of Cultural Genocide[/i], “the state
sponsored transfer [of Han Chinese] to Tibet is on a small scale. From 1994
to 2001 the PRC organized only a few thousand people to go to Tibet as cadres
. Most serve only 3 years and then return to China. Those who move on their
own to the Tibet Autonomous Region usually return to China in a few years
. They come for a while, find the cities of Tibet too expensive, and then
return to China. Some of the 72,000 Chinese who maintain their [i]hukou[
/i] [household registration] in Tibet don't really live there. Pensions are
higher if your household is registered in Tibet.”
These facts are supported by articles in the [i]Columbia Journal of Asian
Law[/i] and by an Australian Chinese demographer in [i]Asian Ethnicity[/
i][i] in 2000[/i], and show that the claims of ethnic swamping in Tibet are
misleading. "What I think these articles show,” says Barry Sautman, “is
that there is no evidence of significant population losses over the whole
period from the 1950s to the present. There are some losses during he Great
Leap Forward but these were less in Tibetan areas than in other parts of
China. Where these were serious were in Sichuan and Qinghai, but even there
not as serious in the Han areas of China. There are no bases at all for
the figures used regularly by the exile groups. They use the figure of 1.
2 million Tibetans dying from the 1950s to the 1970s, but no source for this
is given. As a lawyer I give no credence to statistics for which there is
no data, no visible basis."
In fact, as Michael Parenti has pointed out in his article on [i]Friendly
Feudalism: the Tibet Myth[/i], “both the Dalai Lama and his advisor and
youngest brother, Tendzin Choegyal, claimed that ‘more than 1.2 million
Tibetans are dead as a result of the Chinese occupation.’ But the official
1953 census - six years before the Chinese crackdown -recorded the entire
population residing in Tibet at 1,274,000.33 Other census counts put the
ethnic Tibetan population within the country at about two million. If the
Chinese killed 1.2 million in the early 1960s then whole cities and huge
portions of the countryside, indeed almost all of Tibet, would have been
depopulated, transformed into a killing field dotted with death camps and
mass graves - of which we have not seen evidence. The thinly distributed
Chinese military force in Tibet was not big enough to round up, hunt down
, and exterminate that many people even if it had spent all its time doing
nothing else.”
Tibetans in exile and their supporters seem to pull such figures out of a
hat in the same way that the Chinese exile Harry Wu does in relation to
the number of mainland prisoners (see my piece [i]On the Nature of Chinese
Governance and Society[/i] for details).
Barry Sautman also convincingly challenges claims that the Tibetan language
is being devalued and replaced by Chinese. "92-94% of ethnic Tibetans speak
Tibetan,” he notes. “Instruction in primary school is pretty universally
in Tibetan. Chinese is bilingual from secondary school onward. All middle
schools in the TAR also teach Tibetan. In Lhasa there are about equal time
given to Chinese, Tibetan, and English.”
There is also an upsurge of the performing arts, poetry and painting by Tibetans
, which many visitors to Tibet today cannot fail to notice, all of which
are encouraged and funded by Beijing, though of course the growing tourist
market also plays an important role in encouraging Tibetans to continue
practicing their traditional arts and crafts, albeit, in a commodified form
.
Importantly, Sautman, like me, has observed surprisingly “few aspects of
Chinese culture in Tibet, but there are many aspects of Western culture,
such as jeans, disco music, etc.”
Barry Sautman’s views are by no means marginalised within Western academia
either Tony. Colin Mackerras, Professor Emeritus of International Business
and Asian Studies at Griffith University, Australia, for example, remarked
that Suatman’s book “is a courageous and long overdue study of a highly
emotional and extremely important topic’ in that it meticulously details
and documents “the processes of cultural change in religion, the arts,
language, migration and various other aspects” which are rightly attributed
“mainly to Westernised modernity.”
Another interesting and insightful study is the one carried out by Melvyn
C. Goldstein, who is Professor and Chairman, Department of Anthropology,
and Director of the Center for Research on Tibet at Case Western Reserve
University, Cleveland, Ohio, and Cynthia M. Beall, who is Professor of Anthropology
at Case Western Reserve University. Their study, titled [i]The Impact of
China’s Reform Policy on the Nomads of Western Tibet[/i], was carried out
over a 16 month period in the Tibet Autonomous Region, and was supported
by grants from the National Academy of Sciences' Committee on Scholarly
Communication with the People's Republic of China, the Committee on Research
and Exploration of the National Geographic Society, and the National Science
Foundation.
It’s worth quoting at length from their conclusion:
“The new Chinese economic and cultural policies implemented in Tibet following
Hu Yaobang's investigation tour in May of 1980 have produced a major transformation
in Phala. Following decollectivisation, the nomads' economy immediately
reverted to the traditional household system of production and management
, which, enhanced by the concession on taxes, has led to an overall improvement
in the standard of living even though local-level officials have not completely
implemented an open (or negotiated) market system. The new policies have
also led to increasing involvement in the market economy and dramatic social
and economic differentiation. Equally important, the post-1980 policies
have fostered a cultural and social revitalization that has allowed the nomads
to resurrect basic components of their traditional culture….life in Phala
today is closer to that of the traditional era than at any time since China
assumed direct administrative control over Tibet in 1959. The post-1980
reforms created conditions whereby the nomadic pastoralists of Phala were
able to regain control of their lives and recreate a matrix of values, norms
, and beliefs that is psychologically and culturally meaningful. The new
polices have, in essence, vindicated the nomads' belief in the worth of their
nomadic way of life and their Tibetan ethnicity.”
Tyler Denison reached similar conclusions in his study, titled [i]Reaffirmation
of ‘Ritual Cosmos’: Tibetan Perceptions of Landscape and Socio-Economic
Development in Southwest China[/i], published quite recently in the Spring
2006 edition of the [i]University of New Hampshire Undergraduate Research
Journal[/i].
“Rather than finding Tibetan tradition being destroyed by Chinese rule and
the influx of people, goods and ideas from the modern world,” concludes
Denison, “I witnessed firsthand the importance of Kawa Karpo and the ritual
cosmos in the lives of the Tibetans of Deqin county: it has not been diminished
. Tibetans’ enduring perception of the landscape as a ritual cosmos cannot
be termed a static reality of tradition, but more a dynamic cultural process
, as they are continually renegotiating and redefining their beliefs in light
of new social and economic realities.”
So much then Tony, for your claims of cultural genocide. And by the way,
most Tibetans, if you ever get a chance to visit Tibet and to converse with
the Tibetan locals, will tell you that they are not “forced” to learn
Chinese, but rather, do so keenly, and on the expectation that being fluent
in both Chinese and English will help to empower themselves by broadening
their future employment opportunities.
Tony, I hereby charge you with having a patronising attitude towards the
Tibetan people – they are not passive victims, and you really shouldn’t
deny them of any agency. In fact, as Tsering Shakya has pointed out in a
paper he wrote for the [i]New Left Review[/i] back in 2002, "Tibetans are
indeed well represented on bodies like the National People’s Congress and
the People’s Consultative Conference. In fact I would go further and say
that they are over-represented, given the size of the Tibetan population
." And don't forget the role that many Tibetans themselves played in the
destruction of monastries and the various perscutions that took place in
Tibet during the Cultural Revolution. Let's not deny the people of Tibet
of any agency.
Your assertion that Western journalists make their observations of Tibet
in the presence of “Chinese Communist Party lackeys” also demonstrates
your ignorance. Journalist and tourists alike are quite free to wander about
most parts of Tibet (provided they have PSB permits) without the accompaniment
of officials.
You asked me to provide you with evidence of journalists having met Tibetans
in Tibet who have expressed the view that the positives of Chinese rule
outweigh the negatives.
Let us take attitudes towards the Beijing to Lhasa railway for starters.
In the lead-up to the opening of that railway, the Dalai Lama expressed fears
that the railway was going to aid in the Sinocisation of Tibet, and this
was quickly seized on by Tibetans in exile support groups throughout the
Western world as a development that would aid in Beijing’s alleged policy
of genocide. Such claims of course, excited the imaginations of many ordinary
Tibetans, many of who not surprisingly then expressed suspicions about what
the new train line would bring them. But as many tourists and journalists
to Tibet soon discovered, many urban ethnic Tibetans felt as though the
positives would outweigh the negatives, and this is because an increasing
number of Tibetans now have a very real material stake in the new economy
. Their living standards are improving, and although Han retailers and small
businesses stand to benefit more from increases in tourism and trade, the
fact is that this will likely change as more and more Tibetans accumulate
sufficient enough capital to start up enterprises of their own. And many
Tibetans know this. Jonathon Watts, of [i]The Guardian[/i] newspaper, reported
that “Among the four or five unscheduled meetings I had with Tibetans,
most were looking forward to the economic benefits the line is expected to
bring: 2.5m tonnes of cargo and 1m tourists and business people.”
Indeed, Tibetans are divided on the issue of whether or not the benefits
of being a part of China outweigh the negatives. “Tibetans are divided,”
noted Jonathon Watts. There are those “independence activists” who expressed
disapproval of the railway because they are against being a part of China
, and who therefore regard the new line as evidence that Beijing is out to
further entrench their rule, while others acknowledged the good that the
trains might bring. “I was surprised to find a living Buddha make one of
the strongest arguments in favour of the railway,” wrote Watts. "’We've
been too backward, too isolated for too long,’ said the lama, who asked
that his name not be used. ‘The rest of the world is in the 21st century
. We are still in the middle ages.’ A more predictable advocate was the
governor of the Tibetan Autonomous Region, Jampa Pahtsok. "It is unimaginable
to have a high growth rate without a railroad.’” (see [i]The Guardian[
/i], Sep.20, 2005)
And life is improving for many Tibetan farmers also, as Goldstein and Beall
’s research (mentioned earlier) shows. When Dexter Roberts came across villagers
in Northern Tibet’s Nagqu Prefecture, he discovered that most of the villagers
(barley farmers and herdsmen) were quite content. “Life isn’t bad at all
”, he quoted one villager as saying. (see "Tibet: Caught in China’s Two
Hands", [i]Business Week Online[/i], Sep.19, 2003).
Tony, I have never argued that most Tibetans don’t want some form of self
-government. I simply said that I think it is presumptuous to say that the
majority of Tibetans want independence. I stand by that. Maybe they do?
But to assert with confidence that most want independence without supporting
such a claim with any empirically verifiable evidence of a quantitative
nature is questionable, especially when there is a growing amount of qualitative
evidence to show that Tibetans are divided on such issues. Even the Dalai
Lama himself says that he no longer wants total independence from China,
but instead, some form of self-government.
Take a closer, more objective look at Tibet today. The mass protests have
stopped. As Robert Barnett, author of [i]Lhasa: Streets with Memories[/i
] (published by Columbia University Press) stated in an interview back in
April 2006, “Tibet has become a dispute in which the main weapons are forms
of economic change that have benefits and drawbacks: the market, the leisure
industry, mass tourism, population shift, uneven wealth, and consumerism
.”
It won’t be all that much longer Tony, before Lhasa’s main thoroughfares
find themselves hosting McDonald’s, KFC, and Pizza Hut fast food outlets
, along with Starbuck’s and other such global enterprises. And don’t be
too surprised if some of the license holders turn out to be ethnic Tibetans
.
Tony, you argue that “Tibet and Tibetans might [have] been very different
had China not invaded, but for sure they would be sovereign masters of their
own destiny.”
Bollocks! How many ordinary Tibetans were ever the “masters of their own
destinies”? I’m not justifying China’s invasion and occupation of Tibet
, which was carried out for geopolitical reasons, and largely in response
to continual incursions by Britain and Russia, and which therefore needs
to be viewed in the context of the Cold War. The Kuomintang of course consistently
made it clear that they intended on invading and occupying Tibet, and had
they defeated the PLA, they probably would have gone on to do just that.
Had that been the case, I bet the the U.S. State Department wouldn't have
objected.
But let us not romanticise the life of Tibetans prior to the invasion either
. As Michael Parenti (and many others like Leigh Feigon, in his book [i]Demystifying
Tibet[/i]) has documented, Tibet “was a retrograde theocracy of serfdom
and poverty, where a favoured few lived high and mighty off the blood, sweat
, and tears of the many. It was a long way from Shangri-La.”
And “whatever wrongs and new oppressions introduced by the Chinese in Tibet
, after 1959 they did abolish slavery and the serfdom system of unpaid labour
, and put an end to floggings, mutilations, and amputations as a form of
criminal punishment. They eliminated the many crushing taxes, started work
projects, and greatly reduced unemployment and beggary. They established
secular education, thereby breaking the educational monopoly of the monasteries
. And they constructed running water and electrical systems in Lhasa.”
Finally, we shouldn’t lose sight of the fact that the Tibetans in exile
and their supporters have consistently exaggerated the human rights abuses
that have taken place in Tibet, as Barry Sautman and others have convincingly
demonstrated. Such exaggerations from the Tibetan community in exile come
as no surprise though. As Michael Parenti says:
“For the rich lamas and lords, the Communist intervention was a calamity
. Most of them fled abroad, as did the Dalai Lama himself, who was assisted
in his flight by the CIA… throughout the 1960s, the Tibetan exile community
was secretly pocketing $1.7 million a year from the CIA, according to documents
released by the State Department in 1998. Once this fact was publicised,
the Dalai Lama's organisation itself issued a statement admitting that it
had received millions of dollars from the CIA during the 1960s to send armed
squads of exiles into Tibet to undermine the Maoist revolution. The Dalai
Lama's annual payment from the CIA was $186,000. Indian intelligence also
financed both him and other Tibetan exiles. He has refused to say whether
he or his brothers worked for the CIA. The agency has also declined to comment
….Today, mostly through the National Endowment for Democracy and other conduits
that are more respectable-sounding than the CIA, the US Congress continues
to allocate an annual $2 million to Tibetans in India, with additional millions
for ‘democracy activities’ within the Tibetan exile community.”
The Tibetan issue is by no means clear-cut. It is complex, and in constant
states of flux. Even Tibetan specialists find it difficult to fit together
images and realities, and so one might imagine how much more difficult it
is for the great majority who make no pretence to knowledge about Tibet
and who, if interested, seek guidance in the formulation of their own images
. Those who seek such guidance from the plethora of publications produced
by the numerous existing Tibetan support groups should therefore read them
with some considerable caution, given their obvious bias.
I am not a Tibetan specialist, by any means, but I have more confidence in
the findings of independent academic researchers (who present more objective
, more soberly balanced views that are based on empirically verifiable research
data of both a quantitative and qualitative nature) than I do in both the
claims of official Chinese sources and of the various Tibetans in exile
support groups.
Oh, and by the way Tony, your puerile attempt to discredit me by dismissing
me as an employee of the Chinese government really is pathetic, and only
serves to further demonstrate the height of your ignorance. I have been
in China now for five years, not four, and I am not, and never have been,
employed by the Chinese government. I teach a university preparation program
at a Chinese private university in Hangzhou for a Sydney-based college,
and I am paid an Australian salary, in Australian dollars, by my employer
of over 15 years, the N.S.W. Department of Education and Training. There
is absolutely no pressure on me to “two the Partly line” – in fact, nobody
here has ever interfered with my teaching.
I suggest, Tony Martin, that you take a sedative and calm down. A few laxatives
will no doubt help!
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