Click here to learn six things you can do to help make the 2008 Beijing Olympics a catalyst for change in Tibet.
The small concrete room smells of urine.
In the corner, a young woman lies on a metal cot, moaning softly
and vomiting up blood. A former Buddhist nun, she is recovering
from an operation on her stomach to fix internal injuries caused by
beatings from Chinese guards. Her roommate, Lhundrub Zangmo, speaks
in a whispery monotone. Zangmo's head is no longer shaven, and her
straight black hair falls over her tight sweater emblazoned with
the words The Coolest Boy. But even though she has left
the clergy, Zangmo remains deeply religious. She has plastered the
walls of the tiny room with photos of Buddhist deities and the
Dalai Lama, leader of Tibetan Buddhists.
It has been only a few months since Zangmo and her friend fled
Tibet on foot over the Himalayas to this squat, block-shaped center
for Tibetan refugees in India. The two women had been imprisoned
along with a group of other nuns, some for as long as sixteen
years. They were first arrested in 1990 for staging a protest in
Lhasa, the capital of Tibet, to demonstrate their outrage over
China's continuing presence in their native land. As the women
chanted "Free Tibet," Chinese police moved quickly, knocking them
to the ground and dragging them to jail before their protest could
attract attention. Inside the prison, Chinese authorities subjected
the nuns to a brutal routine. "Police stuck electric prods into my
vagina and then hung me from the ceiling," Zangmo says softly. Her
voice doesn't waver, but she looks away. Some of her friends lost
consciousness as soon as guards pushed the cattle prods inside
them, but Zangmo remained alert throughout the torture. "I was
totally, totally frightened," she says.
Police eventually transferred the women to Drapchi, the most
feared prison in Lhasa. According to human rights organizations,
there are hundreds of political prisoners in Tibet, the majority of
them Buddhist clergy. Scores have died from torture at the hands of
Chinese authorities: electric shock, hanging, forced blood
extraction. "They tried to pull my arms out of my sockets, and beat
my legs and arms with metal bars and shocked me," recalls Phuntsog
Nyidron, another nun who was imprisoned at Drapchi. "I was worried
they could easily kill me." After repeated beatings, a monk named
Lobsang Choephel hanged himself at Drapchi, his body dangling from
the iron bars of his cell.
The punishment was most severe for those who refused to give up
their faith. "In Drapchi, there were numerous demonstrations,"
Zangmo says. One day, four nuns refused to renounce their Buddhist
beliefs in front of the Chinese guards. "They were beaten until
they died." Zangmo stares at the floor and starts to cry, her voice
breaking. "They died together."
Before places like drapchi existed, Lhasa
was the capital of a remote kingdom where a long line of Dalai
Lamas presided over a civilization infused with spirituality,
perpetuated in more than 6,000 monasteries and protected by the
snow-capped Himalayas. In their sacred land, Tibetans built a
distinct and mystical culture, a matchless experiment in faith that
permeated their lives. "Tibetans are unique on the planet in that
their national life is wholly dedicated to Buddhism," says Robert
Thurman, the most famous Tibet scholar in America. By developing a
worship of living things, he says, Tibetans also preserved the
Earth's highest ecosystem, one that comprises biodiversity on the
scale of the Amazon and serves as the source of rivers that sustain
nearly half the world's population. "This is some of the most
important environment in the world," Thurman says, "so fragile
that, once it's gone, it can never come back."
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.