Why In The Film Battle Of China (1943), A Map Of China Shows That Chinese Territory Includes Tibet?
Posted on | December 26, 2009 | 3 Comments
At around 3:00 you can see a map of China.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YS-gP8I5e…
BBC and other major western medias always say that China invaded Tibet in 1959. But this film shows that China included Tibet, Xinjiang(eastern turkistan) and mongolia. So at least US recogonized that Tibet is part of China in 1943, right?
I have watched another documentary film about Tibet and CIA. It seems that American support for the independence of Tibet began when Communists took over China, since US was against communists, so it started to undermined communist China by support seperatists force in Tibet. And since then, Dalai Lama is portrayed as a divine figure. And if you have even did some serious study of the old tibet under Dalai Lama’s rule, it is actually is theocracy with a lot of brutal violence, 95% of tibetan population are serfs and slaves owned by previlidged people like Dalai Lama.
There is another branch of Tibetan buddhism (cannot remember its name) who’s under constant oppression of Dalai Lama, they protested a lot but western medias just don’t give a ****, they don’t want to report anything that will damage Dalai Lama’s divine image.
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December 26th, 2009 @ 4:28 am
During Tibet’s history, it has been an independent country[2], divided into different countries, and a part of China each for a certain amount of time. Tibet was first unified under King Songtsän Gampo in the seventh century. A government nominally headed by the Dalai Lamas, a line of spiritual leaders, ruled a large portion of the Tibetan region at various times from the 1640s until 1950s. During most of this period, the Tibetan administration was subordinate to the Chinese empire of the Qing Dynasty. The 13th Dalai Lama proclaimed Tibet independent in 1913, but this declaration was not accepted by China, nor recognized by any country as a de jure independent nation. Only three of the fourteen Dalai Lamas have actually ruled Tibet; regents ruled during 77 percent of the period from 1751 until 1960.[3] The Communist Party of China gained control of central and western Tibet (Tibet area controlled by the Dalai Lama) after a decisive military victory at Chamdo in 1950. The 14th Dalai Lama fled to India after the 1959 Tibetan uprising.
Today, Tibet is administered by the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Beijing and the Government of Tibet in Exile disagree over when Tibet became a part of China, and whether the incorporation into China of Tibet is legitimate according to international law[4] (see Tibetan sovereignty debate). Since what constitutes Tibet is a matter of much debate (see map, right) neither its size nor population are simple matters of fact, due to various entities claiming differing parts of the area as a Tibetan region.
December 26th, 2009 @ 5:19 am
Please see http://www.tustin.k12.ca.us/cyberseminar…
December 26th, 2009 @ 9:23 am
There are other movies as well. You might like to see the Brad Pitt movie “Seven Years in Tibet” and another one “Kundun” to widen your horizon. Being selective in your information will not help you much.
BTW What’s your say on the neighboring country Nepal signing a treaty with Tibet, and showing it as a proof of its sovereignty while they applied for the membership of UN. Also Tibetan Visa and whole lot of other stuff.