Special report: Tibet: Its Past and
Present
BEIJING, May 2 -- Huang Guangxue, vice-director of the
National State Nationalities Affairs Commission in the 1980s, still remembers
his first visit to Tibet in 1954. Huang and his colleagues were on a State
Council mission to assess the situation in the region.
The young man, who grew up in the countryside, was
struck by the poverty of the Tibetans.
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Visitors take pictures at the exhibition
"Tibet of China: Past and Present" yesterday at the Cultural Palace of
Nationalities in Beijing. The exhibition opened on Wednesday and will run
untill July 25.(Photo: China Daily) Photo
Gallery>>> |
In
the northern pasture areas, Huang saw Tibetans dressed in rags, huddled around
fires of yak dung to keep warm.
When Huang visited Tibet again in 1959, it took him a
week to travel from Urumqi, capital of Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, to
reach the remote Ngari region of western Tibet.
"The changes since have been tremendous," Huang said
at the grand exhibition - Tibet of China: Past and Present - that opened on
Wednesday at the Cultural Palace of Nationalities in Beijing.
The cultural relics, pictures and other exhibits on
display provide ample evidence of the changes in Tibet.
Before 1959, serfs comprised more than 95 percent of
the population, but 80 percent of the assets were controlled by serf owners -
officials, aristocrats and monasteries.
According to the Thirteen and Sixteen Statutes
practiced in Tibet from the 17th century until 1959, it was stated that each
noble was worth his weight in gold. People at the lowest level - women,
vagrants, beggars, butchers and blacksmiths - were only worth a length of rope
made of grass.
At the exhibition, the song Heavenly Road that
praises the Qinghai-Tibet Railway can be heard in the background.
One picture shows a happy Tibetan family around a
table covered with food during a festival. Alongside, is a 1950s photo showing a
beggar taking shelter in a toilet in Lhasa.
A graphic on food production shows that in 1959
one-fifteenth of a hectare of farmland only produced 91 kg of grain. In 2007,
production had increased to 364 kg. Over the same period, the per capita income
of the rural and pastoral population had quadrupled from 175 yuan to 2,788 yuan.
Tashi, a sophomore at the Central University for
Nationalities, was impressed by the cultural relics he was seeing for the first
time. Tashi is majoring in Tibetology, taught by Tibetan and Han teachers.
Tuition at the university is free and each student
receives a monthly subsidy of 52 yuan from the government.
Tashi comes from the Yushu Tibetan prefecture of
Qinghai province. When he returned home last year, it took him only 24 hours to
reach Xining, capital of Qinghai, via the second phase of the Qinghai-Tibet
Highway which opened in July 2006. "It's quite convenient for me to go home. I
do it once a year," Tashi said.
(Source: China Daily)
Exhibition on Tibet's past, present
held in Beijing
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A worker is preparing for the exhibition
on Tuesday. An exhibition on Tibet history opened here on Wednesday,
aiming to present visitors with a full landscape of the autonomous
region's past and present through pictures and exhibits. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, April 30 (Xinhua) -- Jia Qinglin, Li Changchun and Zhou Yongkang,
members of the Standing Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central
Committee Political Bureau, visited a large-scale theme exhibition, "Tibet, the
Past and the Present," on Wednesday.
During their separate visits, they were shown around
the 160 material exhibits and more than 400 pictures. The exhibition is being
held in two halls of the Nationalities Cultural Palace. Full story