标签 'Tibet' 的存档

Olympic Torch Gets Home

 

Finally, Olympic torch gets home. Above picture is taken in Shenzhen, a southen coastal city of China near Hong Kong, where thousands of people poured in street welcoming the torch.

The controvosies associated with Beijing Olympic Games has become an seldom opportunity to test one’s perspective towards China. Unfortunately, the result shows only how wide the gap is between westerners and Chinese. On one hand, many western activists consider Olympics an extremely good (maybe last) opportunity to use as leverage to push Chinese government solving issues like Darfur and Tibet. On the other hand, most Chinese view Olympics as a declaration to the world that once again China will join the world’s elite country community. 

Facing criticism from Chinese, many westerners consider it being roused and backed by Chinese government. Many of them believe Chinese are simply brain-washed by the government’s propaganda,  Chinese don’t know what is really happening, and Chinese will support the boycott if they know what’s going on.

I have to say these westerners don’t understand China or Chinese. Many Chinese don’t care human rights as much as westeners. For them, Olympic Games are far more important than the seldom-heard place like Darfur. Even when Chinese know well of Darfur, in fact some do, they still don’t and can’t understand why Darfur should have anything to do with the beloved Olympics. Tibet on the other hand is considered to be far more important if compared with Olympics. Chinese will have to choose Tibet if they have to make a choice, which means giving up their long-held dream of Olympics. Natually if that happens they will feel devastated as for them Olympics are kidnapped.

Why Chinese are so Angry towards Anti-Olympic Protesters

Below pictures are taken in Paris of the Olympic Torch Relay. The girl, Jin Jing, was sitting in a wheelchair when protesters tried to grab her torch. These pictures are being widely circulated in Chinese websites. Why do you thing Chinese are so angry towards anti-Beijing-Olympics protesters?

5月1日,我不去家乐福!

认真的考虑了一下立场,我决定5月1日不去家乐福。我并不认为家乐福应该被抵制,我只想对西方人发出我的声音。

作为一个经济学的学生,我深知抵制某国产品本身很难说是对该国的一种“惩罚”。在全球化的今天,企业本身的国籍早已很难分辨,抵制所造成的损害也未必就一定由抵制的目标群体承担。更何况,对一国产品的抵制,从长期看,会导致本国产品在相同价格水平上的竞争力落后于被抵制国的产品——在相同价格水平上,抵制会造成被抵制国产品处于竞争劣势,迫使其采取其它提高竞争力的手段,如提高效率,改善质量等,长期结果是在同等价格水平上,被抵制国产品优于本国产品。

作为一家零售企业,对家乐福的抵制不仅仅会直接影响其在华员工的利益,更重要的是,家乐福会利用其在分销体系中的相对优势地位,把抵制所造成的损失转移到上游厂商,比如延长对上游厂商的帐期,甚至巧立名目迫使上游厂商为抵制直接买单,而这些厂商中绝大多数是中国企业。对家乐福抵制的很大一部分后果要由这些中国企业来承担。

但5月1日,我不会去家乐福,我并不是要抵制法国企业,我只想通过这种方式对西方发出我的声音。西方媒体总是认为,中国是“专制国家”,中国人没有“人权”,面对中国人对西方媒体的抗议与愤怒,有不少人认为这不过是因为政府的宣传。我希望借此能让西方人明白,在西藏和奥运问题上,他们已经触动了中国人的核心价值,我希望借此能让西方人反思,满口“自由平等”的他们在对待中国时,是否做到了言行一致,他们是否给予了中国人同样的尊重,是否耐心而无偏的倾听了中国人的声音。

我承认,我的行动对家乐福并不公平,我更多的只是想通过吸引西方媒体的关注来达到发出声音的目的。但我的行动将用最简单最和平的方式进行,这种方式对家乐福的影响也将是微乎其微的,我将在公元2008年5月1日0时0分0秒到公元2008年5月1日23时59分59秒的这段时间里,按照我旧有的生活轨迹行走,唯一的不同,是在这段时间里我将避开家乐福这座超市,仅此而已。

5月1日,我不去家乐福,我只想让西方人听到中国人的声音。

Arrogance and Ignorance

Once again, the New York Times shows its ignorance about China and Chinese. Yes, the paper successfully predicted the full retirement of a former president, but apparently when things dive deep into an identity issue, the Times does not know what it is talking about.

In an editorial published today, titled The Torch and Freedom, the paper “kindly” offered help to China:

Stop arresting dissidents. Stop spreading lies about the Dalai Lama, and start talking to him about greater religious and cultural freedoms for Tibet. Stop being an enabler to Sudan in its genocide in Darfur. In other words, start delivering on the pledge you made to the International Olympic Committee to respect human rights — which, by the way, include the freedom of expression and the freedom of assembly.

The editorial went on trying to explain why the Times is being resented by many Chinese:

Just so, the Communist authorities in China have been fanning nationalist resentments among their citizens with claims that protests against their repressive policies are staged by hostile foreign forces bent on ruining China’s grand Olympic party. The popular anger then makes it easier for the regime to arrest dissidents, stifle the news media and blame a “Dalai Lama clique” abroad for the troubles in Tibet.

This fits exactly into what I described as “arrogant westerners” in my last blog post. These westerners simply believe they know what Chinese are thinking, and hope they could get support from Chinese. When they don’t, they blame Chinese government for “fanning nationalism”.

It is especially interesting reading “stop spreading lies about the Dalai Lama”. The paper seems sure about its knowledge about Dalai. Unfortunately however, I doubt any serious academic work, even books and papers published in western world, was read by the Times’ editors. If they did read any, they would find Dalai is almost as much to blame as Chinese government in the current dilemma. Still, the only reason I can think of as why the Times blame Chinese government wholly for the Tibet problem is simply the paper’s preference. The Times just doesn’t believe what communists said.

I am Chinese but I am not communist. I read the Times and other American and European papers regularly and I would like to write about my opinion here. I’m interested to see if I would also be labeled as “brain-washed” Chinese just because I wrote something different. Below are my responses to the Times’ “help”:

  • Stop arresting dissidents.
    Sounds not bad. Only Chinese doesn’t care about this issue that much. Chinese know about these dissidents, but usually don’t care a lot. Political liberty is being discussed, sometimes even by the Government itself, yet most Chinese simply are not interested in the topic. You constantly read about this topic on the Times? Surprise! Isn’t that the Times’ “preference”?
  • Stop spreading lies about the Dalai Lama, and start talking to him about greater religious and cultural freedoms for Tibet.
    Well, Chinese government might not tell the whole story, but neither does your lovely “spiritual leader”. Read some serious work before making irresponsible judgments! Finding out why previously talks stalled and why Chinese government doesn’t trust Dalai from an independent source! (Which excludes Dalai’s followers as well as the Chinese Government!!!)
    Compared with American, yes, Tibetans may enjoy less religious and cultural freedom, but if compared with other Chinese, I don’t see they enjoy anything less. As compared with what they enjoyed under Dalai’s rule; of course they used to have what Dalai called “freedom”—it was “freedom” to warship Dalai under his rule! Tibet was then theocratic and Dalai considered Tibetan’s god!! Why do you think Dalai want a “free” Tibet? Think about Iran’s theocracy!!!
    Regarding reserving Tibetan culture, the risk it is facing is actually from globalization instead of Han Chinese. In fact, Han Chinese are busy worrying about their own culture reservation. Kicking all the Han Chinese and muslims out of Tibet might help to reduce the influence of the modern society, but unless Tibetans lock themselves from the outside world, there is no way to maintain the “purity” of their culture. Aren’t exiled Tibetan youth in India following Dalai meeting a similar problem? Can we say Dalai is committing his own “Cultural Genocide” to his fellow Tibetans?
  • Stop being an enabler to Sudan in its genocide in Darfur. In other words, start delivering on the pledge you made to the International Olympic Committee to respect human rights — which, by the way, include the freedom of expression and the freedom of assembly.
    Again, Chinese doesn’t care about Darfur much, neither about human rights issues. Without Renaissance, we simply don’t have that kind of culture, at least for the moment. Haven’t you found out the Times write only about a few dissidents consistently. I guess that’s basically China’s whole dissident community already!
    Talking about human rights, yes, China has many issues. But things are indeed getting better, and Chinese government is delivering its commitment to some extent. Only 30 years ago, people were executed without even trial, and now Chinese are already talking about “rule of law”. The government’s response to the riot is already with unprecedented restraint. We can and should expect more. But over one single night and China turns a democracy? It’s simply impossible! Keep in mind it was until 1965, roughly 100 years after the Civil War, when the African-American got the real voting rights!
  • The Communist authorities in China have been fanning nationalist resentments among their citizens…
    Judged by western standard, Chinese might be considered as nationalistic. But it is a way much complicated issue rooted deeply in Chinese culture and history, not over-simplified Government’s fanning. I explained a little bit in my last blog post.

Other than showing its arrogance and ignorance, this editorial of the Times is nothing constructive but misleading its readers, fanning resentments from Chinese or widening gap between westerners and Chinese. The Times itself should try something suggested to Chinese about the Tibet issue — Understand a different culture!

Stupid! It’s about Identity!

Some arrogant westerners always feel pathetic for Chinese - Poor Chinese, you are so brain-washed by your government that you have no idea what is happening out there. There is Darfur, there is human rights violation, and most recently, there is Tibet! How can you still support the “Genocide Olympics”? You must have been misguided by your “state-controlled media”. What? There is spontaneous anti-western media campaign? Then the state-controlled media must have stirred “nationalism” so successfully!

Unfortunately, that’s not necessarily true. For Chinese, or should I say basically for all Chinese around me (including myself) to be precise, we are truly supporting Beijing Olympics deep in our heart (not in Orwellian way as someone may respond quickly), we don’t care Darfur that much, and we believe Tibet WAS, IS and SHOULD ALWAYS BE a part of China. To the contrary of some westerners would have predicted, if China were a democracy, the government would still have done exactly the same thing as what it is doing right now about Tibet, simply because any government in China can not afford the consequences of losing Tibet. You can take the late Qing Dynasty as an example.

The problem is not about democracy, the problem is about Chinese identity. Some western media accuse Chinese government deliberately fueling “nationalism” by constantly emphasizing the invasion of western countries and Japan in late 19th century and early 20th century, but that’s not the whole story. This kind of “nationalism” is widely viewed as patriotism in China. It roots in China’s long Confucius culture. This sentiment spurred after the First Opium War, in which China was defeated by Britain. (At the time, Tibet was ruled by the Qing Dynasty.) Since then, territory integrity had become one key pillar for ideas of China’s reformers and revolutionists. That’s why the Hundred Days’ Reform happened right after China’s defeat by Japan in the First Sino-Japanese War, because of which Taiwan was taken by Japan from China; that’s why one of Sun Yet-sen’s famous Three Principles of the People includes nationalism. It is not bluffing when Chinese government announced “People’s War” towards pro-Tibet-independence clique. The government indeed has the support of most Chinese.

I feel ashamed for the western media, especially the American ones, and I am so disappointed myself as I always believe in independent media. Western media disappoint me most as they trust Dalai without any proof while they defy Chinese government’s interpretation for no good reason as well. It seems they choose whom to believe just by their preference. When they quote Dalai, they quote whatever he said, but when they quote Chinese government or Han Chinese, they wrote specifically “the story couldn’t be independently corroborated”. Come on! Since Chinese government has kicked out all foreign media (presumedly independent by many western media) as western media reported, how can they “independently corroborate” what Dalai said? ! Why not emphasize this point when they quote Dalai? The only explanation I can think of is western media simply interpret “communists” as bad. That’s all! And they declare this is independent and professional journalism! Some western columnists even judge Chinese in a way as if they are superior than Chinese. How ironic! Isn’t it exactly what westerners accuse Chinese government is doing towards Tibetan?

Yes, I complain about a lot of things in China. Actually I just complained about Beijing Olympics Organizing Committee (BOCOG) as well as Bank of China, the Olympics official sponsor, in my last blog post. But I am still enthusiastic about the games myself and I still consider Tibet an indispensable part of China. Once again it is nothing else but about Chinese identity. Live with that!