Chinese President Xi visits Tibetans and temple in western China, calls for ethnic unity

Xi’s inspection was reportedly focused on local efforts to deepen education to forge “a strong sense of community for the Chinese nation” and strengthen “love for both the country and the religion” of Tibetan Buddhism, as well as education support from more developed eastern provinces.

04:31

Growing up on top of the world: A nomadic family’s summer on the Qinghai-Tibet plateau

Growing up on top of the world: A nomadic family’s summer on the Qinghai-Tibet plateau

Xi met provincial party and government representatives on Wednesday and stressed the importance of cultivating national unity in the “province with concentrated ethnic minorities”, according to Xinhua.

He told leaders in Qinghai to “adhere to the direction of sinicisation of religion in our country, and strengthen the management of religious affairs, especially the management of religious venues”.

He also stressed the province’s “great mission” to preserve ecological security as the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau “has a rich and diverse but fragile ecosystem”.

The president said provincial leaders should “accelerate the construction of a world-class salt lake industrial base and make [the province] a national clean-energy industry highland, an international ecotourism destination and a green and organic agricultural and livestock product export base”.

The province shares a vast plateau with the Tibet autonomous region and is rich in petroleum, natural gas. It also has the country’s largest salt lake area, which contains mineral resources – like potassium and lithium – that are widely used in industries such as high-efficiency agriculture and new energy.

The president sent the signal for ethnic unity as a plenary session of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China – to unveil economic and social development strategies for the coming decade – is set to convene next month.

His trip also came at the time when tensions are simmering between the US and China over the issue of Tibet.

The US Congress passed a new Tibet policy bill last week which would channel funds to boost Washington’s support for Tibet and counter what it calls “disinformation” from China about the region’s history, people and institutions.

A seven-member US congressional delegation met the 14th Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader whom China has described as “anti-China separatist activities under the cloak of religion”, in India on Wednesday and said they would not allow China to influence the choice of his successor and would pressure Beijing to resume talks with him.

The Dalai Lama, who fled China during the Tibetan Uprising in 1959, will turn 89 next month. Beijing has blamed him for bouts of ethnic unrest in Lhasa, the Tibetan capital, in the 1980s and again in 2008, upheaval that human rights groups blamed on the government’s repressive religious policies.

The Dalai Lama was born in Qinghai, where about half those living in the sparsely populated and remote inland province are non-Han Chinese, and most of those are Tibetan.

Xi last visited the province three years ago, when he described the northwestern province as “a strategic key place in maintaining stability in Xinjiang and Tibet”.

Although Hongjue Temple where Xi visited this time was not the biggest Tibetan Buddhist temple in the city, it was the site of one of the most significant meetings between Communist Party’s leadership and a Tibetan Buddhist leader in 1951, said Xie Maosong, a senior researcher at the National Institute of Strategic Studies at Tsinghua University.
President Xi Jinping visited a middle school as part of his trip to Qinghai province in northwestern China. Photo: Xinhua
Xi Jinping’s father Xi Zhongxun, then the Communist Party’s deputy secretary of the Northwest Bureau and vice-chairman of the Northwest Military and Political Committee, was appointed by Mao Zedong to arrange the 10th Panchen Lama Erdeni Chokyi Gyaltsen’s return to Shigatse in Tibet, according to the Communist Party’s archive.

The Panchen Lama is considered the most revered religious leader of Tibet after the Dalai Lama.

Xi Zhongxun met the 10th Panchen Lama at Hongjue Temple on December 15, 1951, to discuss details of the Panchen Lama’s return trip as part of a treaty signed by Beijing and Tibet that year.

“They spoke for three hours in the temple, discussed a series of important matters, including the further implementation of the agreement on the peaceful liberation of Tibet and the specific arrangements for the 10th Panchen Lama’s visit to Tibet,” Xie said.

“That was one of the most significant meetings that forged the friendship between Xi Zhongxun and the Panchen Lama that lasted for more than four decades.”

02:45

Tibetans in exile march in solidarity with Dalai Lama in India

Tibetans in exile march in solidarity with Dalai Lama in India

A Qinghai official said the temple still kept Xi Zhongxun and the Panchen Lama’s meeting room untouched as a memorial to mark a historic friendship between the party leadership and Tibetan religious leaders.

Besides the senior Xi’s meeting with the Panchen Lama, Hongjue Temple has been a key historical gateway of communication and interaction between China’s central government and Tibetan Buddhist leaders, according to an ethnic and religious affairs researcher from the Chinese Academic of Social Sciences.

“When Princess Wencheng travelled to Tibet to marry the then Tibetan king Songtsen Gampo, she made a stop at Xining for a month to get herself ready for the higher altitude in Tibet around 641 AD. The stop later became Hongjue Temple,” the researcher said.

Many Panchen Lamas stayed in the temple after it was built in the Song dynasty.

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