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Difference between revisions of "Escape into Exile"

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[[File:Buddhasface.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Buddhasface.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
One winter day of 1959 (March 10), General Zhang Chenwu of {{Wiki|Communist China}} extended a seemingly innocent invitation to the [[Tibetan]] leader to attend a theatrical show by a [[Chinese]] [[dance]] troupe. When the invitation was repeated with new [[conditions]] that no [[Tibetan]] soldiers were to accompany the [[Dalai Lama]] and that his bodyguards be unarmed, an acute [[anxiety]] befell the [[Lhasa]] population. Soon a crowd of tens of thousands of [[Tibetans]] [[gathered]] around the [[Norbulingka Palace]], determined to thwart any threat to their young leader's [[life]] and preventing [[His Holiness]] from going.
 
  
On 17 March 1959 during a consultation with the [[Nechung Oracle]], [[His Holiness]] was given an explicit instruction to leave the country. The Oracle's [[decision]] was further confirmed when a [[divinity]] performed by [[His Holiness]] produced the same answer, even though the odds against making a successful break seemed terrifyingly high.
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One winter day of 1959 (March 10), [[General Zhang Chenwu]] of {{Wiki|Communist China}} extended a seemingly innocent invitation to the [[Tibetan]] leader to attend a theatrical show by a [[Chinese]] [[dance]] troupe.
 +
 
 +
When the invitation was repeated with new [[conditions]] that no [[Tibetan]] soldiers were to accompany the [[Dalai Lama]] and that his bodyguards be unarmed, an acute [[anxiety]] befell the [[Lhasa]] population.
 +
 
 +
Soon a crowd of tens of thousands of [[Tibetans]] [[gathered]] around the [[Norbulingka Palace]], determined to thwart any threat to their young leader's [[life]] and preventing [[His Holiness]] from going.
 +
 
 +
On 17 March 1959 during a consultation with the [[Nechung Oracle]], [[His Holiness]] was given an explicit instruction to leave the country.  
 +
 
 +
The Oracle's [[decision]] was further confirmed when a [[divinity]] performed by [[His Holiness]] produced the same answer, even though the odds against making a successful break seemed terrifyingly high.
  
 
A few minutes before ten o'clock [[His Holiness]], disguised as a common soldier, slipped {{Wiki|past}} the massive throng of [[people]] along with a small escort and proceeded towards the [[Kyichu river]], where he was joined by the rest of the entourage, [[including]] some of his immediate [[family]] members.
 
A few minutes before ten o'clock [[His Holiness]], disguised as a common soldier, slipped {{Wiki|past}} the massive throng of [[people]] along with a small escort and proceeded towards the [[Kyichu river]], where he was joined by the rest of the entourage, [[including]] some of his immediate [[family]] members.

Revision as of 03:11, 9 January 2016

Buddhasface.jpg


One winter day of 1959 (March 10), General Zhang Chenwu of Communist China extended a seemingly innocent invitation to the Tibetan leader to attend a theatrical show by a Chinese dance troupe.

When the invitation was repeated with new conditions that no Tibetan soldiers were to accompany the Dalai Lama and that his bodyguards be unarmed, an acute anxiety befell the Lhasa population.

Soon a crowd of tens of thousands of Tibetans gathered around the Norbulingka Palace, determined to thwart any threat to their young leader's life and preventing His Holiness from going.

On 17 March 1959 during a consultation with the Nechung Oracle, His Holiness was given an explicit instruction to leave the country.

The Oracle's decision was further confirmed when a divinity performed by His Holiness produced the same answer, even though the odds against making a successful break seemed terrifyingly high.

A few minutes before ten o'clock His Holiness, disguised as a common soldier, slipped past the massive throng of people along with a small escort and proceeded towards the Kyichu river, where he was joined by the rest of the entourage, including some of his immediate family members.

Source

www.dalailama.com