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Freeing Tibet: 50 Years of Struggle, Resilience, and Hope
 
 
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Freeing Tibet: 50 Years of Struggle, Resilience, and Hope [Hardcover]

John B. Roberts II (Author), Elizabeth A. Roberts (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 4, 2009
In March of 1959, a 23 year-old Tibetan youth named Tenzin Gyatso burst onto the world stage. Fleeing his native country to govern in exile from India, the Dalai Lama would go on to become one of the great leaders of our time. Then, in March 2008, the diplomat, icon, and winner of the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize was blamed for inciting violence in Tibet's traditional capital of Lhasa. From the national uprising in 1959, which cost more than 85,000 Tibetans their lives, to the rise of the Tibetan freedom fighters; the aftereffects of Nixon's historic visit to China, and preparations for the Dalai Lama's successor, this seminal history offers an insider's view of the 50-year struggle for autonomy. Based on interviews with CIA and political insiders, this epic story gives readers a new understanding of a conflict that continues to fascinate the world.

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Freeing Tibet: 50 Years of Struggle, Resilience, and Hope + The Story of Tibet: Conversations with the Dalai Lama + The Dragon in the Land of Snows: A History of Modern Tibet Since 1947 (Compass)
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Former Reagan strategist Roberts and journalist Elizabeth Roberts draw on unprecedented access to the Dalai Lama's circle and U.S. government insiders to recount Tibet's resistance movement and its unlikely allies. Featuring recently declassified information, the book reveals the extent to which the CIA was involved in the Dalai Lama's flight into exile in northern India and in arming and training the Tibetan military resistance movement. During the cold war, the U.S. government regarded Tibet as another front from which to fend off the threat of global communism and spent millions on military and propaganda operations the authors term the Himalayan Bay of Pigs. After the Sino-Soviet split, the U.S. shifted its attention to the war in Vietnam and the cause of Tibet's human rights was embraced by the U.S. counterculture and, later, academics and Hollywood celebrities. The authors argue that Tibet's only hope lies in global economic divestment and boycotts against the Chinese government, actions that were effective in urging the end of apartheid in South Africa. Despite its somewhat simplistic solutions, this book offers a clear overview of the key issues and conveys why Tibet's situation is more urgent that ever. (Mar.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

“Former Reagan strategist Roberts and journalist Elizabeth Roberts draw on unprecedented access to the Dalai Lama's circle and U.S. government insiders to recount Tibet's resistance movement and its unlikely allies….this book offers a clear overview of the key issues and conveys why Tibet's situation is more urgent that ever.” --Publishers Weekly



"A treasure trove of information about Tibet's ordeal....[an] informative take on an important aspect of Asian political history." --Kirkus Reviews



"While this book has been expertly and technically crafted, at heart it is a passionate act of advocacy that had become, in the short months since its release, a part of the campaign committed to freeing Tibet. Read the book and, if you can, join the struggle." --Tom Blankley, syndicated columnist



"Written in an engaging, narrative style, Freeing Tibet is the story of a culture that has been struggling to survive for half a century... Freeing Tibet is not the chronicle of a hopeless cause—au contraire. It tells how an engaged global community could liberate the Tibetans." --Shambhala Sun


Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 17 and up
  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: AMACOM (March 4, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0814409830
  • ISBN-13: 978-0814409831
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.3 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,242,215 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

For his latest book, J.B. Roberts II took a thirteen-hour road trip to northern India in the dead of winter to reach Dharamsala, the Dalai Lama's home in exile. While doing research for the book he stayed in an unheated guest house during the coldest January on record for years, raced thunderstorms to write a TV show from an Internet cafe before lightning plunged Dharamsala into a black-out, and immersed himself in the world of Tibetan exiles and their political movements.

It was just another typical adventure in a career that has thrown him into the Salman Rushdie riots in Pakistan, the overthrow of the Ceasescu dictatorship in Romania, and an attempted coup in Argentina. As a freelance television producer, Roberts has written thousands of shows and interviews for world leaders, celebrities, experts, politicians, and authors. He works on assignment around the world, from exotic locales such as a remote atoll in Tahiti to world capitals like Madrid.

Born in Panama, Roberts has lived in Spain and worked throughout Latin America. Before making a mid-career switch to writing fulltime, he was an international political consultant. His experience in the White House and in campaigns in the U.S. and abroad makes him an expert in political movements and trends, especially in developing democracies. His personal knowledge of how politicians work and what motivates them carries into his non-fiction books, bringing an invaluable insider perspective.

He is listed in "Who's Who in America" and has been published in the New York Times, Washington Post, Washington Times, Reader's Digest, and other publications. When he isn't writing television shows, books, or articles, he can be found drawing and painting,or wandering remote biways in his 1984 Jeep.

 

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A 'must' for any library strong in global issues and world politics, April 14, 2009
This review is from: Freeing Tibet: 50 Years of Struggle, Resilience, and Hope (Hardcover)
FREEING TIBET: 50 YEARS OF STRUGGLE, RESILIENCE, AND HOPE provides an inside story of how the 'free Tibet' movement was born and why it has lasted. Interviews with former CIA officers, government executives, and others provides new details on all aspects of Tibet's struggles, offering unusual insights into a movement maintained by millions around the world. A 'must' for any library strong in global issues and world politics.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Espionage turns into counterculture and then protests, August 10, 2009
This review is from: Freeing Tibet: 50 Years of Struggle, Resilience, and Hope (Hardcover)
Credit Allen Ginsberg! His Beat quest crossed, in New Jersey, with Geshe Wangyal's Kalmyk refugees who founded the first Tibetan Buddhist monastery in a garage. While Ginsberg's popularization of the dharma, repeated in this book, is well-known, Wangyal and his Tibetan colleagues provide the other side of a symbiotic relationship between the counterculture and the Establishment in their struggle to raise not only consciousness but funds and resistance within the occupied homeland for the cause of freedom.

The CIA, as the first part documents (within limits as much remains classified), tried to work within Cold War tensions, India-China frontier clashes, and propaganda benign and black to support Khampa freedom fighters in the Eisenhower administration. But, after secret guerrilla training in Saipan and Colorado, and airlifts into Tibet, the People's Liberation Army, in 1961, slaughtered the rebels in a "second Bay of Pigs" that today still is largely hush-hush, even to the Beltway-insider authors, who in this narrative rely on CIA operatives and released security directives to explain the role of spies and arms in the failed first stage for Tibet's struggle against Communism. With the Asian geopolitical tensions rising in the early '60s, Tibet was abandoned by Washington.

Part Two shows how Beats and then hippies-- and Ginsberg seems to be always in the vanguard-- took over the "ethical obligation" to Tibet. It concludes with an intriguing reflection. After the CIA's failure to support a popular uprising against vicious PLA reprisals, "shared spiritual values instead of political expendience" entered the awareness of the West. Therefore, "what appeared as a double-cross by the American government-- cold-hearted reneging on solemn promises to support the Dalai Lama during his exile-- was in reality a criss-cross, a moment in time when the surging counterculture took over from an establishment that had discarded the goal of Tibetan liberation." (173)

Published in 2008 after the latest uprising, Part Three therefore shows the little we know, given Chinese manipulation and censorship-- of the protests that March, that failed to derail international acclaim for the Beijing Olympics, and that did not result in Western leaders having the courage to boycott the most favored of all trading partners. Yet, the Roberts pair insist that, as with apartheid-era South Africa, divestment and boycotts can and would work against China to force a sort of Catalan autonomy within Spain parallel for Tibet.

Their proposals, on economic, moral, and environmental grounds, dovetail nicely with the book also from 2008 by an advocate they both quote often, Robert Thurman in his "Why the Dalai Lama Matters." What frightens one in the last stages of the Roberts book is that the present, aging Dalai Lama may not reincarnate, or that his reincarnation may be stage-managed as the Panchen Lama has by the Chinese.

The steady erosion of Tibetan culture, where 8 monasteries out of 6000 survived intact after the invasion and then the Cultural Revolution, continues. Native tour guides in Lhasa are replaced by Han Chinese parroting the party line of a grateful nation happy to be released from serfdom and pits of scorpions run by mad monks. The rail brings in immigrants; Tibetan is not taught but Chinese remains a must for traders and advancement of the dwindling indigenous population against the incomers who bring capitalism without ethics or respect for the Buddhist and local traditions.

While this efficient account moves smoothly through such details, it stumbles a bit in the early section, perhaps burdened inevitably by lots of diplomatic minutiae that historians and analysts will nonetheless welcome. The second part, with the Beats and hippies, moves more fluidly; the third part weighs one down with the realization that cheap labor and high profits from the PRC trump any committment by the East or West to lasting Chinese reform.

I'd have added a couple of clarifications. The 1904 British occupation of Lhasa by Col. Younghusband did lead to a treaty that forced Tibet's trade with the British in exchange for the Empire's recognition of its independence, but it also meant that the Chinese could twist this treaty with a foreign power into a reason to take over Tibet. The Manchus were deposed but the new Republic of China never ratified the Simla Conference of 1913-14 that acknowledged Tibetan independence. This issue is not mentioned by the Roberts, who maybe march too rapidly over early 20th century diplomatic foundations upon which the present Chinese later justified their long domination of Tibet.

Also, in the Dorje Shukden controversy, the "rival sect" possibly entangled with the murderous debate over the 17th Karmapa seems worthy of more coverage. The Roberts do not elaborate, but the controversy over the New Kadampa Tradition (NKT) in the West that has spread an anti-Dalai Lama campaign taken up often by pro-PRC media appears deserving of attention, as this plays into the current political and cultural skirmishes over the Dalai Lama and his role in governing Tibetan affairs from his Dharamsala exile.

Still, these are minor asides compared to the moral necessity that most in East and West have shirked-- outside of a few celebrities, musicians, more low-key activists, and brave protesters. Our leaders tell us to trust in "blind faith that capitalism has some magical quality to transform China from a one-party communist state to a multi-party democracy." (246) We buy cheap goods, we send them our factories, and we rely on them to support our debt. But, we fail to make them a fairer regime for the Han let alone Tibetans. I hope this book finds an audience, and I hope it changes the complacency and indifference with which many dismiss Tibet today.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Premier book on the subject, June 1, 2009
This review is from: Freeing Tibet: 50 Years of Struggle, Resilience, and Hope (Hardcover)
Authors John B. Roberts II and Elizabeth A. Roberts do such an outstanding job in Freeing Tibet: 50 Years of Struggle, Resilience, and Hope and I so hope lots of people read the book.

Have been concerned about Tibet since I was in my early twenties back in the early 70's. Wonder how many Buddhists even know that China wants the say in who will be the Dalai Lama, thus having two instead of the one Dalai Lama we all know.

Also of great interest is the history going back to the Eisenhower years. And while some may see the authors solutions as to simple, I happen to think and believe the authors make a lot of sense. My concern is what will the Obama administration do?

The fact that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton seemed to be extra nice the the Chinese when she met with them recently, I hope China doesn't think we as concerned Americans, don't care. Because many of us do.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
station chief, eaters must stand together, national uprising, torch relay, covert war, smoke jumpers
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Dalai Lama, United States, Tibetan Buddhism, Tenzin Gyatso, Special Group, Camp Hale, Eastern Tibet, Panchen Lama, World War, New York, White House, Han Chinese, South Africa, New Delhi, Free Tibet, Red Guards, Gompo Tashi, Tibet Task Force, Cultural Revolution, Vietnam War, Baba Yeshe, Chairman Mao, San Francisco, Gyalo Thondup, Eleanor Roosevelt
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Surprise Me!
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