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Tibet's Dalai Lama: A Life In Exile In 10 Dates

Tibet's Dalai Lama: A Life In Exile In 10 Dates

NDTV02-07-2025
Tibetan Buddhists believe the current Dalai Lama is the 14th reincarnation of a spiritual leader first born in 1391.
He has led Tibetans through some of the most calamitous events in their history.
Decades after the Dalai Lama's exile following a failed uprising, Tibetans will gather to celebrate his 90th birthday on July 6.
Here are key dates in the life of the leader, monk and Nobel laureate Tenzin Gyatso.
1935: Farming Family
Lhamo Thondup is born to a farming family in the rural village of Taktser on July 6, 1935, more than a decade before the Communist Party establishes the People's Republic of China.
Situated on a high-altitude plateau, dubbed by some the "roof of the world", Tibet has alternated over the centuries between independence and control by China.
At the time, Tibet is largely autonomous, after shaking off both the grip of China's Qing dynasty and a British invasion.
1937: 14th Reincarnation
He is just two when Buddhist monks in disguise arrive at his family home searching for the reincarnation of the Dalai Lama, who had died four years earlier.
The monks are convinced they have found the right boy when he asks for prayer beads that had belonged to his predecessor.
In 1940, he is enthroned as Tibet's leader, taking the monastic name Tenzin Gyatso.
1950: China Takes Control
The Chinese army pours into Tibet, crushing a ramshackle resistance. Beijing says it "peacefully liberated" the rugged plateau.
1954: Meets Mao
He visits Beijing and meets Mao Zedong, who he says tells him that "religion is poison".
1959: Flees to India
He flees Lhasa after China deploys troops in the region to crush a popular uprising.
Too sick to ride a horse, he crosses the snowy mountain passes into India on the back of a dzomo, a cow-yak hybrid.
India allows the establishment of a Tibetan government-in-exile in its northern town of Dharamsala. Beijing calls him a "wolf in monk's robes".
1967: Launches Global Campaign
He visits Japan and Thailand, the first stops on a globetrotting campaign to promote his cause, hobnobbing with world leaders and Hollywood stars.
China's Cultural Revolution of 1966-76 devastates Tibet.
1988: 'Middle Way'
He abandons demands for Tibetan independence, advocating instead for the "Middle Way" approach for greater autonomy. China continues to call him a separatist.
1989: Nobel
He receives the Nobel Peace Prize for advocating solutions based "upon tolerance and mutual respect".
Beijing, which months earlier had crushed large-scale demonstrations in Lhasa calling for independence, condemns the award as "preposterous".
2011: Political Retirement
He steps down as political head of Tibet's exiled government to make way for a democratically elected leader.
Today: Monastic Life
He maintains a rigorous monastic life, rising before dawn for prayers.
"I always consider myself as a simple Buddhist monk," he writes on his website. "I feel that is the real me."
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