Fundamentalist christians putting Tibetans in danger
When Dawa said yes to a party held by
American friends in the city of Xining, she expected music, drinks, and a
chance to practice her English. But it soon transpired that there would
be more to the evening’s activities.
“When we arrived one person said loudly: ‘Lord!’ and started to cry,”
Dawa, an earnest Tibetan in her late 20s, recalls in a café in Xining,
the capital of China’s Qinghai province. “Some people came and touched
me and cried. We were so afraid. We thought, Why are they crying?”
For Dawa and her friend Tenzin (names have been changed to protect
their identities), both Tibetans from nomadic families trying to make it
in the big city, the situation was not only potentially dangerous if
they had been caught by police but humiliating. “We were upset,”
explains Tenzin. “They had told us we could learn English. We felt like
fools.”
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