25 November 2014

Tibet for the day


Harry Swartout has an article with a video (above) in Time about rediscovered Tibetan movies:
It’s hard to get to Tibet. But as tough as that is, a more difficult feat is to get something out. For the many Tibetans still living in Tibet, the best way to preserve their culture from the growing influence of Han Chinese migrants is to send it abroad, preferably in secret in the bottom of a steamer trunk, say, in the dead of night. That is where the Tenzin Phuntsog found sixteen films, some of which hadn’t been seen in nearly fifty years.
Using his own money and learning from friends along the way, Phuntsog restored and digitized the films, creating the Tibet Film Archive. Now, Phuntsog tells Time, comes the tricky part: getting the films back into Tibet to show the people who need to see them the most. The films preserved by the Tibet Film Archive chronicle the region's rich culture, troubled present and unsure future: 
German Expedition to Tibet: Geheimnis (Secret) (1939)
In 1939, Nazi Germany sent an unprecedented expedition to Tibet, complete with botanists, anthropologists, photographers, and a film camera operator. Despite receiving part of their funding from the infamous Nazi leader Heinrich Himmler— and being forced into becoming SS officers themselves— the scientists still collected artifacts, made maps, and documented the land for European eyes. 
Lowell Thomas: Tibet Lecture (1944)
The traveler who chronicled the story of Lawrence of Arabia also made trips to Tibet. The film shows a young candidate for the position of the Panchen Lama, a spiritual leader like the Dalai Lama— or possibly the tenth Panchen Lama as a youth— while documenting the monastic life central to Tibetan culture. 
The Religious Investiture of His Holiness the Dalai Lama (1970)
Given the newsreel treatment in the 1970s, the original footage in this film was shot before the Dalai Lama fled Tibet into exile in India in 1959. Depicting the Geshe exam, a scholarly test taken by the current Dalai Lama, the film serves as proof that the Dalai Lama attained his rank legitimately and, more importantly, in Tibet.
Rico says it's a place that, even though the Chinese are fucking it up, he'd still like to visit...

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