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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Dalai Lama

Interviewed May 20, 2024

Briefly, I should explain about the whole background. When I was young, I think age 13, 14, but not yet taken responsibility or political responsibility, there was a regent – infant regent was my own sort of teacher. In spite of deep respect as a teacher, but I heard a lot of criticisms about this regent. And then I already noticed the system itself, you see, there are some sort of drawbacks.

Then age 16, I took the – I had the responsibility for the political aspect. Then, of course, in spite – beside difficulties dealing with Chinese, I already start some reform. So I set up one reform committee and started some reform. But not very successful because the Chinese side, you see, they want reform according to their own sort of style. So if Tibetan reform was to carry, then that might become a hindrance in their own introduced reform like that.

So then, after then, 1954, I went to China. I participated at the People’s Congress there. In fact, I am one of the member of the Tibetan delegation. Then 1956, I came to India on one Buddhist celebration. I invited by Indian government, so I went there. Then, I also, you see, was to observe Indian Parliament. I found big contrast. The Chinese Parliament, very much disciplined. The Indian Parliament looks as no discipline, too much noisy. And the members very proudly criticized about their leaders, their government. So I was very much impressed. Very much impressed.

So then 1959, after we came to India – of course, it’s traditionally the venerable Dalai Lama and the Dalai Lama’s cabinet there, the Tibetan government there, like that. This is not a newly established, but simply myself and a few cabinet ministers with me when we escape from Tibet.

But then 1959 April, we reach India. We already – then, at once, we start some change. Not like previous sort of system, but more divisions among the cabinet ministers. So then, 1960, we start work for democratization.