By Natalie Hale
Deseret Morning News
Published: October 7, 2007
The handmade banner that hung from China's great wall could barely be
seen through the mist, but its message in Chinese and English was
clear - "One World, One Dream, Free Tibet."
The handful of American and Canadian protestors, some sons and
daughters of exiled Tibetans and others simply sympathizers to the
cause, rappelled down the ancient wall and sent the message that they
wanted independence for Tibet live around the world using video cameras.
The act itself, in addition to stirring up thought about the issue,
managed to get the students detained and deported by the Chinese
government.
Lhadon Tethong, the executive director of the Students for a Free
Tibet, held a press conference Saturday before Utah residents, many
of them members of Utah's growing Tibetan community.
On Aug. 8, the year marker before the start of the 2008 Olympic
Games, Tethong was among the thick of things in China. After seven
days of protesting and discussion, she and her friends were detained
that afternoon and interrogated for six hours. The words that were
spoken to her before she was deported were still fresh in her mind.
"You are reported to be promoting Tibetan independence and human
rights," the interrogator told her. "You are undermining the
stability of Chinese society, and you must go now to Hong Kong."
Tethong said Chinese secret police had followed her group, but she
couldn't figure out why the police hadn't taken action against them
earlier. She said the police probably couldn't decide what to do, as
messages of openness and acceptance were being touted to the
international community to promote the Olympics and mark the one-year
countdown to the Games.
"In China, there are the three forbidden topics," Tethong said.
"Taiwan, Tiananmen and Tibet."
Tibet was annexed by the People's Republic of China in the 1950s by
leader Mao Zedong, forcing the Dalai Lama and his government into exile.
Tethong had crossed the line, but it wasn't the first time her
organization used the future games in Beijing as leverage to raise
awareness of the current political and humanitarian situation in Tibet.
Earlier that year, on April 25, Tenzin Dorjee, the deputy director of
the Students for a Free Tibet and a son of refugee Tibetans in India,
staged a demonstration at the base camp of Mount Everest, where some
Chinese people were going to be doing trial runs of taking a mock
Olympic torch to the top of the peak.
Dorjee and other protestors held up a banner with the same modified
Olympic theme: "One World, One Dream, Free Tibet" while singing the
Tibetan National Anthem before all at the camp.
"They definitely weren't expecting us," Dorjee said. "We sent live
feed to New York on YouTube and were arrested within 25 minutes."
Dorjee was detained for two-and-a-half days, and he was interrogated
and threatened.
But the terrifying experience hasn't stopped him and Tethong from
promoting their cause for Tibet's independence from China.
"A generation has grown up completely in exile, but still, because of
grandparents and parents, they very strongly identify as Tibetans,"
Tethong said. "Our mission is to work in solidarity with Tibetans for
the restoration of independence and human rights."
For more information about the Students for a Free Tibet organization
and to watch video of their protests, visit
www.studentsforafreetibet.org.
E-mail: nhale@desnews.com