The
people of Tibet first started coming to India around 1960, after the
Tibetan uprising against the Chinese rule in 1959. Soon after they
arrived, the government of India allotted the area of Majnu Ka Tila,
in north Delhi, to them. The place has since become an attractive
tourist spot and a regular adda for students of Delhi University
close by. Along with cafes, shops, a Tibetan school and a monastery,
it also has a clinic called Men Tsee Khang, where patients go to get
Tibetan medicines, a huge number of Indians among them. Incense smoke
wafts through the air as one crosses the busy courtyard of the
monastery and passes by walls mapping Dalai Lama’s travels through
newspaper clippings.
A cafe in Majnu Ka Tila
In
1964, the Tibetan Welfare Office was set up in Delhi to address the
needs and concerns of the Tibetans living in India. When I go to this
office in Majnu Ka Tila to know more, a perplexed Lekyi Dorjee
Tsangla, the welfare officer, looks up from his files and tries his
best to answer my questions: “You can ask me in Hindi. My English
is not so good and I can only manage broken Hindi.” Tsangla is not
from Delhi and looks back with wistfulness at his previous
appointment in the state of Arunachal Pradesh, a place he knew much
better than Delhi, where he got appointed in 2009. In his official
capacity, he acts as the link between the Tibetans in Delhi and the
Tibetan government in exile. “If a big religious ceremony is to be
held, I receive instructions from the government about how it should
be organised and pass them on to the people. After it is concluded, I
have to prepare a report and send it back to the government.”
It
is from this office that educational scholarships to Tibetans are
given out, both government and non-government. “If someone wants to
put up a shop and an agreement has to be made about space, they come
to me. If a family is trying to get their child admitted in a school
and don’t know how to go about it, they approach the welfare
office. We also certify nurses so they can get jobs in private
medical institutions, as without citizenship they can’t work in
government organisations.”
The
issue of citizenship of course is one which keeps cropping up because
a citizen identification card becomes a mandatory document to avail
of many services in town. Tsangla talks of how the Election
Commission keeps saying Tibetans would get citizenship soon while the
Ministry of Home Affairs maintains that no such rule has been framed
yet. “There was a
2014 circular saying
they would get regulation. Some people who arrived in 1962 have
ration cards while most others do not, though electricity and water
supply has been there.” So far, says Tsangla, there has not been a
tussle over resources with neighbours either.
For
Tibetans to be identified to their own government, there is something
called a green card which serves as proof of identification. A charge
of Rs 60 has to be paid for it per year and if a Tibetan national
does not have a green card, they apply for one at the welfare office.
Children
also get scholarship from nursery to class 12 to study in the Tibetan
Children’s Village (TCV) school but expenses overall have been on
the rise. “After passing out, if they do not get seats in colleges,
they directly get into jobs like call centres or hotels,” adds the
welfare officer.
Tibetan Children's Village School
There
are a lot of small businesses run by Tibetans in Majnu Ka Tila. They
also get loans up to a lakh from the Tibetan government to start
their venture. The interest rate is one per cent and the loan has to
be repaid in three months.
But
running cafes and selling woollens are not all that Tibetans in Delhi
do. Tashi Tsering came to Delhi from Dharmshala. When asked if he
faced any discrimination in Delhi, he responds in the negative. “A
lot depends on the individual. For example, if you get into a taxi
and start talking to the driver, he will do the same. And if you sit
quietly and give him tough looks, he will act in a similar manner.
Our cultures are different and in the beginning misunderstanding
might be there when people look at each other curiously. You should
take this in a positive light.” He admits that at times people are
deliberately insulting. Once when he was in Noida with a group of
friends, a guy tried to bully him. Tashi and his friends did not
react and then another guy, the first one’s friend, came and
apologized on his behalf.
Compared
to other places, Tashi finds people in Delhi relatively more
open-minded. “We had gone to Uttarakhand for a trip and some local
people came and started asking us questions about who we were, where
we have come from. They kept following us.”
But
while looking for work in the field of web development or digital
marketing, Tashi did not have to face any hassles because of his
origin. “You have to be good at your work so nobody can point a
finger at you.” Sometimes, even working with Tibetans could have
challenges. Tashi gets projects from monasteries in India and some of
the senior monks he has to deal with are often not flexible with
their requirements, not being well versed with technology and its
limitations themselves.
Tashi’s
aim is to ultimately have his own start-up, a gaming company that
targets mobile users, for which he finds India fertile ground. If it
doesn’t work here, Tibet and the US would be his other options.
“India is a free country and you can have your own business. And I
don’t need to earn billions. Just enough to survive decently and
time for family and friends.”
What
makes for challenging logistics is the lack of documentation when one
tries to set up a business or get into jobs. Tashi feels that where
he lives right now, in East of Kailash, the requirements, say for
taking a house on rent, are more relaxed than in a place like Laxmi
Nagar. That is probably one reason why the colony houses a number of
Tibetans.
There
is an important difference to note between the two kinds of Tibetans
currently living in India. The birthplace of some is Tibet while
others were born in India. The latter find it easier to make cultural
adjustments in their country of birth. But the Tibetan government
takes care to ensure that all Tibetans stay connected to their
culture. Children in Delhi are sent to a school called Tibetan
Children’s Village where they learn the Tibetan language. The
people I interviewed proudly recalled how Dalai Lama refused Nehru’s
offer of sending these children to English medium schools in India
but instead established TCV. In 1961 the Indian government
established the Central Tibetan Schools Administration (CTSA), which
has 28 schools, both day and boarding, under it in different places
in India.
Tashi
believes that while these platforms educate people in the Tibetan
language, they miss out on learning other languages as fluently. Once
he has set apart enough savings for the investment, Tashi plans to
build translation tools for Tibetans. “People like Steve Jobs can
never be my role model. What is the good of earning so much money for
yourself? Once you have enough, it is more important to give back to
society.” He also finds it limiting that for Tibetans direct
political participation is often seen as the only way of contributing
to their country. “Two years ago I started a social networking site
which also became political, though I didn’t want it to be. Why
does everything have to be like that? Or maybe I am selfish. I do
understand that my family in Tibet may have to face pressures I am
free of in Delhi. Still one cannot say that protesting is the only
way to work for our people.”
He
also admits that living away from home opens up new vistas. “You
can try anything. You face problems on your own, become mature. You
can take your own risks free from your family’s anxieties and
expectations.” After coming to Delhi, Tashi did not do much for a
year, then realised he needs to do something to stay financially
independent, became a web developer, started taking freelance work.
He also opened a cafe with a partner and later sold it when his other
work became too demanding. “Sometimes I see other families and miss
mine. I do have relatives in Nepal but don’t go there much as I
have become too used to my own freedom. I tell myself that even if I
am away from home at least I am not not wasting going to parties
every day. I am trying to do something good for myself.”
He
has a strong network of Tibetan friends around. “We regularly call
each other, meet and hang out together during Tibetan festivals.”
When in college, he first got to see Indian students his age at close
quarters. “We were two Tibetans in class and most of the students
there, in Punjab Technical University, were Punajbi. Punjabi guys are
serious. They reply when you talk; they don’t initiate
conversations. I observed that he had a group earlier but later we
would mostly see him alone. When we asked him, he said the others had
stopped hanging out with him because he had scored well in the exams.
We tried to befriend him but he seemed tense and overburdened by his
family’s expectations.”
Tashi
remembers a student in class who would look down on others and
pretend to know it all even when he didn’t, a quality he says he
later observed in a lot of Indians. I become conscious of my own
continuous nodding throughout the conversation and make it a point to
stop and ask Tashi for more clarity later in the conversation on
things that are new to me. “If I don’t know something, I’ll
come out and say it. On the other hand, this one student who would
always laugh at me had actually failed. It was only when I pointed it
out in class did he stop being contemptuous.” Talking of cultural
differences with Indians, he gives the example of marriage: “In our
society, it is not a big deal if a rich person marries someone poor.
We don't have restrictions imposed by our families. As for religions,
I feel we should pick the best parts of all religions and practise
those.”
Tashi
feels impatient with some Tibetans of the older generation, because
he has faced ageism from them. “I used to work in CTSA and nobody
would listen to me over there. You have to have grey hair in order to
be taken seriously in Tibetan society.” While working in
Dharmashala with the education department in 2014-15, he was offered
a permanent position but he refused because he felt he would not get
enough exposure there.
Learning
new things is something that most excites Tashi. “I would get the
fourth or the fifth rank in school but I was quite good in sports,
painting and computers. After graduation, I was going to pursue fine
arts and become a cartoonist.” But he eventually got interested in
web development and self-taught himself a lot of the relevant things
even before he went for a professional course. “I recently met an
old man in Nepal who was a musician and had just started a soya sauce
making ‘factory’ in his small room and was selling the products
himself on the streets to earn money. No skill goes waste.”
In
Jawaharlal Nehru University, another Tibetan is brushing up on a
skill. Tsering Tharchin is studying the Chinese language. He feels
that in the days to come Tibetans would need more and more resource
people who understand Chinese, especially with regard to political
matters. Tharchin has been in Delhi, where he came from Himachal
Pradesh, for seven years. Having been in India since 2002, he doesn’t
find it difficult to adjust here, though he is still learning to cope
with Indian spices. In Delhi, he found the opportunities that he says
aren’t available at other places in India. “I have’t
experienced discrimination here. Sure, at times there would be racist
comments but the people who would pass those would be in a small
percentage. Delhi is a liberal place and it feels like home.”
Amongst
Indians aware about the political context of Tibet’s struggle, it
is easy to see every Tibetan through those lenses. An Indian friend
with contacts in the Tibetan community told me many of them do not
want to speak to the media as they are tired of always being seen as
refugees. Sonam Dolkar, now 25, came to Delhi when she was 18, and is
pursuing her MPhil in Japanese Studies in JNU. She says that she does
not mind if people see her in the light of Tibetan’s liberation
struggle, “Even if I can educate one person about our struggle,
that’s one way I can contribute to the cause.”
Protest posters on a Majnu Ka Tila wall
Culturally,
she finds Indians more outgoing and also outspoken. “Studying and
living in Delhi was one of the best decisions for me.” As far as
the city of Delhi is concerned, she would like to work here after her
academic life is complete, “although there were times when Delhi
was not so safe for women and people like us . . . because of the
fact that we look like Chinese. I constantly experience people
calling us different names and gawking at us. But the positive thing
about Delhi has been learning to use our freedom. In the Tibetan
school, we were constantly under the eyes of a teacher, school
captains and warden. Living in Delhi and having the freedom from all
these pressures has been, in one way, very liberating.”
If
not the only, or the permanent home, the city has definitely become a
second or a current home for a lot of Tibetans, not all of them young
students. Tenzin Passang came to Delhi after his education in
Mussourie and set up his shop in the Monastery
Market in Buddhist Vihar, near ISBT.
“I am grateful to the government of India for this place, for the
amenities of water and electricity. If I have got the chance to do
business here, I too make it a point not to dupe customers. Even
students are happy with the reasonable rates at my shop.” Has he
ever had to face any racism here? “Maybe one in hundred persons is
like that. And if that person says something, other Indians explain
to him, tell him about us, where we have come from and why.”
Sonam
Wangyl is in the Indian army and helps his wife manage their shop
when he comes to Delhi during his period of leave. I ask him about
some of the clothes at the shop and he gives an embarrassed smile,
saying it’s really his wife who knows the shop
best but is unwell and thus away from the shop. He is happy with his
job and satisfied with the running of the shop, “Business is good;
the environment is favourable for doing business.”
The
president of the market association, Sonam Dorjee, explains that
since the ministry of urban development exclusively allotted the
place to Tibetans, even shops run by Indians are owned by Tibetans.
At the time of the interview, Dorjee was extremely busy because
around Buddh Purnima a lot of religious ceremonies take place around
the monasteries, which the market association has to arrange for. On
the question of whether the market people have tiffs with the Indians
around, he says, “Sometimes, but we try to ignore these things.
While some local people might discriminate against us, most are not
bad. If there is any trouble with customers, we go and pacify things.
With time, things are becoming smoother. We advise our people that
the customer is god in Indian culture and that they should be dealt
with carefully.” He feels Tibetans are well looked after by the
Indian government.
The
Tibetans who came to Delhi might be satisfied with their day to day
experience in Delhi but those who have lived in the south of India
find it an easier place to be. Tashi, living in the Tibetan youth
hostel in Rohini, which houses around 300 students, finds the south
more welcoming. At the same time, he also remembers protests in
Arunachal Pradesh, which had asked Tibetans to leave.
Entrance to the youth hostel in Rohini
Tashi
had left Tibet at the age of three, after his parents passed away,
with other Tibetans. Living in Delhi, he tries to ignore differential
behaviour towards them as much as possible. “Sometimes we are
overcharged by shops. We know this yet we agree as we Tibetans are
often lenient with our money.”
At
times he is left flustered. “We have small eyes and that’s why we
are called chinkis. Fine. But at least they shouldn’t call us
Chinese. Many people think Tibet is an Indian state in the
north-east.” On occasions when the harassment turned more
aggressive, Tashi and his friends did not find the police very
helpful. “Indian guys on bikes have targeted women around here.
They snatch phones or abuse them verbally. We have had a few fights.
We try to be around women when they step out in the evenings so we
can protect them.” Yet he feels that those from the north-east have
suffered more attacks. “And then those from the north-east have
also wanted us to leave Majnu Ka Tila, because they want to run the
market. But that is so unfair because we built the entire place. It
was bare when we got it.”
Apart
from the schools, Tashi mentions the Tibet House in Delhi, which
promotes Tibetan culture beyond the Tibetan community as well, and
the Tibetan Institute of Performing Arts in Dharmshala as another
place where Tibetan art and culture are kept alive. Graduates of the
school can then teach others. “After graduation, all of us have to
find our next stop. I am thinking of JNU or the Jindal School.”
Scholarships
from the Tibetan government are from those scoring 60 per cent and
above. If someone gets marks above 80 per cent, another 7,000 is
added. “Financial aid is there but limited and you are not left
with much for additional expenses after paying for food and
transportation. But we all try to help each other. There are Tibetan
people with money who sponsor students.” Tashi also works to
support himself, helping organise tours when he has time to spare.
In
the same hostel lives Phurbu Tsetan, a second year student of English
literature in Ramjas College, Delhi University. Her birthplace is
Kollegal in Karnataka. Right after she passed out of the Convent of
Jesus and Mary in Dehradun and started preparing to come to Delhi,
she heard news of racial attacks on people from the north-east.
“Since we look alike I was afraid. My senior reassured me that
while the news is correct the media also exaggerates.” Soon she was
explaining to locals that she was not from the north-east, and where
Tibet is. “In the beginning I didn’t get this hostel as I am not
from one of the Tibetan schools. When I was looking for a house, I
was asked for huge security deposits that other Indians did not have
to pay.” Like for most other women, traveling in Delhi is not
stress free for Phurbu, though she felt less afraid in Dehradun and
even more comfortable in Karnataka. For vacations, she prefers to go
to places around Bangalore. She says India is an evolving country and
she understands that sometimes misunderstandings and discrimination
can happen. “But one student had some really bad experiences here.
She was filling someone's survey and wrote that Indians are fake. I
was shocked as I found it rude. She then agreed to write that Indians
are mostly nice but rude at times. Actually because of what Tibetans
have faced they're close knit. So probably college friendships where
you just hang out and go back home seemed fake to her.”
Phurbu
herself has friends from different places. “One is from Arunachal
and we definitely share more solidarity.” Phurbu, like many
Tibetans, closely follows the teachings of Dalai Lama. “His
Holiness says our culture is all we have right now. So we have to be
attentive to it. We observe each festival with equal fervour. On our
national day, I wear our traditional dress.” The most anticipated
occasion is Losar, the Tibetan new year. Dalai Lama’s birthday and
the day he received the Nobel Prize are important.
Talking
more about her culture, Phurbu says, “Tibetan parents take a lot of
risks. They send kids to boarding schools at a young age. They
believe they will get prepared to face the world. When I was in the
sixth grade I travelled to Bangalore alone. There is no pressure on
us related to marriage. Though my mother was too lazy to be romantic,
I can choose my partner. I would surely like to but I am not sure if
my mother would agree to my being with someone from another
nationality. When I went to a Christian school, she was really scared
and made doubly sure that I knew my own religion closely.” In
Dehradun, Phurbu shares, there are hostels run by NGOs especially for
children from Nepal, Tibet and India, funded by people in the UK.
She
does not shy away from direct political participation though she says
she stays away from college elections because of the fights and
vandalism involved. She participates in protests for Tibet though as
a Dalai Lama follower, she sticks to the stand of demanding autonomy
for her country, rather than a complete break from China. Another
youth, Tsering Wangmo, a Delhi University graduate, speaks similarly,
“I go for gatherings that do not trigger anger against the Chinese
because that can antagonise them further and harm the Tibetans living
with them. I prefer peace marches.”
Phurbu
happily recalls, “On 10 March, the Tibetan Uprising Day, we went
around with banners to the university and to Madhuban Chowk and spoke
to people, informed them about our struggle. They gave us our full
support. Indians have suffered under the British rule; they can
empathise with us.”
............
When
seen together with the experiences of Africans living in Delhi and a
spate of attacks on them, the accounts of Tibetans tell of relatively
smoother adjustment stories. They might not be targeted because of
their colour, but they are still easily segregated based on their
looks. Lack of knowledge about Tibet-from its geographical location
to its political status-are still common challenges they have to
face. But at least till the Tibet-China tensions are resolved, the
Tibteans in Delhi seem to have accepted it as their home for a brief
period in time and made their peace with it.