TFIPOST हिन्दी
TFIPOST Global
Tfipost.com
Tfipost.com
No Result
View All Result
  • Premium
  • Politics
    • All
    • Analysis
    • Opinions
    • Trending
    Silenced and Forgotten: How China Suppressed Justice for Xiao Huamei and Zhang Zhan

    Silenced and Forgotten: How China Suppressed Justice for Xiao Huamei and Zhang Zhan

    Ayatollah Khamenei Row Sparks Protests as Karti Chidambaram’s Office in Karaikudi Targeted

    Ayatollah Khamenei Row Sparks Protests as Karti Chidambaram’s Office in Karaikudi Targeted

    Allahabad High Court Seeks Centre’s Records in Rahul Gandhi Citizenship Complaint

    Allahabad High Court Seeks Centre’s Records in Rahul Gandhi Citizenship Complaint

    After Oil, Fertiliser Supply Becomes India’s Next Concern Amid Iran’s Hormuz Tensions

    After Oil, Fertiliser Supply Becomes India’s Next Concern Amid Iran’s Hormuz Tensions

    • Analysis
    • Opinions
    • Trending
  • Economy
    • All
    • Business
    • Economy1
    • Finance
    After Oil, Fertiliser Supply Becomes India’s Next Concern Amid Iran’s Hormuz Tensions

    After Oil, Fertiliser Supply Becomes India’s Next Concern Amid Iran’s Hormuz Tensions

    LNG Supply Crunch: IRCTC Directs Station Caterers to Use Microwaves, Induction Cookers Amid West Asia Crisis

    LNG Supply Crunch: IRCTC Directs Station Caterers to Use Microwaves, Induction Cookers Amid West Asia Crisis

    Five Pakistanis, One Bangladeshi Arrested in Bahrain for Filming, Praising Iranian Missile Attacks

    Five Pakistanis, One Bangladeshi Arrested in Bahrain for Filming, Praising Iranian Missile Attacks

    BJP Issues Three-Line Whip, Directs All MPs to Be Present Amid No-Confidence Debate

    BJP Issues Three-Line Whip, Directs All MPs to Be Present Amid No-Confidence Debate

    • Business
    • Finance
  • Defense
    • All
    • Defence
    • Strategy
    • Weaponry
    After Oil, Fertiliser Supply Becomes India’s Next Concern Amid Iran’s Hormuz Tensions

    After Oil, Fertiliser Supply Becomes India’s Next Concern Amid Iran’s Hormuz Tensions

    India Moves Ahead with Development of 13-Ton Ghatak UCAV, Stealth Drone Designed to Breach Enemy Air Defences

    India Moves Ahead with Development of 13-Ton Ghatak UCAV, Stealth Drone Designed to Breach Enemy Air Defences

    From Shore to Shadow: Why Lashkar-e-Taiba’s Maritime Foray Reawakens Mumbai Attack Memories?

    From Shore to Shadow: Why Lashkar-e-Taiba’s Maritime Foray Reawakens Mumbai Attack Memories?

    Undersea Dominance: India’s Growing Submarine Fleet Highlights Vulnerabilities of Surface Warships After IRIS Dena Torpedo Strike

    Undersea Dominance: India’s Growing Submarine Fleet Highlights Vulnerabilities of Surface Warships After IRIS Dena Torpedo Strike

    • Defence
    • Strategy
    • Weaponry
  • Geopolitics
    • All
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia Pacific
    • Europe
    • South Asia
    • West Asia
    Balochistan at Crossroads: Geopolitics, Security, and Struggle for Local Empowerment

    Balochistan at Crossroads: Geopolitics, Security, and Struggle for Local Empowerment

    Carney to Visit India on Feb 26 as Part of Three-Nation Indo-Pacific Tour

    Carney to Visit India on Feb 26 as Part of Three-Nation Indo-Pacific Tour

    India to Likely Procure Israeli-Origin ‘Sky Sting’ Long-Range Air-to-Air Missile During PM Modi’s Israel Visit

    India to Likely Procure Israeli-Origin ‘Sky Sting’ Long-Range Air-to-Air Missile During PM Modi’s Israel Visit

    Most Anticipated New Car Launches in India for 2026

    ‘POJK Sankalp Diwas’: The Parliamentary Resolution of 22 February 1994 and India’s National Responsibility

    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia Pacific
    • Europe
    • South Asia
    • West Asia
  • Knowledge
    • All
    • Culture
    • Education
    • History
    • Indology
    Silenced and Forgotten: How China Suppressed Justice for Xiao Huamei and Zhang Zhan

    Silenced and Forgotten: How China Suppressed Justice for Xiao Huamei and Zhang Zhan

    Tibetans and Unbroken Cry of Tibet: Memory, Resistance, Weight of Silence

    Tibetans and Unbroken Cry of Tibet: Memory, Resistance, Weight of Silence

    International Women’s Day

    International Women’s Day: Could the West Match the Rights Women Had in the Vedic Era?

    Top International Healthcare Jobs and Global Demand Trends in 2026

    Top International Healthcare Jobs and Global Demand Trends in 2026

    • Culture
    • History
    • Indology
  • Law
  • Lounge
    • All
    • Books
    • Cinema
    • Entertainment
    • Food
    • Games
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Satire
    • Sports
    • technology
    • Travel
    Benefits and Challenges of Using Home Hemodialysis Equipment

    Benefits and Challenges of Using Home Hemodialysis Equipment

    First Steps to Start Using Nagad88

    First Steps to Start Using Nagad88

    Electric Bike vs Petrol Bike: Charging, Cost, and Maintenance Differences of Owning an Electric Bike in India

    Electric Bike vs Petrol Bike: Charging, Cost, and Maintenance Differences of Owning an Electric Bike in India

    1Win App – A Game Changer in Pakistan’s Mobile Casino Scene

    1Win App – A Game Changer in Pakistan’s Mobile Casino Scene

    • Books
    • Cinema
    • Food
    • Health
    • Sports
    • technology
    • Travel
    • Satire
Tfipost.com
  • Premium
  • Politics
    • All
    • Analysis
    • Opinions
    • Trending
    Silenced and Forgotten: How China Suppressed Justice for Xiao Huamei and Zhang Zhan

    Silenced and Forgotten: How China Suppressed Justice for Xiao Huamei and Zhang Zhan

    Ayatollah Khamenei Row Sparks Protests as Karti Chidambaram’s Office in Karaikudi Targeted

    Ayatollah Khamenei Row Sparks Protests as Karti Chidambaram’s Office in Karaikudi Targeted

    Allahabad High Court Seeks Centre’s Records in Rahul Gandhi Citizenship Complaint

    Allahabad High Court Seeks Centre’s Records in Rahul Gandhi Citizenship Complaint

    After Oil, Fertiliser Supply Becomes India’s Next Concern Amid Iran’s Hormuz Tensions

    After Oil, Fertiliser Supply Becomes India’s Next Concern Amid Iran’s Hormuz Tensions

    • Analysis
    • Opinions
    • Trending
  • Economy
    • All
    • Business
    • Economy1
    • Finance
    After Oil, Fertiliser Supply Becomes India’s Next Concern Amid Iran’s Hormuz Tensions

    After Oil, Fertiliser Supply Becomes India’s Next Concern Amid Iran’s Hormuz Tensions

    LNG Supply Crunch: IRCTC Directs Station Caterers to Use Microwaves, Induction Cookers Amid West Asia Crisis

    LNG Supply Crunch: IRCTC Directs Station Caterers to Use Microwaves, Induction Cookers Amid West Asia Crisis

    Five Pakistanis, One Bangladeshi Arrested in Bahrain for Filming, Praising Iranian Missile Attacks

    Five Pakistanis, One Bangladeshi Arrested in Bahrain for Filming, Praising Iranian Missile Attacks

    BJP Issues Three-Line Whip, Directs All MPs to Be Present Amid No-Confidence Debate

    BJP Issues Three-Line Whip, Directs All MPs to Be Present Amid No-Confidence Debate

    • Business
    • Finance
  • Defense
    • All
    • Defence
    • Strategy
    • Weaponry
    After Oil, Fertiliser Supply Becomes India’s Next Concern Amid Iran’s Hormuz Tensions

    After Oil, Fertiliser Supply Becomes India’s Next Concern Amid Iran’s Hormuz Tensions

    India Moves Ahead with Development of 13-Ton Ghatak UCAV, Stealth Drone Designed to Breach Enemy Air Defences

    India Moves Ahead with Development of 13-Ton Ghatak UCAV, Stealth Drone Designed to Breach Enemy Air Defences

    From Shore to Shadow: Why Lashkar-e-Taiba’s Maritime Foray Reawakens Mumbai Attack Memories?

    From Shore to Shadow: Why Lashkar-e-Taiba’s Maritime Foray Reawakens Mumbai Attack Memories?

    Undersea Dominance: India’s Growing Submarine Fleet Highlights Vulnerabilities of Surface Warships After IRIS Dena Torpedo Strike

    Undersea Dominance: India’s Growing Submarine Fleet Highlights Vulnerabilities of Surface Warships After IRIS Dena Torpedo Strike

    • Defence
    • Strategy
    • Weaponry
  • Geopolitics
    • All
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia Pacific
    • Europe
    • South Asia
    • West Asia
    Balochistan at Crossroads: Geopolitics, Security, and Struggle for Local Empowerment

    Balochistan at Crossroads: Geopolitics, Security, and Struggle for Local Empowerment

    Carney to Visit India on Feb 26 as Part of Three-Nation Indo-Pacific Tour

    Carney to Visit India on Feb 26 as Part of Three-Nation Indo-Pacific Tour

    India to Likely Procure Israeli-Origin ‘Sky Sting’ Long-Range Air-to-Air Missile During PM Modi’s Israel Visit

    India to Likely Procure Israeli-Origin ‘Sky Sting’ Long-Range Air-to-Air Missile During PM Modi’s Israel Visit

    Most Anticipated New Car Launches in India for 2026

    ‘POJK Sankalp Diwas’: The Parliamentary Resolution of 22 February 1994 and India’s National Responsibility

    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia Pacific
    • Europe
    • South Asia
    • West Asia
  • Knowledge
    • All
    • Culture
    • Education
    • History
    • Indology
    Silenced and Forgotten: How China Suppressed Justice for Xiao Huamei and Zhang Zhan

    Silenced and Forgotten: How China Suppressed Justice for Xiao Huamei and Zhang Zhan

    Tibetans and Unbroken Cry of Tibet: Memory, Resistance, Weight of Silence

    Tibetans and Unbroken Cry of Tibet: Memory, Resistance, Weight of Silence

    International Women’s Day

    International Women’s Day: Could the West Match the Rights Women Had in the Vedic Era?

    Top International Healthcare Jobs and Global Demand Trends in 2026

    Top International Healthcare Jobs and Global Demand Trends in 2026

    • Culture
    • History
    • Indology
  • Law
  • Lounge
    • All
    • Books
    • Cinema
    • Entertainment
    • Food
    • Games
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Satire
    • Sports
    • technology
    • Travel
    Benefits and Challenges of Using Home Hemodialysis Equipment

    Benefits and Challenges of Using Home Hemodialysis Equipment

    First Steps to Start Using Nagad88

    First Steps to Start Using Nagad88

    Electric Bike vs Petrol Bike: Charging, Cost, and Maintenance Differences of Owning an Electric Bike in India

    Electric Bike vs Petrol Bike: Charging, Cost, and Maintenance Differences of Owning an Electric Bike in India

    1Win App – A Game Changer in Pakistan’s Mobile Casino Scene

    1Win App – A Game Changer in Pakistan’s Mobile Casino Scene

    • Books
    • Cinema
    • Food
    • Health
    • Sports
    • technology
    • Travel
    • Satire
No Result
View All Result
Tfipost.com
Tfipost.com
No Result
View All Result
  • Premium
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Defense
  • Geopolitics
  • Knowledge
  • Law
  • Lounge

Tibetans and Unbroken Cry of Tibet: Memory, Resistance, Weight of Silence

March 10 is a date that Tibetans carry with them wherever they go, returning each year with a quiet but persistent demand: to remember, to grieve, and to refuse to give up

Ashu Maan by Ashu Maan
11 March 2026
in Analysis, History, Opinions
Tibetans and Unbroken Cry of Tibet: Memory, Resistance, Weight of Silence

Tibetan Uprising Day Commemoration of the 10 March 1959 Tibetan uprising

Share on FacebookShare on X

March 10 is a date that Tibetans carry with them wherever they go, returning each year with a quiet but persistent demand, to remember, to grieve, and to refuse to give up.

It marks the uprising of 1959, when thousands of Tibetans gathered in defiance of the Chinese Communist Party’s tightening control over their homeland, their faith, and their way of life, standing up with little more than courage against a force far more powerful than themselves.

RelatedPosts

Galwan Cover-Up: Blueprint for Chinese Communist Party Duplicity, Deepened Indo-Pacific Distrust

How the Dalai Lama’s 1913 Declaration Shattered China’s ‘Tibet Always Been Part of China’ Claim

The Sovereignty Debate: Dismantling the Chinese Myth of “Ancient Rule” in Tibet

Load More

The world’s response to that moment, and its choices in the decades that followed remains uneasy and unresolved. For Tibetans, however, time has not softened the question, if anything, it has only sharpened it, returning each year as both a memory and a quiet challenge to a world that has yet to fully answer it.

This year marks the 67th anniversary of Tibetan National Uprising Day when thousands of Tibetans who rose against Chinese rule in Lhasa in 1959 and sacrificed their lives to protect the 14th Dalai Lama and defend Tibet’s freedom and cultural heritage. March 10 is observed as Tibetan Uprising Day to commemorate the revolt against Chinese rule.

People Who Stood in the Way

To understand March 10, 1959, you have to understand what Tibet was facing. Through the 1950s, China had been steadily extending its reach into Tibetan territory following its invasion in 1950, yet Tibet had managed to hold on to something of itself, its own way of governing, its monasteries, its spiritual identity.

Then came the rumour, as word spread that Chinese officials intended to take the 14th Dalai Lama, the man who was not only Tibet’s political leader but the living centre of its spiritual world. Nobody waited to find out if it was true. Tens of thousands of Tibetans moved toward his palace in Lhasa and formed a human wall around it.

What started as an act of protection became something larger. People poured in from all three of Tibet’s provinces, U-Tsang, Kham, and Amdo, bound together by a shared refusal to submit. Men and women who had never thought of themselves as fighters stood in the streets and declared, simply and clearly, that Tibet was theirs and they would not hand it over.

The Chinese military’s response was not negotiation. It was a bombardment. Thousands were killed. And the Dalai Lama, slipping away in the chaos, made the long journey into exile in India, where he would eventually build the Central Tibetan Administration in Dharamshala, a government without a country, keeping the flame alive from a distance.

What Came After

Beijing had a word for what happened: rebellion. It was a useful word. It reframed a people defending their home as a threat that needed to be put down, and it gave what followed the appearance of necessity. But what followed was not the restoration of order. It was the destruction of a world.

Monasteries that had been built over hundreds of years, places where knowledge was kept, where community gathered, where generations had been shaped were pulled apart. Faith, which had been as natural to Tibetan life as breathing, became an act of defiance simply by existing.

People were locked away not for anything they had done, but for what they believed, or for belonging to a community that believed it. In some cases, for nothing more than being the kind of person who might, one day, speak their mind.

The decades that followed brought more of the same, only quieter and more thorough. Surveillance spread. The freedom to move was curtailed. A generation of Tibetan children grew up being taught a history of their own land that had been carefully emptied of its truth.

And all the while, the things that hold a people together, their language, their customs, their sense of themselves were being steadily taken apart by a government that had decided Tibetan identity was an inconvenience at best, and a danger at worst.

Human Rights Watch and other organisations have kept documenting what continues to happen: arbitrary arrests, blocked movement, the grinding suppression of culture and religion. Monks have been detained. Writers have been silenced. People who did nothing more than care for the land they lived on have been punished for it.

The ambition behind all of this is not simply to govern Tibet. It is to remake it, to produce a Tibet that thinks what Beijing wants it to think, remembers what Beijing wants it to remember, and forgets everything else.

What Has Never Died

And yet. Tibetans have not become what Beijing wants them to become. In exile communities scattered across the globe, people have held on to the language, to the prayers, to the stories, to one another.

The Central Tibetan Administration has continued to function as a moral and political voice for a people without a state, insisting through peaceful means that the Tibetan cause is not finished.

Inside Tibet itself, resistance lives in the spaces that surveillance cannot fully reach. A prayer spoken under one’s breath. A song remembered and passed on. A scrap of paper carrying words that someone needed to write. These are not small things. They are proof that something has survived that was never supposed to.

And there are the ones who felt that quiet resistance was not enough to make a world that was not listening finally hear. In recent years, a number of Tibetans have set themselves alight, an act of almost unbearable desperation, and at the same time an act of profound conviction. They did not do it simply because they had lost hope.

They did it because they needed the world to understand the weight of what was being lost, and they feared nothing else would be enough to make it look.

The Responsibility That Belongs to All of Us

Here is the uncomfortable truth, what is being done to Tibet is not happening in secret. The world knows, the governments know and most of them have decided, quietly and without much fanfare, that it is not worth the trouble of saying so out loud.

Beijing is too large a trading partner. The economic consequences are too significant. It is easier to look at other things. That calculation is understandable. It is also a moral failure. When a country’s silence about the suffering of other people is purchased by trade agreements, something has been given away that cannot be replaced.

The dignity of human beings is not a bargaining chip. Tibet’s long struggle, like the struggles of other peoples who have been told their existence is inconvenient, is a reminder that justice does not expire. It waits.

The Day That Still Speaks

On 10 March 2026, Tibetans will gather again in Dharamshala, in New York, in London, in Tokyo, in every city where the diaspora has put down roots and they will mark the day. They will carry with them sixty-seven years of loss, and sixty-seven years of refusal because the people who faced the Chinese military with nothing but their conviction in 1959 passed something down through all the generations that followed.

A knowledge that freedom is worth wanting even when it is far away. That a people cannot be truly erased as long as they remember who they are. Tibet’s story does not live only in political chambers or human rights reports. It lives in every act of remembrance, in every march, in every person who hears what is happening and decides it matters.

It lives in the Tibetans who were forced off their mountains and built new lives in refugee camps and foreign cities, who raised their children in a language and tradition that the country they were born in tried to destroy. The call they are making has not gone quiet. It will not go quiet. And as long as people are willing to stand beside it, honestly, courageously, and without looking away, the dream of a free Tibet will remain what it has always been: alive, unbroken, and impossible to erase.

Tags: 14th Dalai LamaBeijingchineseChinese Communist PartyHuman Rights WatchrefugeeSpiritual IdentityTibetan territoryTibetans
ShareTweetSend
Previous Post

Five Pakistanis, One Bangladeshi Arrested in Bahrain for Filming, Praising Iranian Missile Attacks

Next Post

Miss India Earth 2019 Winner Sayali Surve Converts Back to Hinduism After Alleging ‘Love Jihad, Harassment by Muslim Husband’

Related Posts

Silenced and Forgotten: How China Suppressed Justice for Xiao Huamei and Zhang Zhan
Analysis

Silenced and Forgotten: How China Suppressed Justice for Xiao Huamei and Zhang Zhan

11 March 2026

  Some stories trend for a week and vanish from public attention, but the people in those stories continue...

International Women’s Day
Analysis

International Women’s Day: Could the West Match the Rights Women Had in the Vedic Era?

8 March 2026

International Women’s Day is celebrated every year on March 8. This day is dedicated to promoting women’s rights, equality,...

Kamal Maula Mosque Site In MP’s Bhojshala Built Using Parts of Ancient Temples, Says ASI Report
Culture

Kamal Maula Mosque Site In MP’s Bhojshala Built Using Parts of Ancient Temples, Says ASI Report

24 February 2026

The Kamal Maula Mosque, also called the Bhojshala in Madhya Pradesh’s Dhar district was constructed using remains from ancient...

Load More

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I agree to the Terms of use and Privacy Policy.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Currently Playing

Truth of IRIS Dena: 8 Days That Changed Narrative | War zone Reality, Not an Indian Navy Exercise

Truth of IRIS Dena: 8 Days That Changed Narrative | War zone Reality, Not an Indian Navy Exercise

00:08:02

300 Million Euros for SCALP: Strategic Necessity or Costly Dependency on France300

00:04:06

Tejas Mk1A: 19th aircraft coupled but Not Delivered: What Is Holding Back the IAF Induction?

00:07:21

Agni-3 Launch Decoded: Why Test an Active Nuclear Missile That’s Already Deployed?

00:05:05

India’s Swadesi ‘Meteor’: World’s Most Lethal BVR Missile | Gandiv| SFDR | DRDO

00:06:48
Facebook Twitter Instagram Youtube
tfipostTfipost.com
Right Wing | News Analysis | Indian Opinion
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Careers
  • Brand Partnerships
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap

©2026 TFI Media Private Limited

No Result
View All Result
  • Premium
  • Politics
    • Analysis
    • Opinions
    • Trending
  • Economy
    • Business
    • Finance
  • Defense
    • Defence
    • Strategy
    • Weaponry
  • Geopolitics
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia Pacific
    • Europe
    • South Asia
    • West Asia
  • Knowledge
    • Culture
    • History
    • Indology
  • Law
  • Lounge
    • Books
    • Cinema
    • Food
    • Health
    • Sports
    • technology
    • Travel
    • Satire
TFIPOST हिन्दी
TFIPOST Global

©2026 TFI Media Private Limited