Tibetan of China
Population and Location
The Tibetans are one of the 55 minority people groups of mainland China. According to the 2000 census, there are about 5.4 million Tibetans in China, with about half in the Tibet Autonomous Region. Tibetans are also found in the provinces of Sichuan, Qinghai, Gansu and Yunnan. They are called Zang inside China.
Language
Tibetan is a Tibeto-Burman language with written script. The difference in their dialogues has given rise to three dialogue areas: Lhasa, Kham (Kang) and Amdo (Anduo).
Livelihood
The main economic activities are agriculture, animal husbandry and industry (carpets and farm machinery). Situated on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, the greater Tibetan area contains one of the five largest pasturelands in China. A type of cold- and drought-resistant barley, which grows quickly, is the main crop.
History
The Tibetans originally lived along the banks of the Yarlung-Zangbo River. In the early 7th century Songzen Gampo established the first great Tibetan state. At that time the Tibetans began to have greater contact with the Han Chinese. In 641 the king married the Han princess Wen Cheng of the Tang Dynasty, establishing friendly relations between the groups for many years. Beginning in 1271 the Yuan (Mongols), Ming and Qing dynasties influenced Tibet greatly. In 1965 the Tibet Autonomous Region was established. There has been serious political unrest in recent years, as Tibetans call for independence from Chinese rule.
Lifestyle
In some rural Tibetan areas, people build stone houses on sunny slopes and live on the second floor, leaving the first floor for animals or storage. Other farmers, particularly in the drier north, build houses of packed dirt. Every house has a courtyard. In the pastures, people live in tents woven from yak hair that provides coolness in summer and warmth in winter.
Parched barley mixed with tea, known as zanba, is a staple of the nomad Tibetan diet. Butter tea and milk tea are common beverages. The Tibetans are good dancers and singers, with Tibetan New Year being the most important holiday. Special religious ceremonies commemorate Sakyamuni’s "Enlightenment as Buddha" and other important religious events.
Religion
The Tibetans are Lamaist Buddhists. Buddhism began to be firmly established in Tibet around 620 AD, with the main Buddhist missionaries coming from India. The king at that time believed in Buddhism and had monasteries built and Buddhist scriptures translated. Sharp and intense conflict arose between Buddhism and the aboriginal Bon religion. In its struggle with the Bon religion, lasting several hundred years, Buddhism finally prevailed. However, it absorbed numerous doctrines, rites and divinities of the Bon, thus forming Tibetan Buddhism with evident local characteristics. Before the Cultural Revolution, Tibet had 2,700 temples and monasteries and about 110,000 monks and nuns. Prior to that, Tibet was a theocracy where the officials and priests were treated as nobles by the common man.
From the age of five, thousands of boys entered lamaseries to become monks and learn the Buddhist scriptures. The dalai lama, meaning Ocean of Wisdom, is the highest priest and god-king of Lamaistic Buddhism. Tibetans believe that when a dalai lama dies his soul is reborn in a new born baby. Soon after the death of each dalai lama, the search begins to find his successor.
Since 1980 China’s government has supported the repairing of temples and monasteries in Tibetan areas and has recently been promoting Tibetan language education along with Mandarin from primary school onward.
Openness to Christianity
Christianity and Lamaism are diametrically opposed, so Tibet has strongly resisted Christianity for centuries. TEAM, the CMA, the China Inland Mission and other organizations have worked diligently in this difficult land prior to its closing in 1949. Although relatively few Tibetans responded in that period, some home churches have recently developed in several key Tibetan areas with the total number of Tibetan Christians in all three major dialect groups now numbering in the hundreds.
The Bible was translated into Tibetan script in 1948, but this specific dialect is now understood by very few Tibetans, so new works are in progress. Scripture portions and evangelistic materials ranging from written tracts to the Jesus film and other video and audio CDs etc. are now being distributed.
