Books on Tibet
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“Tibet’s Forgotten Heroes”
By Birgit van de Wijer The Story of Tibet’s Armed Resistance Against China
Published in September 2010 by Amperley Publishing, Birgit van de Wijer has transcribed original interviews with forty-eight members of Chushi Gangdruk who were engaged with armed struggle against the Chinese. The book is the result of two years’ work with dozens of Tibetans involved and is in two parts, the first part is the historical background and the second part is made up of background to the interviews followed by the interviews themselves.
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Murder in the High Himalaya PUBLISHED IN PAPERBACK (UK), 23 JUNE 2011 Hardback Published in 2010. RRP $26.95; from $17 from Amazon, Waterstones, Barnes & Noble and all good booksellers |
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| Tibet's War of Peace: A Nation's Nonviolent Struggle for Freedom By Dennis Cusack -------------------- In Tibet's War of Peace, Dennis Cusack tells the story of the people and events behind the world's best-known but least understood contemporary nonviolent campaign. Cusack describes its evolution, its philosophical foundation, and its political realities. He concludes with a provocative vision of its possible future. Politics; Published in 2008 |
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Falling Through the Roof By Thupten Samphel ---------------------------- A group of Delhi University students decide to form the Tibetan Communist Party (TCP), with Tashi, the new chairman of the TCP, planning to liberate his beloved Tibet with the some weapons which caused its downfall. His plans, however, do not fall in line with those of Drubchen Rinpoche who believes him to be the reincarnation of Drubtop Rinpoche. His first incarnation, according to the Lama, invented the Word, the Tibetan alphabet on a hill in Kashmir, some fourteen hundred years ago. According to the Lama, the invention of the Tibetan Word enabled the Tibetan people to take in the whole of the wisdom of ancient India. Fiction: Published in 2008 |
| Freedom in Exile Autobiography of His Holiness the Dalai Lama of Tibet. ------------------------------------------------------------ The exiled leader of Tibet recounts his life, from the time he was whisked away from his home in 1939 at the age of four, to his escape from Tibet in 1959, to the winning of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989. The backdrop of the story is the 1949/50 Chinese invasion of Tibet, yet the Dalai Lama's story is strangely one of hope. This man who prays for four hours a day harbours no ill will toward the Chinese and sees the potential for good everywhere he casts his gaze. Someday, he hopes, all of Tibet will be a zone of peace and the world's largest nature preserve. Inspiring in every way, Freedom in Exile is both a historical document and a fable of deepest trust in humanity. Autobiography: Published in 1998 |
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Dragon in the Land of Snows: a History of Modern Tibet Since 1947 By Tsering Shakya -------------------- Drawing on unpublished primary sources, a history of modern Tibet from 1947 provides both Chinese and Tibetan perspectives on events, describes Chinese depredations of Tibet, critiques Tibet's leadership strategy as well as that of China, and documents the country's ongoing struggle to maintain it. Political History: Published in 2000 |
A copy of the 2000 Report "Truth is Our Only Weapon" can be viewed by clicking here.




