Crackdown on Tibetan language and cultural education continues

By ANI | Published: April 24, 2022 01:12 AM2022-04-24T01:12:55+5:302022-04-25T00:05:02+5:30

China orders Tibetan private schools to be closed and students enrolled in Chinese medium schools in Sershul County, said a Dharamsala based rights organisation.

Crackdown on Tibetan language and cultural education continues | Crackdown on Tibetan language and cultural education continues

Crackdown on Tibetan language and cultural education continues

China orders Tibetan private schools to be closed and students enrolled in Chinese medium schools in Sershul County, said a Dharamsala based rights organisation.

Chinese authorities in Sershul County, Kardze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, had ordered sometime early this year that all Tibetan private schools must be closed and students enrolled in government schools by April 20 where the medium of instruction is Chinese, said Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD).

Information obtained by the rights organisation also reveals that Chinese authorities had threatened any possible resistance to the order with imprisonment.

According to the rights organisation, the majority of the schools affected by this order are primary schools located in nomadic communities. Local Tibetans have submitted petitions against the order citing that those targeted schools are the only available means of Tibetan medium education in the remote nomadic region.

Local sources believe that the petition will have little effect and that the authorities have made a definite decision not only to close all private schools but also to demolish the school buildings.

A forthcoming report by TCHRD and Asian Dignity Initiative - "Sucked Our Bone Marrow: Tibetan Education and Language Rights under Xi Jinping" - further reveals that several schools located in Sershul County had faced varying degrees of interference from the local Chinese authorities since their inception.

One such recently closed primary school had around 130 students and about 20 staff.

Local Chinese authorities initially approved the school's founding as a private school. It lost considerable autonomy, however, in 2013 when the county government appointed a principal and some teachers to work at the school.

In 2017, local authorities downgraded the school, allowing classes to be held only until grade 4. Consequently, teachers teaching grades 5 and 6 lost their jobs, and students in these classes were enrolled in a government school nearby. The school initially controlled its own curriculum, which prioritised traditional Tibetan education subjects like Tibetan history and grammar, along with Chinese and English languages.

In 2020, the school was ordered to adopt the national curriculum and a new Tibetan language textbook was issued, the contents of which "glorified the Chinese Communist Party and the Chinese nation".

"It is much easier teaching in a private school because one can also teach Tibetan subjects such as Tibetan language and history alongside the mandatory state-compiled textbooks. It is impossible to do so in government schools," according to a private school teacher in Sershul county.

Following the spate of school closures, parents and teachers in Sershul share a significant concern that the last avenues for teaching Tibetan language and history to young Tibetans are now being closed.

Since 2020, Chinese authorities in Tibetan and Inner Mongolian areas have implemented the unified Chinese textbook system making Chinese medium education mandatory in schools at all levels and grades. Both state and private schools are required to adopt the new sinicized textbooks, which mostly contain Party propaganda and exclude contents relevant to Tibetan culture and language.

At least since 2012, private initiatives to promote Tibetan language and culture have been suppressed, and individuals advocating for Tibetan language and cultural education have been detained and tortured. Private educational institutions previously approved by the authorities are being closed down while monastic institutions are forced to prioritise Mandarin Chinese teaching and propagation.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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