October 2, 2006

Interview: Miss Tibet Pageant founder Lobsang Wangyal


Lobsang Wangyal is a tech-minded Tibetan cultural entrepreneur in Dharamshala, India. I met him there earlier this year, and shot the portrait above. One of his projects is the Miss Tibet Pageant, and I asked him to tell us about it. They're having a hard time coming up with funding to put on the event this year, and they've established a Paypal account (link here, top of page) so folks in the West who'd like to support it can help with cash.

Here's our email interview:

Xeni Jardin: What is the Miss Tibet pageant?

Lobsang Wangyal: Miss Tibet pageant is an annual event started to provide a platform for young Tibetan women. It is educational, cultural, social and fun. Unlike the common understanding of a beauty pageant, Miss Tibet is unique, in which both the inner and outer beauty are tested. The one week training reflects what the pageant tries to achieve. Not only physical aspects such as Yoga, make-up, hair-care, choreography and personality development workshops are provided, there also is orientation on Tibetan history, culturE and current affairs during the one-week training session.

The seven rounds of competitions over three days also reflects the amount of talent and ingelligence it is required by the contestants. In all, the pageant has become a much-awaited event in Dharamshala, the exile headquarters of the Tibetans in Diaspora.

XJ: When did you start doing the pageant, and how has participation and community reaction changed over time?

LW: The pageant was started in 2002. Four Tibetan girls plunged in to the competition that year. Since then there were ups and downs in the number of contestants. There may be different reasons for that but we guess that the Tibetan society becomes over cautious when something new comes up socially. When living in exile and without their country, people tend to be very cautious because back home changes are taking place not out of choice but under coercion.

XJ: You've experienced some politically-related challenges with the pageant in the past involving the PRC. Tell us about that.

LW: In February 2005 when Miss Tibet 2004 Tashi Yangchen went to participate in a smaller level international pageant the Chinese embassy in Harare, Zimbabwe, interfered and asked the organisers to ban Miss Tibet from the pageant. The organisers suggested us that if Yangchen participate as Miss Tibet-China, she would be allowed to remain in the competition.

We told them flatly that the issue of Tibet is not yet resolved. Accepting that would give wrong information. So Yangchen happily withdrew from that pageant.

Same thing happened in Malaysia after a few months. That time Yangchen even didn't go there.

XJ: How did the pageant go last year?

LW: Last year was the second time we had only one participant showing up. The entire preparation was done as planned and we crowned the lone contender, Tenzin Nyima, for her confidence and bravery. Not many Tibetan girls could come forward in a conservative society like ours.

XJ: What's different this year?

LW: This year we will have the biggest number of contestants. We will announce the number, where they are from and who they are this week when we will do a press conference. We want to give a pleasant surprise for all this year on that day!

XJ: What will you do this year if the same political problems occur again?

LW: We cannot give up. Time changes and things must change. We are confident that Miss Tibet will rub shoulders with other talented and intelligent women from different countries in the future, showing the beautiful culture and colours of Tibet.

XJ: Why do you do the pageant? For fun? For money? As a political statement? What's the motivation for you, and for the women who participate?

LW: Miss Tibet is a youth event aimed specially for young Tibetan women. There isn't any platform where young Tibetan women could come forward and be themselves, show their talents, express their aspirations and bring young women together at one platform to share their ideas in like a exchange programme and learn different things from Tibetan experts as their resource persons.

There is noting political about Miss Tibet but since Tibetans we are politics is intrinsically pervasive. However, Miss Tibet pageant is not aimed against China at all.

So far I, as the director of the pageant, has been paying from my own pocket. The director's pocket is way too thin for a pageant to hold as it planned. So, he is requesting some funding assistance. Considerate donors may pay through Paypal at misstibet.com.

XJ: What do you hope the world outside of Dharamshala learns from it?

LW: A Miss Tibet will draw people's attention who do not know or heard about Tibet. So, it will help let people know about Tibet and Tibetans - what's happening with them now and what do they aspire.

# # #

Image: Lobsang Wangyal, at Chonor House hotel in McLeod Ganj, India. (c) 2006, Xeni Jardin.

Video: Xeni's talk at SOCALWUG

Here's the video from a talk I gave at SOCALWUG last week about community wireless projects among Tibetan refugees in Dharamshala, India. During the session, we Skyped Yahel Ben-David -- he's the co-founder of Tibtec.org and the forthcoming Air Jaldi summit there.

Link to video. (Thanks, Frank Keeney and Mike Outmesguine!)

Dalai Lama: my successor could be chosen by election.

Snip from news coverage of an address given by the Dalai Lama in Helsinki, Finland:
The Dalai Lama, who lives in exile in India, says that it will fall to his successor to continue the struggle for the autonomy of Tibet, which is under Chinese rule. He leaves it up to the Tibetans to decide how the next leader is to be chosen. "An election is one option", he says.

Under prevailing Tibetan tradition, based on reincarnation, the leader is chosen in a ritual in which the right child is found to fill the place of the previous Dalai Lama. "My successor could even be found in Finland", joked the cheery 71-year-old Dalai Lama as flash cameras went off. He added that a woman would be quite suitable for the post.

Link to article in the Finnish newspaper HELSINGIN SANOMAT. Image: MIKA RANTA / HS

Reward offered for contact with Panchen Lama

When the developers of a new online privacy tool called Torpark released their creation a few weeks ago, they dedicated the app to the Panchen Lama Gedhun Choekyi Nyima. One of the Panchen Lama's supporter wrote to the Torpark team with news of an open reward for $30,000 (USD) for anyone who establishes contact with the abducted religious figure. Snip:
"This reward is serious. If you have information regarding the whereabouts of the Panchen Lama, Email or phone 1-616-235-0284. Your name, and any information supplied, will remain confidential. $30,320 United States Dollars will be rendered to the person(s) who provides information resulting in outside contact with Gedun Choekyi Nyima."
Link (Thanks, Oxblood Ruffin)

DRM-free Tibetan music for sale at Cruxy.com


Nathan Freitas says,

Seeing the launch of the no-DRM BoingBoing Digital Emporium made me think I should probably share with you a new service I've just built called Cruxy. Anyone can join and sell anything digital (song, film, pdf, ringtone, avatar, whatevs) without DRM. It's all free and easy to get going - we just take a very small fee when you sell something.

There's a Tibet connection! The first thing I did was go out and get a couple of Tibetan musician (Techung and Danny of Choksampa), a friendly neighborhood non-profit (Students for a Free Tibet), and a local inji musician from the NYC area, and have them all sign up as Cruxy artists and upload their wares. Here's a blog post about it.

I am hoping to get more of the great musicians out there (especially want the Exile Brothers and Vajara from Lhasa) to get on to Cruxy - if only to get the word out about this new wave of crazy, interesting, diverse music coming from this huge distributed diaspora of exiles. Techung was really excited about the service, which made me feel proud. He said:

"I am so excited about your new website. I will surely want all my music to be on there and I will also encourage other Tibetan artists about your website. Music business in Nepal is totally out of control as most of the albums are booleged right under the artists nose. All my cds are bootlegged and I don't get a penny out of it. They even have ring tones of my music but there is no one to go after. I found latest American movies on DVD avialable everywhere for about .50 cents. I loved that part. Any way it is kind of strange and fun."

Link to a search for "Tibet"-related items on Cruxy, including "Tibetan Banjo - electro-style!" music, Audio tours of the Barkhor pilgrimage circuit, and the sound of debating monks at Drepung monastery. Huh, wow -- you can also buy auspicious Tibetan Buddhist symbols for your mobile phone, and traditional Tibetan ringtones!

Image: Musician AchoDanny with friends, performing for HH Dalai Lama (shot by Nathan Freitas)

Wiring Laos


My friend Patrick Tufts points to another project working to wire remote, rural Asian communities -- this time, in Laos.

"One of their goals is to provide Laotian village farmers with news about city market prices so they get a fair deal from middlemen who come to their villages," says Patrick. "The project is called Jhai PC, and they've also deployed systems for the Navajo Nation." Link, and here's more.