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Thomas Kelly  > REPORTAGE > Tibetan Diaspora
Only a hundred thousand Tibetans left their homeland in the wake of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama in 1959. Thirty-five years later, small but flourishing Tibetan lay communities exist in most large cities of America, Europe and East Asia, hundreds of Tibetan gompas and temples have been built in the Indian sub-continent and around the world, and Tibetan Buddhism has become one of the fastest growing religions on the planet. The Dalai Lama himself, a winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, has international status as a man and politician of rare, if not unique, integrity, and has assumed a high media profile in his crusade for the survival of Tibetan culture and for the oppressed people of his country. The Dalai Lama is the spiritual leader of the Geluk order and his name is well known, but performing the same quality of spiritual guidance are scores of other lamas with similar status within their communities of Tibetan, Asian and Western disciples. How has this tiny number of representatives of a nation of four million people achieved such international renown?
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Old Tibetan Refugee at Tibetan Old People Home in Rajpur, India.
A young Tibetan boy holds pamphlets of Dalai Lama.
Topai Adhi caring for her aged brother, a monk, Dharamshal, India. Adhi escaped from Tibet in 1991, having survived more than 30 years of brutal persecution and imprisonment because her husband's involvement with the Tibetan resistance movement.
Aten, a former Khampa Guerrilla seen here with his family in Kathmandu. aten is also author of the book" White Horsemen, a recount of the Khampa movement".
Richard Gere in Monastery @ Bouddhanath. Kathmandu, Nepal.
Tibetan Buddhist's association with just a few responsive Westerners was to grow into a worldwide fellowship.
Exiled Tibetans demonstrate on street every March 10 against the Chinese occupation of their homeland. "The Tibetan youth's biggest struggle is for freedom. In every Tibetan person's heart this is the struggle."
Tibetan pilgrims prostrating Buddha, at the base of Swayambhunath.
Former Khampa Guerrilla at 'Regional Office of Tibetan Freedom Movement".
Western monks and nuns at Bouddhanath, Kathmandu, Nepal
Exiled Tibetans demonstrate on street every March 10 against the Chinese occupation of their homeland. "The Tibetan youth's biggest struggle is for freedom. In every Tibetan person's heart this is the struggle."
Exiled Tibetans demonstrate on street every March 10 against the Chinese occupation of their homeland. "The Tibetan youth's biggest struggle is for freedom. In every Tibetan person's heart this is the struggle."
Exiled Tibetans demonstrate on street every March 10 against the Chinese occupation of their homeland. "The Tibetan youth's biggest struggle is for freedom. In every Tibetan person's heart this is the struggle."
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Keywords: exiled tibetans
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< 51 of 64 >

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