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Kadrin-
A journey to success
Phayul[Monday, October 02, 2006 14:26]
By Phurbu Thinley
Phayul Correspondent
Dharamsala, September 30 - A movie, somehow based on a lifes
true account, Kadrin, meaning- gratefulness, was screened
for press at a local mini-theatre here today.
The
movie shot and directed by Topgyal Tsering, the elder bother of
Ngawang Sampdup on whose personal life experience the movie has
been actually based, endeavours to depict the reality of the many
untold hardships faced by Tibetans who brave a treacherous crossing
of the Himalayas every year to head for Dharamsala via Nepal.
These
illegal crossings are made by people who are unable to tolerate
the Chinese occupation anymore, or by those who simply wish to be
blessed by His Holiness the Dalai Lama. Still many young Tibetan
children are sent by their parents into exile to seek better education
in the network of Tibetan schools spread across India run under
the guidance of Dalai Lama.
Since,
the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet fled his homeland in 1959 as a direct
result of illegal Chinese occupation of Tibet, and even after more
than four decades of Chinese rule, hundreds of Tibetans still continue
to escape Tibet.
In
so doing, many of them will either never return back to their country,
or will perhaps never see their dear and near ones left behind in
Tibet in their life time again. The worst of them all, many die
on their way, or are arrested by Nepalese border police to be deported
back and handed over to the Chinese authorities. For those who are
deported back, the worst is yet to face in the Chinese detention
centres, prisons and labour camps established across Tibet.
Ngawang
Sampdup, who is actually starring in the movie, is one among the
many young Tibetans sent into the exile Tibetan community in India
by his parents, against his own wish, to follow the footsteps of
his elder brother for a better prospect of seeking a modern education
with a blend of Tibetan cultural practices.
Today,
Mr. Samdup calls his life a journey of success for having successfully
made his way to India and having received the wonderful opportunity
to pursue the kind of education as per the wishes of his parents
left back in Tibet. For all these, he believes the movie is a tribute
expressing thankfulness to the exile Tibetan leader and the exile
Tibetan Government led by Him.
The
movie also portrays the feeling of poignant solitude, which the
Tibetan children endure while growing up in the complete absence
of their parents at such a young tender age and their longing to
see their parents again in life.
Ngawang
fled into exile in 1985, when he was still a young kid. Since then
he has never returned back to Tibet. However, his much awaited moment
in his life came when he had had the chance to meet his mother briefly
for the first time in 20 years time. For that also, Ngawang had
to go to Kathmandu to see his mother since the Chinese authority
had issued her travel permit only to visit Nepal and not India.
Although
theirs is a story of success, the two brothers dedicated their movie
for those Tibetans who were unable to make their way safely to Dharamsala
and those who have lost their lives on the way. The first public
screening of Kadrin will be held at the Tibet Festival
in Germany later in November this year.
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