Tibetan Govt-in-Exile Celebrates Calligraphy Day to Preserve Language and Script

The Tibetan government-in-exile concluded a two-day celebration of Tibetan Calligraphy Day with an exhibition at the main Tibetan temple in Dharamshala. The event was organized to promote and preserve the Tibetan language and script, with calligraphy teacher Karma Wangdue emphasizing its importance for preserving religion and culture. A Tibetan student highlighted the event as a perfect chance to revive their culture, noting that language and handwriting help understand thoughts. A Tibetan Buddhist follower praised the initiative for preserving culture and providing learning opportunities for global visitors.

Key Points: Tibetan Calligraphy Day Exhibition in Dharamshala

  • Two-day celebration of Tibetan Calligraphy Day held in Dharamshala
  • Exhibition organized at Thekchen Choeling Tsuglakhang temple
  • Event aims to promote and preserve Tibetan language and script
  • Calligraphy teacher emphasizes importance for preserving religion and culture
  • Tibetan student says language and handwriting help understand thoughts
2 min read

HP: Tibetan government in-exile observes Tibetan Calligraphy Day; holds exhibition to promote their language, script

Tibetan government-in-exile holds two-day celebration of Tibetan Calligraphy Day with exhibition in Dharamshala to promote and preserve language and script.

"Our purpose is to preserve our language and script. His holiness the Dalai Lama has also focused more on it - Karma Wangdue"

Dharamshala, May 2

The Department of Information and International Relations of the Tibetan government in exile concluded a two-day celebration of Tibetan Calligraphy Day on Friday with an exhibition at the main Tibetan temple, Thekchen Choeling Tsuglakhang's courtyard in McLeodganj of Dharamshala.

The event was organised to promote and preserve the Tibetan language and script.

Karma Wangdue, a calligraphy teacher from Palpung Sherabling monastery, told ANI the purpose of the celebration is to preserve the language and script.

"We are holding an exhibition on Tibetan script. We observe Tibetan calligraphy or script day on April 30 because we have 4 vowels and 30 consonants in Tibetan script, so we celebrate it on the April 30. We, the Palpung Sherabling monastery has celebrated the day yesterday in the Tibet museum with the Tibetan government in exile, and since more people visit the Dalai Lama's temple, we have organised an exhibition here for their information today. Our purpose is to preserve our language and script. His holiness the Dalai Lama has also focused more on it by opening schools and monasteries in-exile," he said.

He highlighted that since their religious textbooks are written in Tibetan script, preserving their language and script is an attempt to preserve their religion.

"In India, we have lots of schools and monasteries to preserve our language. The language develops our culture as well, so we are trying to inspire our younger generation towards our own language," he added.

Tenzin Dhondup, a Tibetan student who had come to explore the exhibition, highlighted it as "perfect chance to revive" their culture, adding, "It is very important for us because we consider that language and handwriting help us to understand our thoughts, and without our language and handwriting we will be erased in this world."

Dia, a Tibetan Buddhist follower, said that witnessing the calligraphic events was fascinating, and provides an opportunity to learn somethign new.

"These days, a lot of people from around the world are also learning the Tibetan language, and some of them are very fluent, so it's a very nice step to preserve their language and culture, and I think it's really helpful. So many people from around the world come here, and when they see something which is banned in some places like China, maybe they are forced to learn Chinese and thier culture, and here we are actually preserving the culture," he said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

V
Vikram M
While I understand the need to preserve their language, the framing of "government-in-exile" is problematic. India has a clear policy on Tibet. We should be careful not to legitimise any separatist narratives on Indian soil. Just saying.
P
Priya S
Beautiful initiative! I visited Dharamshala last year and saw how Tibetan kids are passionate about their calligraphy. The beauty of Indian democracy is that we allow every culture to thrive. However, the student's fear about being "erased" seems a bit exaggerated. Many cultures coexist peacefully in India.
M
Michael C
As a foreigner living in India, I've seen how Tibetan culture is alive and well in McLeodganj. It's heartening that India provides the space for this. The calligraphy art is beautiful and it's sad that in their homeland, this might be restricted. Kudos to India for its inclusive approach!
N
Neha E
I'm all for cultural preservation, but why is the Dalai Lama referenced so much here? This looks more like a political statement dressed as a cultural event. India should focus on our own endangered languages first before giving platform to this. 🤔
A
Aman W
"Preserving their religion" through language - that's deep. We Indians understand this connection between language and faith. Our Guru Granth Sahib is in Gurmukhi, the Quran in Arabic, the Vedas in Sanskrit. Cultural preservation is natural. But let's keep geopolitics out of it. Just enjoy the art, yaar! 🙏

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