Tibet: Cry of the Snow Lion

General Information

Author/Creator
Peosay, Tom, director.
Language
English.
Subtitles
Polish
Published
Florio, Maria ; Mudd, Victoria ; Peosay, Tom ; Peosay, Sue, 2002.
Physical Description
DVD-ROM (103 min.)
Digital ver. identifier
HU_OSA_00002460

Contents/Summary

Summary
The film is an account of the half-century-long occupation of Tibet by China. Shot with footage gathered over ten years, the film includes accounts from Robert Ford, one of the few people to have lived in Pre-Chinese Tibet, interviews with Western scholars, and personal testimony from some of the monks and nuns that survived the Chinese crackdown on Tibetan religion and culture. While the film does gloss over the Chinese government's rationale for the occupation, stating that Tibet, far from being a utopian society, had been a feudalistic society plagued by poverty, it is clear from the start that this is a film meant to inspire outrage. The description and images of the 1987 Lhasa demonstrations, described by two American tourists who witnessed the protests and brutal crackdown that ensued, are particularly wrenching. Perhaps most memorable is the sentiment echoed throughout the film by the monks and nuns at the forefront of the Tibetan freedom movement and voiced by Gendun Rinchen, a former political prisoner: "The worst thing for a Tibetan under the Chinese rule is that one cannot say that I am a Tibetan, as simple as this."

Subjects

Genre
Documentary films

Bibliographic Information

Copyright Status
Copyright by Earthworks/Zambuling

Holdings

Item Type Current Location Call Number Status Shelving Location Public Note
DVD-ROMOSA Film LibraryFL Record 0720Available--
Digital filmOSA Film LibraryFL Record 0720
(HU_OSA_00002460.mp4)
AvailableAccess Copy, MP4 format