Kaydor aukatsang biography channels
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The best should lead — that’s Penpa Tsering
Choedak Gyatso
DHARAMSHALA, India, 18 January 2021
After the end of the preliminary round of the 2021 Tibetan elections, we are all eagerly waiting for the tjänsteman announcement of the results from the Election kommission. Various sources are showing hypothetical results, which shows the people’s interest and responsibility in the principle of the democratic system.
For the past few months of my observations and analysis of the Sikyong candidates for the 2021 elections, inom believe Mr Penpa Tsering (PT) fryst vatten the right candidate to win. The following qualities listed will enable him to confidently and efficiently lead the people in the right direction. Though I am very sure that the majority will go with PT for the sista Sikyong election, I feel it important to enumerate the qualifications that he possesses which make him the best candidate for the brev of Sikyong. My inner conscience fryst vatten forcing me to
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CTA President Dr Lobsang Sangay, DIIR Secretary (Equivalent) Dhardon Sharling and Kaydor Aukatsang, Chief Resilience Officer at the opening of the Film Consultants Meeting. Photo/Jayang Tsering/DIIR
Dharamshala: The three-day meeting of Consultants for Central Tibetan Administration’s (CTA) film project, convened by the Department of Information and International Relations (DIIR), kick-started today at Lhakpa Tsering Hall. The meeting scheduled from June 6 – 8, began this morning with President of CTA Dr. Lobsang Sangay also holding the portfolio of Minister for DIIR delivering the opening remarks.
President Dr. Sangay addressed the attendees on importance of establishing a narrative for the Tibet story and showcase that CTA will carry forward the struggle. He also stressed on the importance of branding component in communications strategy that could sustain and illicit interest in Tibet and CTA in the long run.
He said that the film on CTA should be ab
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The Once and Future Tibet
In 2011, the 14th Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, then both the spiritual and political leader of the global Tibetan community-in-exile, announced that he would be relinquishing political leadership. Though some Westerners don’t know exactly what the Dalai Lama does, he serves as a critical figurehead for Tibetans who hope to reclaim their home, which has been under Chinese occupation since 1950. Ever since the Dalai Lama fled to India in 1959, international attention on the plight of Tibet has come and gone, from the 1960s counterculture fixation on Tibetan Buddhism to the 1990s campus craze over “Free Tibet.” But through all these years, one constant has remained: the 14th Dalai Lama himself, the 10th most admired man in America.
And so it wasn’t a surprise that the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA), the democratically elected government-in-exile that presides over Tibetans — an organization that the Dalai Lama had established in 1959 to help Tibetans tr