An imposing array of valuable
cultural relics on display at the Sagya Monastery
in Lhasa prove that Tibet became part of China in
the Yuan Dynasty and has remained under the
administration of the central government of China
since then.
According to the historical
records of the monastery, Kublai Khan, the
founding emperor of the Yuan dynasty, asked Phags-pa,
head of the Sagya Monastery, to be his spiritual
guide, or a senior official of the central
government, after he created the Yuan Dynasty in
1271.
Lozhub Jaco, an abbot of the
monastery, showed a Xinhua reporter a fresco
depicting a meeting between Kublai Khuan and
Phags-pa in an exclusive interview held Monday.
Though the fresco has worn with time, the picture
can be clearly seen.
"Prior to the
historical meeting, Sapan Kongah Gyaincain, the
fourth chief of the Sakya Sect, spoke with the
grandson of Genghis Khan, Emperor Taizu of the Yuan Dynasty,
on details about Tibet's merger with China,"
said Lozhub Jaco said.
Sapan's letter
calling all sect members to obey orders of the
Yuan Dynasty was recently placed on the top
protection list of the Tibet Museum. The words of
"Paying tributary sincerely and quite willing
to be loyal subjects" can be clearly seen.
Built in 1073, the Sakya Monastery,
located 450 km west of Lhasa, has long enjoyed
nearly the same fame as the Dunhuang Grottoes for
its large collection of Buddhist scriptures, valuable
porcelain and vivid wall paintings dating back to nearly one
thousand years ago.
The most
valuable objects in the collection are ancient vases
presented by emperors of different periods of the
Yuan Dynasty to the leader of the Sakya sect.
Other valuables include a jade bowl, a gold-plated Buddha,
imperial shoes and a gold seal.
Other
exhibits, on display at the Tibet Museum to mark the 50th
anniversary of Tibet's peaceful liberation, show that the
Yuan Dynasty divided Tibet into three military
areas with 15 districts.
The museum
contains letters of appointments of Tibetan
officials by emperors of the Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644) and the certificates and seals
appointing Dalai and Panchan lamas by emperors of
the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).
It also
holds a picture showing the ceremony of the 14th Dalai
Lama ascending to the holy throne as presided over
by Kuomintang Government officials as well as
documents on the peaceful liberation of Tibet
between the central government and the government
of Tibet.
Xerab Nyima, a Tibetan scholar,
said it is irrefutable that Tibet has not been
separate from the motherland since it came under
the rule of the Yuan Dynasty 700 years ago. However, the
Dalai Lama and some people in the west still
preach the independence of Tibet. It is
ridiculous, he said. Enditem