Tibetan Communist Party | |
|---|---|
| Leader | Phuntsok Wangyal |
| Founders |
|
| Founded | 1943 |
| Dissolved | 1949 |
| Merged into | Chinese Communist Party |
| Ideology | |
| Political position | Far-left |
| Tibetan Communist Party | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tibetan name | |||||||
| Tibetan | བོད་གུང་ཁྲན་ཏང | ||||||
| |||||||
| Chinese name | |||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 西藏共產黨 | ||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 西藏共产党 | ||||||
| |||||||
The Tibetan Communist Party[lower-alpha 1] was a small communist party in Tibet which functioned in secrecy under various names. The group was founded by Phuntsok Wangyal and Ngawang Kesang in 1943. It emerged from a group called the Tibetan Democratic Youth League, formed by Wangyal and other Tibetan students in Lhasa in 1939.[1][2]
The party sought to establish an independent and socialist Tibet encompassing the three traditional regions of Tibet: Ü-Tsang, Kham, and Amdo.[1][3] The party contacted the Soviet embassy in Beijing and asked for the Soviets' assistance as it began planning a socialist uprising in Tibet. Wangyal later contacted the Chinese Communist Party and the Communist Party of India.[4]
The Tibetan communists prepared guerrilla struggles against the ruling Kuomintang while promoting democratic reforms inside Tibet.
In 1949, the party merged into the Chinese Communist Party.[5]
Notes
References
- 1 2 New Left Review - Tsering Shakya: The Prisoner
- ↑ "Case anthropologist tells story of Tibet Communist Party founder". 2 July 2004. Retrieved 21 June 2008.
- ↑ Goldstein, Melvyn C. Goldstein/Sherap, Dawei Sherap/Siebenschuh, William R.. A Tibetan Revolutionary: The Political Life and Times of Bapa Phüntso Wangye. University of California Press, 2004. p. xiii
- ↑ Goldstein, Melvyn C. Goldstein/Sherap, Dawei Sherap/Siebenschuh, William R.. A Tibetan Revolutionary: The Political Life and Times of Bapa Phüntso Wangye. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004. p. 42-44, 78-82
- ↑ Melvyn C. Goldstein; Dawei Sherap; William R. Siebenschuh. "A Tibetan Revolutionary". Retrieved 21 June 2008.