Trailer Trash - once again, LOOK AT LINKS PROVIDED IN THE REFERENCES SECTION. Since you are too daft to understand that - I am pasting the links below. Not that you will be able to understand these complex things - but I don't mind educating you Klansman -
^ Jump up to: a b "127935 Tibetans living outside Tibet: Tibetan survey". Press Trust of India. 2010-04-12. Retrieved 2010-12-17.
Jump up ^ Edward J. Mills et al., Prevalence of mental disorders and torture among Tibetan refugees: A systematic review, BMC Int Health Hum Rights. 2005; 5: 7. "It is estimated that more than 150,000 Tibetan refugees reside in the neighboring countries of Bhutan, Nepal, and India"
Jump up ^ His Holiness the Dalai Lama Meets Himalayan Community and Foreigners who visited pre-1959 Tibet, 6 May 2009, "He said that the Tibetan refugees numbered just 150,000"
Jump up ^ McDowell, Adam (2010-10-18). "Tibetans find a Canadian Shangri-La". National Post. Retrieved 2010-10-18.
Jump up ^
Contemporary india art | india art gallery | online indian art gallery delhi | contemporary art india | online gallery art india | Gallery espace A Spot in the Mountains by Arjun Sawhney
Jump up ^
Encouraged By Rising Support From Intellectuals in China: His Holiness the Dalai Lama - Central Tibetan Administration Central Tibetan Administration data
Jump up ^ R.S. Chaurasia, History of Modern China, Atlantic Publishers & Distributors, 2004, ISBN 81-269-0315-5 p 335 : "He was followed by unprecedented exodus of Tibetans into exile."
Jump up ^ Hêng-chih Tu & Hengzhi Du, A study of the treaties and agreements relating to Tibet: a documentary history of international relations of Tibet, Edition Tunghai University, 1971, p 183 : "Since January 1960 it has been estimated that more than 42000 refugees have left Tibet. Of these, some 15000 are at present in Nepal, 3000 in Sikkim, 40000 in Bhutan, and more than 20000 in India. This mass exodus of refugees, by itself, provides perhaps eloquent evidence that people in Tibet obviously found it difficult to live a normal life in their own country."
Jump up ^ United Nations General Assembly Resolution 1723 (XVI) 20 December 1961
Jump up ^ The Situation of Tibet and its People: Maura Moynihan, Consultant to Refugees International, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Hearing on Tibet, May 13, 1997
Jump up ^ 85,000 Tibetans reach India since 1980: US cable The Times of India, Dec 18, 2010
Jump up ^
Tibetan Refugee Part One - YouTube
Jump up ^ Hess, Julia Meredith (2009). Immigrant Ambassadors: Citizenship and Belonging in the Tibetan Diaspora. Stanford University Press. pp. 65–66, 136.
Jump up ^
International Relations Division - Central Tibetan Administration "These offices act as de facto embassies of the CTA"
Jump up ^
Tibetans stage protest in Taipei - Taipei Times "the Tibet Religious Foundation of His Holiness the Dalai Lama — the de facto embassy of the Tibetan government-in-exile in Taiwan —"
Jump up ^
Central Tibetan Schools Administration(CTSA),New Delhi Central Tibetan Schools Administration website
Jump up ^ TCEWF - Central School for Tibetans
Jump up ^
Dalai Lama inaugurates first Tibetan college in India - www.phayul.com Dalai Lama inaugurates first Tibetan college in India by Phayul
Jump up ^ Tenzin Lekshay, Kalon Tripa's election: Crucial time of our history, Engaging Snow Lion and a Dragon, July 17, 2009 : "the persistence threat of voluntary marginalization of Tibetan identity and cultures due to the migration is a serious cause of concerns. In exile, most of our settlements are guarded by old aged people, with young ones settling in distant abroad. Some of our established schools in the settlements are near to close with the lack of pupils, graduates are scattering around Indian metros with the lack of employment opportunities in our community."
Jump up ^ Magnier, Mark (2010-09-22). "Tibetan exiles in Dharamshala, India, settle in with disillusionment". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-09-25.
^ Jump up to: a b Roemer, Stephanie (2008). The Tibetan Government-in-Exile: Politics at Large. Psychology Press. pp. 74–76.
Jump up ^ Pulman, Lynn (1983). "Tibetans in Karnataka". Kailash 10 (1-2): 119–171.
Further reading
Trailer Trash - once again, LOOK AT LINKS PROVIDED IN THE REFERENCES SECTION. Since you are too daft to understand that - I am pasting the links below. Not that you will be able to understand these complex things - but I don't mind educating you Klansman -
^ Jump up to: a b "127935 Tibetans living outside Tibet: Tibetan survey". Press Trust of India. 2010-04-12. Retrieved 2010-12-17.
Jump up ^ Edward J. Mills et al., Prevalence of mental disorders and torture among Tibetan refugees: A systematic review, BMC Int Health Hum Rights. 2005; 5: 7. "It is estimated that more than 150,000 Tibetan refugees reside in the neighboring countries of Bhutan, Nepal, and India"
Jump up ^ His Holiness the Dalai Lama Meets Himalayan Community and Foreigners who visited pre-1959 Tibet, 6 May 2009, "He said that the Tibetan refugees numbered just 150,000"
Jump up ^ McDowell, Adam (2010-10-18). "Tibetans find a Canadian Shangri-La". National Post. Retrieved 2010-10-18.
Jump up ^
Contemporary india art | india art gallery | online indian art gallery delhi | contemporary art india | online gallery art india | Gallery espace A Spot in the Mountains by Arjun Sawhney
Jump up ^
Encouraged By Rising Support From Intellectuals in China: His Holiness the Dalai Lama - Central Tibetan Administration Central Tibetan Administration data
Jump up ^ R.S. Chaurasia, History of Modern China, Atlantic Publishers & Distributors, 2004, ISBN 81-269-0315-5 p 335 : "He was followed by unprecedented exodus of Tibetans into exile."
Jump up ^ Hêng-chih Tu & Hengzhi Du, A study of the treaties and agreements relating to Tibet: a documentary history of international relations of Tibet, Edition Tunghai University, 1971, p 183 : "Since January 1960 it has been estimated that more than 42000 refugees have left Tibet. Of these, some 15000 are at present in Nepal, 3000 in Sikkim, 40000 in Bhutan, and more than 20000 in India. This mass exodus of refugees, by itself, provides perhaps eloquent evidence that people in Tibet obviously found it difficult to live a normal life in their own country."
Jump up ^ United Nations General Assembly Resolution 1723 (XVI) 20 December 1961
Jump up ^ The Situation of Tibet and its People: Maura Moynihan, Consultant to Refugees International, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Hearing on Tibet, May 13, 1997
Jump up ^ 85,000 Tibetans reach India since 1980: US cable The Times of India, Dec 18, 2010
Jump up ^
Tibetan Refugee Part One - YouTube
Jump up ^ Hess, Julia Meredith (2009). Immigrant Ambassadors: Citizenship and Belonging in the Tibetan Diaspora. Stanford University Press. pp. 65–66, 136.
Jump up ^
International Relations Division - Central Tibetan Administration "These offices act as de facto embassies of the CTA"
Jump up ^
Tibetans stage protest in Taipei - Taipei Times "the Tibet Religious Foundation of His Holiness the Dalai Lama — the de facto embassy of the Tibetan government-in-exile in Taiwan —"
Jump up ^
Central Tibetan Schools Administration(CTSA),New Delhi Central Tibetan Schools Administration website
Jump up ^ TCEWF - Central School for Tibetans
Jump up ^
Dalai Lama inaugurates first Tibetan college in India - www.phayul.com Dalai Lama inaugurates first Tibetan college in India by Phayul
Jump up ^ Tenzin Lekshay, Kalon Tripa's election: Crucial time of our history, Engaging Snow Lion and a Dragon, July 17, 2009 : "the persistence threat of voluntary marginalization of Tibetan identity and cultures due to the migration is a serious cause of concerns. In exile, most of our settlements are guarded by old aged people, with young ones settling in distant abroad. Some of our established schools in the settlements are near to close with the lack of pupils, graduates are scattering around Indian metros with the lack of employment opportunities in our community."
Jump up ^ Magnier, Mark (2010-09-22). "Tibetan exiles in Dharamshala, India, settle in with disillusionment". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-09-25.
^ Jump up to: a b Roemer, Stephanie (2008). The Tibetan Government-in-Exile: Politics at Large. Psychology Press. pp. 74–76.
Jump up ^ Pulman, Lynn (1983). "Tibetans in Karnataka". Kailash 10 (1-2): 119–171.
Further reading