Logo
Muddy Boot
ISSUE #34.28 • CULTURE •
Hot Seat

Abrahm Lustgarten


Riding the rails to Tibet on the eve of the Beijing Olympics.

Social bookmarking | Permalink
Email | Print | Rate It! | 5 comments
Recently in "Hot Seat"

August 27th, 2008
Magnus Johannesson | An Alberta booster looks into the future of Last Thursday and says it’s car-free.0 comments

August 20th, 2008
Craig Allen | Home Depot employee wins gold medal … for philosophy.1 comment

August 13th, 2008
Thomas Frank | The left’s brain on what’s the matter with Obama.2 comments

August 6th, 2008
Julius Achon | A Portland runner’s Olympian survival story.1 comment

July 30th, 2008
Dylan Goldsmith | The one-man operation Captured By Porches isn’t a microbrewery, it’s a nanobrewery.5 comments

July 16th, 2008
LaJean Lawson | She follows the bouncing breast.4 comments

July 9th, 2008
Darrel Lee | Portland pastor builds near-term empire, fears long-term locusts.3 comments

June 11th, 2008
Steven Wax | Reading this may result in warrantless wiretapping.0 comments

June 4th, 2008
Richard Preston | The Hot Zone author talks Ebola, self-cannibals and getting into the soup.1 comment

April 30th, 2008
Alice Feiring | Why wine geeks need to tell Robert Parker to cork it.0 comments



IMAGE: Maggie Gardner
BY JAMES PITKIN | jpitkin at wweek dot com

[May 21st, 2008]

When the Olympic torch relay turned into a free-for-all between Tibetan protesters and pro-China demonstrators last month, Abrahm Lustgarten had a unique perspective on the conflict.

A writer who splits his time between New York and Eugene, Lustgarten spent four years traveling to China and Tibet researching the Qinghai-Tibet Railway—a 50-year plan to build the highest train line in the world and solidify Beijing’s hold on the disputed region.

When the first trains rumbled across the Tibetan plateau in 2006, Lustgarten was on board to chronicle the changes Chinese policies have brought. While Tibet’s spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, calls for greater autonomy from his exile home in India, Lustgarten documented the vast erosion of Tibet’s unique culture in the face of China’s march toward modernity.

Lustgarten, who recently took a job as a reporter for the new nonprofit investigative journalism group ProPublica in New York, told WW about Chinese hate mail, “Free Tibet” bumper stickers and why he’s torn over whether to boycott the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

His book, China’s Great Train: Beijing’s Drive West and the Campaign to Remake Tibet, was published in March by Times Books.

WW: Were you surprised by the numbers of pro-Chinese demonstrators during the Olympic torch relay?

Abrahm Lustgarten: I wasn’t. Chinese passion around the Olympics and China as a whole is totally underestimated, by Americans especially. I ran into small-scale expressions of that sentiment every single time the Tibetan issue came up with my Chinese sources.

Have you ever felt heat from that side?

I wrote an opinion piece for The Washington Post [“What they’re really fighting for in Tibet,” March 23, 2008], and they put my email address at the bottom. I got like a thousand emails, and 85 percent of them were in horrible English from Chinese nationals. They were the worst hate mail I have ever received from any story.

Is it right for the West to boycott the Olympics?

I’m undecided. The Olympics are massively symbolic to the very definition of what China is as a country right now. Any threat to that is taken as a sort of a mortal threat and a very deep personal offense. It’s an opportunity that Tibetans, if they want to further their cause, have to seize on. They may end up just abused and thrown in jail, but they sort of have to. But whether it’s appropriate for outsiders to take up Tibet’s cause is very, very complicated.















icon Story continues below

advertisement
OMSI
advertisement

What about all those “Free Tibet” bumper stickers?

I want to know from those people what they learned and who they learned it from. There’s this totally romanticized view of what Tibet is and what Tibetans are. It’s not to say that I don’t think the culture is amazing and worth saving. But there’s a real oversimplification.

Any trouble with the authorities while reporting in China?

I always expected problems, but I never had any direct confrontations. There were times when I was suspicious that people had been in my hotel room. Stuff displaced. I would stick things right in front of the door and it would be moved.

Did you become close with your sources?

My best Tibetan friend was the man I call “Kalden” in the book. There’s an episode at the end where he is really reflecting—kind of forced by me, maybe even inappropriately, to reflect a little bit on his situation. And there is this incredibly emotionally poignant moment, and he was just deeply uncomfortable. And I felt really bad for pushing him there.

How do you prove there’s cultural genocide in Tibet?

It’s in the number of new businesses and new jobs, and the scarcity of Tibetans in those jobs. It’s the widening gap between rich and poor. It’s the phasing out of Tibetan language from schools. It’s interviews with Tibetan friends about how they’re losing touch with their own culture. You can call it genocide or you can call it globalization; it’s a fine line at some point.

Is Tibet already lost?

That’s the question I get most often. I don’t think so. It’s very, very seriously threatened. The train is a bit of a turning point toward the negative and what’s happened in the two years since it opened. The Olympics, and the opportunity to bring attention to their political aspirations and their cause, is the next big turning point.

Rate This Story
4.14 average/7 votes

 
read all 5 comments | add your comment
 

RECENT COMMENTS ON “Abrahm Lustgarten”

1

"But whether its appropriate for outsiders to take up Tibets cause is very, very complicated."

"I want to know from those people what they lear...

curiouser, May 22nd, 2008 10:50am
2

The Olympics are vaunted as the “Noble” Games and as such should be in a setting appropriate and commensurate with what they are supposed to stand for.

Just a quick glance at th...

Cardano, May 22nd, 2008 10:21pm
 
 
 





Recently in Willamette Week
August 29th 2008Sometimes a Great Lawsuit | Ken Kesey’s last prank pits his widow in a court battle with his best friend and a Playboy model.
August 29th 2008Sliced Bread, Beware | A better fire hose, a poker aid & a foldable clipboard—meet six Portland inventors whose big ideas are the best thing since, well, you know.
August 29th 2008How to Live Cheap in Portland | Throwing too much money away on food and shelter? here’s WW’s Recession Survival Guide.
August 29th 2008The Queer and the Qur’an | Ali is gay. And Muslim. Can he be both?
August 29th 2008Good Cop, Mad Cop | Many of Navin Sharma’s colleagues in the Vancouver Police Department can’t believe he got fired. After reading this, neither will you.
August 29th 2008Lean, Mean Meat-Free Machine | Portlander Robert Cheeke is the face of vegan bodybuilding.
August 29th 2008The Sopranokovs | The Russian mob comes to town with a new scam—medical identity theft.
August 29th 2008Manhunter | Almost every state lets bounty hunters chase down its most wanted. Why doesn’t Oregon?
August 29th 2008Get Wet: WW’s Summer Guide 2008 | The rain is finally over. Now let’s get wet!