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Tibetan culture week opened in New Zealand
The China Tibetan Culture Week opened in New
Zealand's most populous city, Auckland, on Monday.
More than 200 people attended the
opening ceremony in the Sky City in the Downtown area,
including Philips Warren, chairman of the Auckland Regional
Council, members of the Parliament, leading officials of
Auckland city and nearby cities, and representatives of
local overseas Chinese organizations.
Chinese Ambassador to New Zealand Chen
Mingming, and Chinese Consul General in Auckland Zhao
Xiangling also attended the ceremony.
Profound changes have taken
place in Tibet since its liberation
Speaking at the ceremony, Tsering
Drolkar, vice-chairwoman of the Foreign Cultural Exchange
Association of Tibet Autonomous Region, said that over the
past five decades since the peaceful liberation of Tibet in
1951, "profound positive changes have taken place in
Tibet's economy and society. Tibet is catching up quickly in
its modernization strive."
"In the long process of history,
the Tibetan people have created a splendid culture with
distinct regional and ethnic features. Attaching great
importance to the preservation and development of the fine
traditional culture of the Tibetan people, the central and
regional governments have invested a large sum of money to
preserve and carry forward the cultural heritage of Tibet
since the peaceful liberation," she said.
Drolkar believed local New Zealanders
will come to the same conclusion through what they will see
during the culture week when there will be a picture
exhibition, film shows, TV programs and ethnic performances.
China first introduced Tibet to
the world in a comprehensive way
Warren
said he thanked the China Tibetan people for "bestowing
us with such a sincere and generous gift by bringing the
festival to our country and to our region."
Living on the Roof of the World,
Tibetans are known for their unique arts including singing,
dancing and painting, he said.
Warren
wished a complete success of the China Tibetan Culture Week.
The event is organized by The Asia
Pacific Culture Connection Center of New Zealand, China
International Culture Association, and the Foreign Cultural
Exchange Association of Tibet Autonomous Region.
This is the first time for China to
make an overall introduction of the Tibetan nature,
geography, history, culture, religion, art, economy and
Tibetan people's life to the international societies in a
comprehensive way of pictures, films, TV programs and
performances.
(People's Daily December
4, 2001)
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