STALKING TIBETANS WITH A CAMERA
Y.B.A.
The road near which we were camped
was one of the great trade routes into Tibet and over
it caravans were continually passing laden with tea
or pork. Many of them had traveled the entire
length of Yuen-nan to S’su-mao on the Tonking
frontier where a special kind of tea is grown, and
were hurrying northward to cross the snow-covered
passes which form the gateways to the “Forbidden
Land.”
The caravans sometimes stopped for
luncheon or to spend the night near our camp.
As the horses came up, one by one the loads were lifted
off, the animals turned loose, and after their dinner
of buttered tea and tsamba
each man stretched out upon the ground without shelter
of any kind and heedless of the freezing cold.
It is truly the life of primitive man and has bred
a hardy, restless, independent race, content to wander
over the boundless steppes and demanding from the
outside world only to be let alone.
They are picturesque, wild-looking
fellows, and in their swinging walk there is a care-free
independence and an atmosphere of the bleak Tibetan
steppes which are strangely fascinating. Every
Tibetan is a study for an artist. He wears a
fur cap and a long loose coat like a Russian blouse
thrown carelessly off one shoulder and tied about the
waist, blue or red trousers, and high boots of felt
or skin reaching almost to the knees. A long
sword, its hilt inlaid with bright-colored bits of
glass or stones, is half concealed beneath his coat,
and he is seldom without a gun or a murderous looking
spear.
In the breast of his loose coat, which
acts as a pocket, he carries a remarkable assortment
of things; a pipe, tobacco, tea, tsamba, cooking
pots, a snuff box and, hanging down in front, a metal
charm to protect him from bullets or sickness.
The eastern Tibetans are men of splendid
physique and great strength, and are frequently more
than six feet in height. They have brick-red
complexions and some are really handsome in a
full-blooded masculine way. Their straight features
suggest a strong mixture of other than Mongolian stock
and they are the direct antithesis of the Chinese in
every particular. Their strength and virility
and the dashing swing of their walk are very refreshing
after contact with the ease-loving, effeminate Chinaman
whom one sees being carried along the road sprawled
in a mountain chair.
Of all natives whom we tried to photograph
the Tibetans were the most difficult. It was
almost impossible to bribe them with money or tin cans
to stand for a moment and when they saw the motion
picture camera set up beside the trail they would
make long detours to avoid passing in front of it.
What we could not get by bribery we
tried to do by stealth and concealed ourselves behind
bushes with the camera focused on a certain spot upon
the road. The instant a Tibetan discovered it
he would run like a frightened deer and in some mysterious
way they seemed to have passed the word along that
our camp was a spot to be avoided. Sometimes a
bottle was too great a temptation to be resisted,
and one would stand timidly like a bird with wings
half spread, only to dash away as though the devil
were after him, when he saw my head disappear beneath
the focusing hood.
Wu and a mafu who could speak
a little Tibetan finally captured one picturesque
looking fellow. He carefully tucked the tin cans,
given for advance payment, inside his coat, and with
a great show of bravery allowed me to place him where
I wished. But the instant the motion picture camera
swung in his direction he dodged aside, and jumped
behind it. Wu tried to hold him but the Tibetan
drew his sword, waved it wildly about his head and
took to his heels, yelling at the top of his lungs.
He was well-nigh frightened to death and when he disappeared
from sight at a curve in the road he was still “going
strong” with his coat tails flapping like a sail
in the wind.
One caravan came suddenly upon the
motion picture camera unawares. There were several
women in the party and, as soon as the men realized
that there was no escape, each one dodged behind a
woman, keeping her between him and the camera.
They were taking no chances with their precious selves,
for the women could be replaced easily enough if necessary.
The trouble is that the Tibetan not
unnaturally has the greatest possible suspicion and
dislike for strangers. The Chinese he loathes
and despises, and foreigners he knows only too well
are symptoms of missionaries and punitive expeditions
or other disturbances of his immemorial peace.
He is confirmed in his attitude by the Church which
throughout Tibet has the monopoly of all the gold
in the country. And the Church utterly declines
to believe that any foreigner can come so far for
any end less foolish than the discovery of gold and
the infringing of the ecclesiastical monopoly.
Major Davies, who saw much of the
Yuen-nan Tibetans, has remarked that it is curious
how little impression the civilization and customs
of the Chinese have produced on the Tibetans.
Elsewhere, one of the principal characteristics of
Chinese expansion is its power of absorbing other races,
but with the Tibetans exactly the reverse takes place.
The Chinese become Tibetanized and the children of
a Chinaman married to a Tibetan woman are usually
brought up in the Tibetan customs.
Probably the great cause which keeps
the Tibetan from being absorbed is the cold, inhospitable
nature of his country. There is little to tempt
the Chinese to emigrate into Tibet and consequently
they never are there in sufficient numbers to influence
the Tibetans around them. A similar cause has
preserved some of the low-lying Shan states from absorption,
the heat in this case being the reason that the Chinese
do not settle there.