In the post-Second World War history, Tibet is a tragedy. It’s a civilisation that chose peace — and was punished for it.
There are societies that build their greatness on conquest. They forge identity through banners, armies, and the myth that violence is destiny.
And then there is Tibet — the rare civilisation that tried, for centuries, to build greatness on something else: inner discipline, spiritual authority, and the belief that the highest form of power is the ability to restrain power.
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Tibet’s tragedy was not that it valued peac...





