Two Long Hours of Historical Revisionism Seven Years in Tibet is the sanitized and romanticized film version of the self-promoting memoir of an elite Nazi who became a tutor and advisor to the spiritual and political leader of one of the last slave societies on the planet Earth. The elite Nazi is Heinrich Harrer, played by Brad Pitt, and the slave master is the Dalai Lama. It comes as no surprise to MIM that the Dalai Lama would embrace a Nazi, nor that Hollywood would use fascism and slavery to concoct an attack on communism. The most important problems with this film are that it practically ignores of the role of Nazism and slavery and that it fabricates the positions and actions of the Chinese People's Liberation Army. Most bourgeois reviews of this film have focused on the fact that Harrer wasn't a good guy (abandoning his wife, engaging in frequent prison breaks from a British POW camp that jeopardized the escape plans of the other fascist POWs) or for turning the film into psychological thriller about Harrer's love for his abandoned son.(1) After the film was completed, Harrer's Nazi past was revealed and few voice-overs in the film were changed to suggest that Harrer joined the Nazi party reluctantly to further his career, and that his sojourn in Tibet made him realize that Nazism is bad. Actually, Harrer joined the SA in 1933, and the SS in 1938. Harrer is no Schindler, but instead someone who joined a voluntary elite Nazi organization and held a rank the equivalent of sergeant. Harrer's memoir makes no mention of his Nazi past.(1) Seven Years in Tibet shows Tibet as a peace-loving, non- violent society, when it was in fact a brutal society of high lamas owning hundreds of thousands of serfs. The Dalai Lama's family alone owned 4,000 people.(2) As one former serf told journalist Anna Louise Strong on life before liberation: "I was not much different than a yak."(3) Amongst the few correct things about this film is that it shows how isolated the high lamas were from the people, as we see the young Dalai Lama constantly watching his people from his palace with a telescope, and his advisors criticizing him for doing so. His advisors wanted the Dalai Lama to be even more cut off from the people. Prior to 1949, Tibet had been considered a part of China. According to Strong, "No foreign power in seven hundred years has recognized Tibet as a separate nation or sent an ambassador to Lhasa."(4) While Tibet relatively autonomous in the period immediately prior to 1949, so was most of imperialist-weakened China as it had broken up into different pieces run by warlords. In the film we see three Chinese People's Liberation Army generals fly to Lhasa to meet with the Dalai Lama. These generals are rude to everyone, and kick over a religious symbol created by a monk as a sign of peace and friendliness towards the generals. After the meeting, the lead general tells a Tibetan minister "Religion is poison." Religion is used by ruling classes to justify oppressive systems and get the people to believe that they deserve their conditions. In the case of Buddhism, adherents are told that if they tolerate their position in society well enough, they may do better in another life. Religion is a reactionary idea that Communists should propagandize against, but the methods used by the People's Liberation Army in the film are not only historically inaccurate but proven ineffective at destroying superstition. As Mao instructed in "Report on an Investigation of the Peasant Movement in Hunan" written two decades before the time covered in the film and a thousand miles from the location of Tibet, the Communists should "Draw the bow without shooting, just indicate the motions." As a footnote to this article explains: "This reference to archery is taken from Mencius. It describes how the expert teacher of archery draws his bow with a histrionic gesture but does not release the arrow. The point is that while Communists should guide the peasants in attaining a full measure of political consciousness, they should leave it to the peasants' own initiative to abolish superstitious and other bad practices and should not give them orders or do it for them."(5) Mao also explained that the nobility would otherwise use this alienation of the peasants' current ideology to rally them against the Communist Party and the revolution. But with careful political work the peasants will become impressed by the honest ways of the Communists and take up the revolutionary science of Marxism that puts the faith in the masses' own actions and not in gods or the location of their ancestors' graves. The film portrays a surprise attack by PLA forces on the Tibetan forces in 1950. The reality was portrayed in an article about Tibet in MIM Theory 8: "The PLA entered the city of Chambdo in 1950. This area plagued by fighting between Tibetan and Szechwan warlords, was not, according to most maps, part of Tibet. In 1950, however, the population was majority Tibetan. The PLA entry was anticipated by the Dalai Lama, so Tibetan troops were sent to meet and fight the PLA. The PLA quickly defeated the Dalai Lama's army in Chambdo. Many Tibetans, including some of the leadership of the Tibetan army, went over to the PLA side. The PLA was able to win support by explaining their intentions and through sharing what was happening in [other parts of] China. "The PLA did not advance into Tibet until 1951, when an agreement between the Dalai Lama and the Central Government for the 'Peaceful Liberation of Tibet' was signed. The agreement set the terms of the transition for Tibet back into being a functioning part of China. "Claiming the support of the Tibetan people, the Dalai Lama also claimed to support the agreement, in which China was to 'leave unchanged the political structure, the powers of the Dalai Lama, the income of the monasteries' and was not to 'use compulsion for reform.' Instead reform was left in the hands of the local governments and monasteries, who had agreed to begin reforming themselves." These agreements included things like abolished debts the serfs had owed for generations to the monasteries.(6) Unlike what was portrayed in the text after the film, the Dalai Lama and the nobility dragged their feet at the reforms, especially land reform, and staged a number of rebellions. After a 1959 nobility-led rebellion, the Dalai Lama fled to exile in India. With the self-removal of the bulk of the nobility and their invalidation of the 1951 agreement, serfdom was officially abolished and land reform was carried out in earnest.(6) This nobility in exile serves as the nucleus of the "Free Tibet" movement. MIM of course does not support the state- capitalist fascism of Deng Xiao-ping and Jiang Zemin, but we see it as preferable to a return to serfdom under the Dalai Lama. A better option would be a capitalism free of China's current fascism, and the best option would be for the genuine Maoists remaining within Tibet to lead a communist revolution against China and for an independent, socialist Tibet. NOTE: 1. The "Hero" of Seven Years in Tibet, Holocaust, http:holocaust.miningco.com/library/weekly/mcurrent.htm. Citing: Dallas Morning News 12 Oct 1997, C3 and Julia Ferguson, "Dalai Lama's Austrian Tutor Says Was in Nazi Party," Reuters North American Wire 28 May 1997. 2. Great Changes in Tibet, Foreign Languages Press: Peking 1972. p. 22. 3. Anna Louis Strong, Tibetan Interviews. New World Press: Peking 1959, p. 30. 4. Ibid, p. 74. 5. Mao Zedong, Selected Works Volume I, Foreign Languages Press, 1965. p. 46, 58(n). 6. MIM Theory 8. "The Liberation of Tibet: Revolutionary Advances and Counter-Revolutionary Claims" pp 92-95. $6 from MIM. This section cites Strong's Tibetan Interviews and Strong's When Serf's Stood Up in Tibet, New World Press, Peking 1960.