The Dalai Lama met with the
Prime Minister of India,
Jawaharlal Nehru, to urge India to pressure China into giving Tibet an autonomous government, as relations with
China were not proving successful. Nehru did not want to increase tensions between China and
India, so he encouraged the Dalai Lama to work on the
Seventeen Point Agreement Tibet had with China. Eventually, in 1959, the Dalai Lama fled Tibet and set up the
Government of Tibet in Exile in
Dharamsala,
India, which is often referred to as "Little Lhasa".
After the founding of the exiled government he reestablished the ~80,000 Tibetan refugees who followed him into exile in agricultural settlements. He created a Tibetan educational system in order to teach the Tibetan children what he believed to be traditional
language,
history,
religion, and
culture. The
Tibetan Institute of Performing Arts was established in 1959 and the
Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies became the primary university for Tibetans in India. He supported the refounding of 200 monasteries and nunneries in an attempt to preserve Tibetan Buddhist teachings and the Tibetan way of life.
The Dalai Lama appealed to the
United Nations on the question of Tibet. This appeal resulted in three resolutions adopted by the General Assembly in 1959, 1961, and 1965. These resolutions required China to respect the human rights of
Tibetans and their desire for
self-determination. In 1963, he promulgated a democratic constitution which is based upon the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights. A Tibetan
parliament-in-exile is elected by the Tibetan
refugees scattered all over the world, and the
Tibetan Government-in-Exile is likewise elected by the Tibetan parliament.
At the Congressional Human Rights Caucus in 1987 in
Washington, D.C., he proposed a
Five-Point Peace Plan regarding the future status of Tibet. The plan called for Tibet to become a "
zone of peace" and for the end of movement by
ethnic Han Chinese into Tibet. It also called for "respect for fundamental human rights and democratic freedoms" and "the end of China's use of Tibet for
nuclear weapons production, testing, and disposal." Finally, it urged "earnest negotiations" on the future of Tibet.
He proposed a similar plan at
Strasbourg on
15 June 1988. He expanded on the Five-Point Peace Plan and proposed the creation of a self-governing
democratic Tibet, "in association with the People's Republic of China." This plan was rejected by the Tibetan Government-in-Exile in 1991. In October 1991, he expressed his wish to return to Tibet to try to make a mutual assessment on the situation with the Chinese local government. At this time he feared that a violent uprising would take place and wished to avoid it. The Dalai Lama has indicated that he wishes to return to Tibet only if the People's Republic of China sets no preconditions for his return, which they have so far refused to do.
Tenzin Gyatso celebrated his seventieth birthday on
6 July 2005. About 10,000 Tibetan refugees, monks and foreign tourists gathered outside his home.
Patriarch Alexius II of the
Russian Orthodox Church said, "I confess that the
Russian Orthodox Church highly appreciates the good relations it has with the followers of Buddhism and hopes for their further development." President
Chen Shui-bian of the
Republic of China on Taiwan attended an evening celebrating the Dalai Lama's birthday that was entitled "Traveling with Love and Wisdom for 70 Years" at the
Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall in
Taipei. The President invited him to return to Taiwan for a third trip in 2005. His previous trips were in 2001, and 1997.