Los Angeles Times

A Tibetan trip in the time of coronaviru­s

- By Alice Su and Eleanor Moseman Su is a Times staff writer and Moseman a special correspond­ent.

GARZE, China — American photograph­er Eleanor Moseman was documentin­g Tibetan life when the coronaviru­s crept into one of China’s most remote areas. She had made the journey to celebrate the Tibetan New Year with friends, but the virus outbreak gave her a remarkable glimpse into a culture of monks, nomads and life at the distant edges.

Moseman has been working for several years on a photograph­y project of a Tibetan prefecture. She knows its people, their rhythms and superstiti­ons. While Beijing and virus epicenter Wuhan were under surveillan­ce and lockdown, the Tibetan prefecture in Sichuan province in the early days seemed oblivious to a mysterious illness that was making its way toward an autonomous land marked by mountain ranges and curled-roofed monasterie­s.

The following is what Moseman saw as she traveled in the prefecture for one month, watching China’s virus control measures play out in a Tibetan context. Her recollecti­ons were told to The Times’ Beijing correspond­ent and edited for clarity.

Jan. 17: I arrived in China a week before the New Year. At that time, few people were thinking about the virus.

When I took a high-speed train from Shanghai to Chengdu on my way to Garze, the station was filled with people heading home to see their families.

A friend from Chengdu texted me on the train, telling me to wear a mask.

But almost nobody was wearing one.

Jan. 18-19: There are multiple Tibetan kingdoms in China. Garze is part of a kingdom called Kham Tibet, or east Tibet. It is still mostly Tibetan, though there is an influx of Chinese. It’s a hub for nomads and herdsmen and villagers to come and buy supplies.

A lot of self-immolation­s — protesting Chinese controls and suppressio­n of Tibetan culture — have happened in this area, so the city can get shut down at a moment’s notice.

It’s a precarious area and I never really know if I will get where I’m going or not.

But when I arrived this time, life seemed to be going on as usual. Nomads from the countrysid­e were coming to shop, dressed in their colorful winter clothing. There are natural hot springs in the town where people gathered at night, sitting close together and dipping their feet in.

Jan. 20-27: My friend Jacob, a Tibetan who teaches English, brought me to his village for Losar, the Tibetan New Year. They chopped up a yak’s head that we boiled and ate, wrapped in buns called momos. I stayed with his family for about a week.

At this point, news about the virus was beginning to spread on foreign media, but people in the Garze district didn’t seem concerned.

I was getting nervous about staying in Jacob’s home, especially as the kids in his family were sick with colds. I didn’t want to catch anything and get quarantine­d out of suspicion.

No one in the household was worried. But on Jan. 26 two coronaviru­s cases were confirmed in the Kham region. No one was panicking, but there was concern.

My friends in the region began saying politely, “Don’t come around.” As an outsider, I had suddenly become suspect.

Jan. 28-29: I managed to leave the village and head back to Garze by hitching rides on minivans that function like shared taxis. The first was filled with Tibetans, the second filled with Han Chinese migrant workers.

We drove through several checkpoint­s, where police and medical workers in white protective suits took our temperatur­es and examined our papers.

A friend who is a monk sent me a photo of an ancient Tibetan text explaining how humans should not eat bats, which are believed to be the genesis of the coronaviru­s. There were a number of moments like this: modern-day disease and science mixing with an ancient religion that believes in reincarnat­ion.

Jan. 30: I arrived in Garze. It was a ghost town. I’d never seen it like this. It was unnerving. The only hotel that would take me in was directly across from the police station.

I started seeing sanitation vans and hearing propaganda shouted on the loudspeake­rs. Posters were going up and police checked shops, telling owners to close. Guards blocked entrances to alleys, registerin­g people’s names and IDs whenever anyone passed.

The city was slowly shutting down.

Feb. 8: A tour bus stopped at my hotel around midnight with police escorts. Six or seven people got off the bus. They were dressed and packed like nomads. One woman appeared unwell. A small child with them cried through the night.

In the morning, those who had arrived late at night left. I opened the door and my hallway was being disinfecte­d. A man came into my room and started spraying everything.

I asked the hotel manager what had happened. He said, “They’re just cleaning up because a lot of people stayed here last night.”

Feb. 14: My hotel finally told me I couldn’t stay anymore. The day I checked out, the hotel staff was shaking out a week’s worth of dirty linens in the lobby. They were wearing masks.

It was getting difficult to stay. It felt more menacing. There were groups of security officers at every village entrance and green government vehicles on the streets. Signs were posted in Tibetan and Chinese, explaining how to prevent and control the virus.

I tried to visit a temple one day and found that all had been closed. Locals were told not to pray at community prayer wheels. But I spotted one woman at the temple, turning the prayer wheel anyway.

Feb. 15: It was so strange to leave the region like this. Military tents were lining the road to Garze’s airport, guarding village entrances. It had taken hours the previous night, with a friend’s help, to find a car that was willing and able to drive an hour out of the city.

Garze felt even more like a police state than usual.

Police questioned me one more time at the airport. I was pulled out of the medical check line for a high temperatur­e. They used a small thermomete­r on my forehead, wrist and neck, and then stuck a thermomete­r under my armpit and told me to keep it there for eight minutes. They let me on the plane. Feb. 16: I f lew to Chengdu, then to Shanghai, where I was shocked. Things were so different there. People were still living their lives, though there were temperatur­e checks and masks. There was much less of a security presence.

Garze city has changed dramatical­ly in recent years. When I first visited in 2011, it was all gravel roads, and now there’s a highway, hotels are popping up, a lot of new infrastruc­ture and tourism. It’s on a major thoroughfa­re to Lhasa, the Tibetan capital.

Sometimes, I think this area is not ready for all these changes. The Chinese build and change at such a fast rate, it seemed like this area was going to stumble and fall to catch up.

The virus highlighte­d preexistin­g cracks in the social structure and medical system: difficulti­es in accessing healthcare, lack of education, and distrust exacerbate­d by cultural difference­s and inability to communicat­e.

After I left, Jacob’s village was locked down. His internet was knocked out as well.

That happens a lot there, especially in March, around the anniversar­y of the Dalai Lama’s exile. China wants to subsume Tibet, make its culture and beliefs bend to the Chinese way, even here — thousands of miles from Beijing.

I got a text from Jacob later. He said, “I have faith in our government that they’re doing the best they can do. Our village leaders said cases will decrease soon.”

I don’t know why he sent those messages. It’s really hard to say.

 ?? Eleanor Moseman ?? COMMUNITY virus prevention workers gather in Garze, a Tibetan autonomous prefecture in China.
Eleanor Moseman COMMUNITY virus prevention workers gather in Garze, a Tibetan autonomous prefecture in China.

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