On Sunday, Lady Gaga made a friend while angering a nation's leaders.
Before the Dalai Lama was set to deliver the keynote address at the annual United States Conference of Mayors in Indianapolis, the 81-year-old Buddhist leader met with the 30-year-old pop star.
The Dalai Lama fielded questions Lady Gaga had sourced from fans on social media. The result was a nearly 20-minute-long conversation, now posted to Facebook and viewed more than 3 million times, that meandered through suicide, yoga, meditation and advice on how to face the current horrors of the world. "Whatever happens," the Dalai Lama said, "hope and self-confidence are essential."
But to Chinese officials who view the Dalai Lama as a Tibetan separatist - and in December tried to paint him as a supporter of the Islamic State - the meeting was more sinister than it seemed.
"The purpose of his visits and activities in other countries is just to promote his proposal for Tibetan independence," Hong Lei, a representative for China's Foreign Ministry, said on Monday, according to the Associated Press.
For nearly six decades, since a Tibetan revolution against China failed in 1959, the Dalai Lama has been in exile from his homeland. In 2009, the Dalai Lama said China had made Tibetan life "hell on Earth," according to CNN; in 2011, a Communist Party chief reiterated the famous epithet that the Dalai Lama is a "wolf in monk's robes."
Lady Gaga's friendliness toward the spiritual leader means she, too, has incurred the Chinese government's wrath. The State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television now legally forbids Lady Gaga and her music from appearing on the radio or TV. Her downloadable albums will be removed from online stores.
In a translation of a report on Hong Kong newspaper Apple Daily, the Guardian said that Lady Gaga had been added to a "list of hostile foreign forces." This is no insignificant threat, as the musician is arguably the most popular Western singer in China, according to the BBC. On social media, Lady Gaga was both applauded for meeting with the Dalai Lama and excoriated by Chinese fans who say she gave them up.
It is not the first time China has censored Lady Gaga. She was subject to a three-year ban that ended in 2014, though that was because her music posed a threat to Chinese "cultural security" rather than because of meeting with political figures.
Nor is she the first popular act from the West to be restricted from Middle Kingdom airwaves for perceived Tibetan sympathies. The Wall Street Journal reported that Chinese officials began taking a harder look at Western musicians after the singer Bjork shouted "Tibet! Tibet!" at a Shanghai venue in 2008. A year later, the band Oasis was banned, perhaps because lead guitarist Noel Gallagher performed at a Free Tibet concert in 1997. This prompted some Chinese observers, according to the Journal, to begin calling the bans "getting Bjork'd."
In the past year, artists as diverse as Bon Jovi and Selena Gomez have canceled concerts in China, possibly for supporting the Dalai Lama - or, in the case of the band Maroon 5, attending his birthday party.
The Washington Post
Thu Jun 30 2016
Lady Gaga's friendliness toward the spiritual leader means she, too, has incurred the Chinese government's wrath.
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