Source: Xinhua

05-07-2008 14:20

A worker is preparing for the exhibition on Tuesday. An exhibition on Tibet history opened here on Wednesday, aiming to present visitors with a full landscape of the autonomous region's past and present through pictures and exhibits. (Xinhua Photo)
A worker is preparing for the exhibition on Tuesday. An exhibition on
Tibet history opened here on Wednesday, aiming to present visitors with
a full landscape of the autonomous region's past and present through 
pictures and exhibits. (Xinhua Photo)
BEIJING, April 30 (Xinhua) -- An exhibition on Tibet history opened here on Wednesday, aiming to present visitors with a full landscape of the autonomous region's past and present through pictures and exhibits.

Yang Jing, State Ethnic Affairs Commission (SEAC) director, told the opening ceremony, "Tibet is an inalienable part of China and an important member of the big Chinese family; Tibet's old feudal serfdom system fundamentally robbed Tibetans of their human rights and prevented economic and social progress."

A visitor is watching the exhibition on Wednesday. An exhibition on Tibet history opened here on Wednesday, aiming to present visitors with a full landscape of the autonomous region's past and present through pictures and exhibits. (Xinhua Photo)
A visitor is watching the exhibition on Wednesday. An exhibition on 
Tibet history opened here on Wednesday, aiming to present visitors with
a full landscape of the autonomous region's past and present through
pictures and exhibits. (Xinhua Photo)

"Objects and pictures presented here are a forceful witness of the region's historical change."

The exhibition, "Tibet of China: Past and Present," features two parts: the History of Tibet and Feudal Serfdom in Old Tibet, and New Tibet Changing With Each Passing Day.

"From 160 objects and more than 400 pictures, the audience will see the backwardness and darkness of the old Tibet as well as the development and progress of the new Tibet," said a senior SEAC official.

The free exhibition is jointly sponsored by the State Ethnic Affairs Commission, the United Front Work Department of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, the State Council Information Office and the Tibet Autonomous Region. It is at the Cultural Palace of Nationalities through July 25.