ABOUT TNSA (TIBETAN NATIONAL SPORTS ASSOCIATION)
October 1998, Kasur Jetsun Pema the then President of TCV (Tibetan Children’s village), received an invitation from Italian Rock Music Group named Dinamorock for an exhibition football match in Italy . The TCV had taken all the initiatives of selecting and training of the two teams of under-13 and the senior team. Thus the first-ever Tibetan Football Team was formed and played in Bologna , Italy , in 1999. This was the turning point for Tibetan football for it opened doors for talented players who could realize their dream of playing for their country.
In 2001, the Danish Tibetan Cultural Society invited the Tibetan Football Team to play against the Greenland national team. This visit by our Tibetan Football Team left no doubt that given proper training and support, our players could successfully compete at international levels.
The TNSA (Tibetan National Sports Association) is the brainchild of Kasur Jetsun Pema. She initiated the move to start the association realizing its potential to energize the youth of Tibet through a natural vehicle to make a difference in our just struggle for our identity and culture. Accordingly, the association was formally formed in May 2002 by pooling in human and financial resources of TCV. The organization’s intimate tie-up with TCV organization continues today. But, now the time has come for the association to find ways and means to stand on its own. And, this effort goes on today.
TNSA is registered under the Indian Societies Act XXI, 1860. The Kashag (Cabinet) Office of the Tibetan Government in-Exile has approved its mission and functions, The association has a Governing Body and an Executive Board to manage its affairs
Aims & Objectives
- To create a sustainable Tibetan National Sports Association and Tibetan Football Team.
- To develop, organize and promote the game of football within the Tibetan Community.
- To promote Tibetan Football at the International Level
- To promote professionalism and career for Tibetan footballers
- To promote awareness of Tibetan cause and issues.
- To promote Football in particular and in general other games and sports opportunities for Tibetan children and youth at all levels within the exile Tibetan community, India and abroad:
- To organize, promote and encourage football and other sporting activities in the Tibetan community
- To start, build, construct, manage, and organize sporting facilities at all levels with particular reference to football, and furnish them with necessary furniture and equipment.
Future Initiative
The association plans to further develop sports in the Tibetan community. Some of the measures on the anvil are:
- Establish a coaching centre with sports facilities for the Tibetan community
- Strengthen the base and quality of football clubs in the community.
- Encourage school-level football clubs through incentive schemes
- Organize football tournaments for both school and club levels.
- Participate in football tournaments in India .
- Arrange international tours for senior and junior Tibetan Football Teams
- Organize workshops to promote sports in the community
- Conduct training programs for officials and coaches.
THE ‘LHASA UNITED’ FOOTBALL TEAM
Members of the ‘Lhasa United’ football team. Spencer Chapman describes a match against ‘Lhasa United’ in October 1936: ‘Together with a crowd of supporters, our opponents were already there, turned out in garish harlequin-coloured silk shirts with L.U. sewn on to the pockets. There were a remarkable looking team, and certainly needed to be “United”! There was a tough looking Nepali soldier, a Chinese tailor, three bearded Ladakhis wearing red fezes – the most hirsute being the goalkeeper, a Sikkimese clerk of Pangda-Tsang’s, and five Tibetan officials, including our friends Yuto, Surkhang-Se, and Taring Dzongpon. The latter still had their charm-boxes on top of their heads, so were precluded from heading the ball.’
Photograph : Federick Spencer Chapman (1936 – 1937)
ABOUT TNFA (TIBETAN NATIONAL FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION
Introduction
Tibetans were first introduced to the game of football in the early part of the 20th Century. The British and their Indian soldiers played football at the British Trade Agency at Gyantse. The introduction of the British military training at Lhasa in 1913, the subsequent increase in the Army and introduction of a modern Police Force in the early 1920’s saw more football in Tibet. The game continued to be played throughout the period before China’s occupation in 1949. In the 1950’s a few popular teams emerged, like the Lhasa, the Potala, the Drapchi and Bodyguard Regiment football teams. There were frequent matches among themselves as well as with the Chinese military.
Soon after the Tibetan Government in Exile was formed in 1959 and Schools established in the early 1960’s, young students showed much interest in football. Regular inter-school tournaments were hosted and these initiated much interest and passion among spectators of all ages.
In 1981, the first club level tournament was organized in memory of the late Great Mother of His Holiness the Dalai Lama. It has since then come to be known as the Gyalyum Chenmo Memorial (GCM) Gold Cup the most popular tournament in the Tibetan exile community.
In 1998, an invitation from the Italian rock music group “Dinamorock” received a positive response from the Head Office of the Tibetan Children’s Villages (TCV). Subsequently, the first ever-national team was selected to play in Bologna, Italy in June 1999. This was the turning point for Tibetan football, for it opened the doors for talented players to realize their dreams of playing for the national side.
In 2001, The Danish Tibetan Cultural Group invited the national team to play against Greenland. Mr. Michael Nybrant, a member of our association, played a pivotal role in our national team’s successful and historic tours to Denmark, Germany and Switzerland.
THE ‘MISSION MARMOTS’ FOOTBALL TEAM
‘The Mission Marmots’ was the name given to the 1936 British Mission football team. The Mission established this team to play against various local groups (including ‘Lhasa United’) on a pitch beyond the Norbulingka. No goal was ever conceded by the British, perhaps because they wore army field boots.
Team members (back row from left to right): Sonam, unknown person, Minghu; (middle row from left to right); Frederick Spencer Chapman, Sidney Dagg, Dr. William Morgan, Evan Nepean; (bottom row) unidentified Mission assistants.
Photograph: Federick Spencer Chapman
1936 – 1937