The event was moderated by Barnard Professor of Film Studies, Meg McLagan, who is also director of the award-winning documentary Lioness and an early film Tibet in Exile, among others, and author of Sensible Politics. The discussion included questions by local Tibetan community members in attendance, such as one businessman who regularly orders khata for retail sale in Queens: "The film made me think. It should be shown for the Tibetan community in Queens."
Columbia Unviersity Tibetan Studies PhD candidate Yewong Dongchung, who attended the event in-person and researches material culture commented, "I was most struck by how generative Professor Huatse Gyal's film was. After the screening, we sat in the audience and collectively discussed how polyester-produced cheap khatas are now used to such an extent that there is a cultural concern about frivolity and an environmental concern about wastage
associated with it."
Columbia College student Steven Song, who was also in attendance, has written on the event in an article for the Columbia Spectator. Due to the weather conditions, an option for online viewing was also offered. The two-plus-hour screening and discussion closed well after 7pm, leaving the in-person attendees to navigate their ways home.
To learn more about the film or to arrange a screening, please contact Professor Huatse Gyal at [email protected].
For more information about the Modern Tibetan Studies Program and its public events, or to sign up for the mailing-list, contact: [email protected]