The article offers a survey of religious contacts
maintained between Tibet and Russian Buddhists, the
ethnic Buryats and Kalmyks, from the late 19th C. to
the 1930s. Chronologically, the story falls into two
parts, the dividing point being the Bolshevik
revolution of 1917. The focus in the first portion
is on the Russian Buddhist colony in Lhasa centred
around the Gomang Datsang (school) of the Drepung
monastery, its emergence and growth in the early
20th C., in the wake of Russo-Tibetan
rapprochement brought about by a
Buryat scholar-monk and adviser of the 13th Dalai
Lama, Agvan Dorjiev. The tsarist government tried to
use their Buddhist connection with Lhasa to
political ends – in January 1904, shortly after the
beginning of the British military invasion of Tibet,
they sent a secret Kalmyk reconnaissance mission to
Lhasa under a Cossack subaltern, Naran Ulanov,
assisted by a cleric (bakshi) Dambo
Ulianov. The latter part of the article concentrates
on the dramatic post-revolutionary period. It begins
with the story of the Kalmyk refugees in Turkey and
their abortive attempt to emigrate to Tibet. There's
also a detailed discussion of the endeavours by
Soviet leaders to win the Dalai Lama over, by
employing the loyal Buryats and Kalmyks for their
secret missions to the Potala. The key figures
behind this scheme were the Soviet foreign minister,
G. V. Chicherin, and the same Agvan Dorjiev, posing
as the Dalai Lama's representative in the USSR. As a
result of the Bolshevik propaganda, many of the
Buryat and Kalmyk residents in Lhasa began to return
to their homeland in the 1920s. The crackdown on
Buddhism in Soviet Russia put an end to the
Moscow–Lhasa political dialogue. Hence all
connections between the Buryat and Kalmyk Buddhists
and their religious “Mecca” were deliberately cut by
the Soviet authorities by 1930.