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Shrinking settlements, fading schools: The Tibetan exile crisis in India

By Tseten Lhundup* 
Since the 14th Dalai Lama fled to India in 1959, the Tibetan exile community in Dharamsala has established the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) as the guardian of Tibetan culture and identity. Once admired for its democratic governance, educational system, and religious vitality, the exile community now faces an alarming demographic and institutional decline. 
According to CTA statistics, the Tibetan population in India has fallen from a peak of about 100,000 in 2010 to fewer than 85,000 in 2025. Simultaneously, enrollment in the Tibetan Children’s Villages (TCV)—a cornerstone of the exile education system—has dropped from approximately 25,700 in 2000 to 15,700 in 2023, a 39% decrease. This dual decline threatens not only the community’s demographic foundation but also its cultural transmission.
The decline of the exile Tibetan population results from intersecting geopolitical, economic, and demographic factors. China’s intensified control over the Tibetan border after the 2008 protests remains a primary cause. Stricter surveillance and militarization along the Himalayan frontier have reduced the number of Tibetans reaching India from thousands annually to fewer than 100 each year. In 2024, the Upper Dharamsala TCV school admitted no new students from Tibet, compared to 700–800 annually before 2008. This effective border blockade has cut off the flow of new arrivals and undermined generational renewal within the exile settlements.
Migration to the West has further accelerated population decline. Between 1998 and 2009, more than 9,300 Tibetans resettled in Europe and the United States, facilitated by favorable immigration policies and better educational and job opportunities abroad. Many families now send their children to Western countries for higher education and employment. As a result, by 2020 the proportion of Tibetans living in South Asia had dropped from 80% to 50%. While this “secondary exile” improves individual livelihoods, it has depleted the labor force and youth population in India and Nepal.
Low fertility rates have compounded the demographic challenge. The average Tibetan family in exile now has only one or two children, reflecting the spread of modern education and family planning. The CTA’s 2009 census already indicated a steep fall from the larger families common in the 1960s. With the Dalai Lama now 89 years old and an aging population structure, the community faces the risk of a demographic collapse.
The decline in TCV enrollment closely mirrors these population trends but also reveals internal educational and social shifts. Founded in 1960 to provide Tibetan-language education for refugee children, TCV has long been central to cultural preservation. Since 2008, however, student numbers have steadily fallen. In 2024, four of the five TCV schools in Himachal Pradesh reported no new students from Tibet. The Gopalpur branch’s enrollment has dropped from 1,200 to about 600. Beyond reduced refugee arrivals, changing parental preferences have played a role, as many Tibetan families now favor local Indian or international schools.
Urban migration and emigration continue to shrink the student base. Younger Tibetans moving to cities or abroad often take their children with them, while declining birth rates further reduce the number of potential students. CTA data shows that overall school enrollment fell from 25,700 in 2000 to 15,700 in 2023 and could fall below 10,000 by 2043 if the trend persists. The scheduled closure of the Lower Dharamsala TCV school in December 2024, which currently has only six students, reflects the scale of this challenge.
The combined population and educational decline pose serious implications for the future of the Tibetan exile community. Educational institutions face mounting financial and staffing pressures. As TCV depends heavily on donations, lower enrollment means reduced income, leading to school mergers and potential closures. The impact on cultural preservation is equally grave. Fewer students mean fewer Tibetan-language speakers and practitioners of traditional knowledge, threatening the continuity of the exile identity.
These demographic shifts also weaken the CTA’s administrative and symbolic authority. As settlements shrink, utilization of community services such as hospitals, schools, and monasteries declines, potentially disrupting financial sustainability. The looming uncertainty surrounding the Dalai Lama’s succession further intensifies concerns about leadership and cohesion. The exile community thus faces a dual test—preserving its cultural legacy while sustaining a viable population base in an era of diminishing numbers and global dispersion.
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*Tibetan exile in the United States engaged in Tibetan cultural research

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