Ngawang Sangdrol
Ngawang Sangdrol is a former political prisoner, imprisoned at the age of 13 by the Government of the People's Republic of China, for peacefully demonstrating against the Chinese occupation of Tibet in 1992. She was at first held for eight months without trial, before being sentenced to a three-year prison term. Her sentence was extended repeatedly for continued protest in prison, which included recording a tape of freedom songs with 13 other nuns from Drapchi Prison that was smuggled out of Tibet.
Prison
As a 13-year-old nun Ngawang became one of the youngest people convicted in China for calling for Tibet's independence. However, as her resolve for Tibetan Independence carried on in prison, Ngawang's original 3-year sentence was extended to a 23-year prison term after hearings in 1993, 1996 and 1998. These extensions were brought about due to Ngawang 'committing counterrevolutionary crimes in prison'.Musical Protest in Prison
One of the protests that extended Ngawang's sentence occurred in October 1993 when Ngawang Sangdrol and 13 other nuns clandestinely recorded songs and poems in tribute to their homeland and the 14th Dalai Lama from inside Drapchi prison. In total 27 tracks were able to be secretly recorded and smuggled out of prison. Ngawang was the youngest of the thirteen Singing Nuns of Drapchi Prison. The recording made it out of Tibet and the CD, "Seeing Nothing but the Sky..." was available through the Free Tibet Campaign in London.The sentences of the fourteen nuns were extended for a further three years when the Chinese authorities learned of the recordings. In addition to this extension, the fourteen nuns were reportedly beaten for refusing to sing pro-china songs during a later flag raising ceremony. Several of the protesters reportedly died due to the beatings. The cases include Ngawang Lochoe who died at age 28 from acute pancreatitis; according to her records she had only been hospitalised on the day of her death and also novice nun Sherab Ngawang who was arrested alongside Ngawang. Sherab died from multiple organ damage due to her treatment. After Sherab's death her internal organs were able to be examined her organs were said to resemble those of a one-hundred-year-old instead of an eighteen-year-old.
Even though Ngawang Sangdrol and all of the other nuns suffered hugely during their imprisonment, Ngawang is adamant that their objective was worth the sacrifice.
This sentiment is also carried in many of the nun's lyrics that were recorded:
"We friends and prisoners,
We will look for joy,
It doesn’t matter if we are beaten,
/ Our arms cannot be separated,
The eastern cloud is not fixed on the horizon,
The time will come for the sun to appear."