The Digital Museum is a flagship project of the 108 Peace Institute, serving as a dynamic digital exhibition space. It vividly brings to life the Institute’s core focus areas through professionally curated collections, including multimedia content, historical artifacts, educational resources, and immersive storytelling, creating an unparalleled learning experience.
Through our digital museum, we aim to inform and educate visitors on 108 Peace Institute’s four focus frameworks (freedom, democracy, climate action, and leadership), transcending physical barriers and making them accessible to anyone, anywhere. Whether you are a student, researcher, activist, educator or art enthusiast, our digital museum is designed to inspire and educate, providing a seamless and enriching experience.
Through our online museum, you can discover a vast collection of digital exhibits, meticulously curated to provide a comprehensive learning experience. Visitors can access rich exhibit content with high-definition images, detailed descriptions and expert commentaries. This is a perfect venue to dive deep into your favorite topics or discover new interests, all without leaving your screen.
Our virtual museum will provide the experience of a real-life museum with a fully immersive 3D-rendered environment where you can explore stunning exhibitions from the comfort of your home. You can navigate through interactive displays, experience artworks and artefacts as if walking through a physical museum and engage with multimedia elements that bring history and culture to life.
The 108 Peace Institute is developing a Digital Repository/Digital Archive dedicated to preserving and sharing the rich cultural heritage and history of Tibet. Our archive will provide access to a diverse range of materials, including photographs, documents, videos, audios, objects, and artifacts that document Tibet’s history, its present situations, and the remarkable lives of the Dalai Lamas. Each item in the collection will be thoroughly researched, documented, and cataloged, making it accessible worldwide to both Tibetans and non-Tibetans.
At the core of this project is our commitment to preserving the stories, traditions, and legacies of the Tibetan people. We invite everyone—Tibetans and non-Tibetans alike—to contribute to this meaningful effort. Your donations of digital or original materials will ensure that future generations can access these invaluable resources.
By sharing photographs, documents, artifacts, or videos, you will play an important role in honoring and preserving Tibet’s cultural and historical legacy.
Join us in building this archive and help keep the spirit of Tibet alive. Together, we can make a lasting impact.
For more details or information about donating to the digital archive, please contact us at: president@108peaceinstitute.org or museum@108peaceinstitute.org
Upload Digital Assets to 108 Peace Institute Digital Archive
Tsering Youdon is the Program Manager at 108 Peace Institute. She has 6 years of experience as a project officer and program coordinator in the Central Tibetan Administration’s Nepal branch. Her expertise includes planning, designing, and monitoring projects and supporting the capacity building of local organizations and individuals. Tsering is an MBA graduate from Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) in New York.
Tenzin Donzey is a Program Manager at the 108 Peace Institute. She has served in the Department of Information and International Relations (DIIR), Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) as a Project Officer and Tibet Support Groups’ Liaison Officer. Tenzin has extensive experience in planning, designing, and managing programs. She is a recipient of the Tibetan Scholarship Program under which she obtained an MBA from Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT), New York.
Lobsang Sangay is a Senior Visiting Fellow at East Asian Legal Studies Program, Harvard Law School. He was a democratically elected Sikyong (President) of the Central Tibetan Administration and served two terms (2011-21). Lobsang completed his BA and LLB from Delhi University. He did his LLM ’95 and SJD ‘04 from Harvard Law School and received the Yong K. Kim’ 95 Memorial Prize for excellence in dissertation and contributions to the understanding of East Asia at the Harvard Law School. While at Harvard, akin to track III, he organized seven rounds of meetings/conferences between Tibetan, Western, and Chinese scholars, most notably, the first-ever meeting between HH the Dalai Lama and Chinese scholars and students.