A tourist snaps pictures of a young Tibetan Buddhist monk carrying a heavy load of water at the Ganden Sumtseling Monastery in Shangrila on March 22, 2008 in the Deqen Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of southwest China's Yunnan province. For China's communist rulers as of April 6, 2008, its re-energised "patriotic education" campaign for wayward Tibetans is standard practice in trying to win their hearts and minds, but Tibetan exiles, activists and rights groups warn the government's latest tactic in trying to end nearly a month of resistance against its rule of Tibet will only lead to more resentment and deepen the divide between the two sides after China announced on April 5, it would step up "patriotic education" for Tibetans to run alongside a controversial security crackdown aimed at ending protests that began on March 10. Belonging to the Yellow-Hat sect of Tibetan Buddhism, the Sumtseling Monastery was first settled in 1681 by the Fifth Dalai Lama.