Showing posts with label Lhasa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lhasa. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Lhasa, Tibet

This morning I visited the Norbulingka Summer Palace.  Norbulingka means Treasure Garden or Treasure Park and is a World Heritage Site.  It served as the summer home of the Dalai Lama.  It was initially built by the 7th Dalai Lama, covers 36 hectares and contains over 400 rooms.

There are numerous palaces such as the Kalsang Palace which was built in 1755 and named after the 7th Dalai Lama.  It houses a protector deities hall, a bedroom, assembly hall and a reading room.  Administrative affairs were carried out here-



Another palace is the Chensal, first built in 1922 for the 13th Dalai Lama.  It contains statues, murals and sculptures-


The Kalsang Dekyil Palace was also built in 1922 for the 13th Dalai Lama to practice tantric Buddhism.  It contains murals and wood carvings.  Tantric Buddhism is the short way to approach enlightenment.


The Dadan Mingjur Palace was built for the 14th Dalai Lama in 1954.  There are more than 30 rooms and its murals depict the history of Buddhism in Tibet-


The Truzing Palace was built during the reign of the 8th Dalai Lama - 1758-1804.  Inside is an eleven headed, thousand - armed and thousand - eyed Avalokiteshavara (Budhasatva of Compassion) and over 3600 scriptures-


After the Norbulingka, I went to Old Town.  Here is a small temple.  These are prayer wheels and are filled with up to a mile of prayers which are recited with each revolution of the wheel.  Pilgrims spin the wheels to gain merit and to concentrate on the prayers and mantras they are reciting. 


This is a Tibetan manilhakang which is a large prayer wheel inside a temple.  People also spin it while walking around it.


Here's a nunnery with prayer wheels outside.  The Lingkor Road passes by.  It's 10 km all around Lhasa.  It takes 3 hours to walk and is very popular with the pilgrims.


Butter lamps are continuously lit in all monasteries.  Today, ghee is often used instead of expensive butter.  The Tibetan people believe that by lighting the candles, it enlightens their minds and also reduces sin.  When one dies, the soul hangs around for 49 days.  This is called bardo.  After 49 days, rebirth happens and your 'new' you  depends on what you did in your last life.


This picture is not clear because I took it without a flash (no photos allowed) but it is a good example of what one finds in a temple: money, 7 bowls of water representing the "Seven Examined Men" who were the first 7 monks in Tibet or the first seven steps of Buddha and Buddhas behind glass-


I went to the Sera Monastery which was founded in 1419.  It's the third largest monastery in Tibet. 


One of the many colorful entrances-


It's well known for the debating that the monks do every afternoon.  To me, it was just a put on act to attract the tourists-


This is the temple-


 No pictures allowed but I took these anyway.  The Buddhas are gigantic and usually behind glass.  This is the future Buddha - Matriya.  He represents a new world and new generations.

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This is the Budhasatava of Compassion.  All the Dalai Lamas are manifested from him. (Chenrize is Tibetan for Budhasatava of Compassion).  


This is also the Matriya, the Future Buddha.  (Jampa Gonpo in Tibetan).


This couple is worshipping at a small shrine while the woman on the right is walking in clockwise circles with her prayer beads.  They fold their hands in the shape of a lotus flower that has nearly opened-



More traditional Tibetans-




This is the wheel of life.  There are 3 things in Buddhism one must overcome to be enlightened- desire, ignorance and anger.  Desire chains us to samsara, the endless cycle of birth, death and rebirth. Yama, The Lord of Death, holds the wheel in his mouth.  The images in the second circle are ascending through the realms on the left and descending on the right.  The third ring has 6 sectors that represent the six realms of rebirth: gods, battling demi-gods and humans, as well as hungry ghosts, hell and animals.  We are reborn, depending on our karma.  The twelve outer pictures represent the "12 links of dependent origination" - codependent and casual experiences of life leading to samsara.  One can see a blind woman, a potter, a monkey, men in a boat, a house, lovers, a man with an arrow in his eye, a drinking scene, someone grasping fruit from a tree, pregnancy, birth and death.  All of these depict either desire, anger or ignorance.  


In the center, the cockerel (representing desire or attachment) is biting the pig (ignorance or delusion) which is biting the snake (hatred or anger).


It was Peking Duck for supper!  Wraps, sliced onion and cucumber, a nice thick sauce and of course the duck-


Preparation-


The finished product!  Delicious!


The cup and saucer came plastic wrapped!


We've spent 2 great days here in Lhasa with perfect weather and fantastic sites and food.  Looking forward to moving on!
































Monday, September 15, 2014

Lhasa, Tibet

Our first stop this morning was at the Jokhang Temple.  It's the heart of Tibet and the most important spiritual centre for all Buddhists.  It was built in the 7th century and is the second most important World Heritage Site in Tibet.  Jokhang means "small house for the twelve years Buddha statue" which is found in the temple.  There are over 33 chapels-


This is the square in front of the temple.  The pole is a darchen, which is wrapped with the 5 colors found in the prayer flags and used to transport the prayers to heaven-


There are many pilgrims making the Barkhor circuit, turning their prayer wheels and chanting the mantra of the Buddhasatva of Compassion which in Tibetan is Chenrize.  They chant Om ma ni padma hung.  Om means the head of all the mantras.  Ma ni means holding gems and jewels in the hand of Buddhasatva of Compassion.  Padma means lotus flower which symbolizes purity.  Hung means a holder of gems and jewels.  It reduces suffering of the six beings in the wheel of life.  Pilgrims make this pilgrimage to accumulate merit and good fortune, to win a better rebirth, to cure an illness, to end bad luck or to give thanks-


They also prostrate in front of the temple.  This is called Chakdsel in Tibetan.  When you do this, you do three different gestures, placing your hands in a prayer position at the head which represents the mind, at the lips, representing speech, and at the heart, representing the body.  This is done to renounce sin-


This woman is praying using wheat and jewels, rubbing her hands clockwise and counter-clockwise to bring peace and prosperity to the universe.  She was doing this inside the temple-


The roofs inside the temple grounds-


The second floor-


More funny Chinglish-



Signs now appear in 3 languages: Tibetan (30 consonants and 4 vowels), Chinese, and English-


Here's a blender store.  Blenders are used to make yak butter tea-


Typical buildings with shops on the ground floor and apartments on the next three.  Notice the bars on the windows-


I used an automated teller and had a heck of a time because my password is a word.  I don't really know the numbers, just where they are, so this really threw me!


The school children wear uniforms-


This afternoon we visited the Potala Palace, former winter home and the governenment of the Dalai Lama who is now in exile in India.  It was the 5th Dalai Lama who moved lthe government here in 1645.  Potala means 'pure land' or 'paradise'-


Many Tibetans visiting the Potala Palace come in traditional dress-





Some of the architecture around the entrance to the Palace-


People also make the circuit around the palace.  This woman is using a prayer wheel-



Tibetan women just hanging out-


It is very interesting to witness the faith of the Buddhist people.  They are so dedicated and proud of their religion.  Today was a great day!
















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