Camera Woes :(
I've been completely out of touch! My camera broke a week or so ago and I also just sort of got lost in the daily life of Dharamsala. It was such a nice place and I made so many friends that it was easy to stay for weeks. I taught English each day to a monk and a Tibetan boy who was the cook for a monastery. They were so fabulous! When I left I cried because they each gave me a white scarf to say good-bye -- symbolic of respect and honor. The same scarves worn in the Buddhist temples.
Traffic Chaos
Typical Indian driving tactics = survival of the fittest mixed with a dose of playing chicken with every possible thing on the road including, buses, trucks, cars, motorcycles, scooters, donkey-drawn carts, motor rickshaws, peddle rickshaws, bicycles and pedestrians -- which are the absolute lowest element on the road food chain. It’s no wonder there are so many gods in this country – all during a 10-hour bus or jeep ride I pray to as many as I can remember!!
The name of the game on the roads is drive as fast as possible while honking incessantly and pass, pass, pass.
Typical view of what is barreling towards you on every road.
Playing chicken with cows.
Monsoon rains washes out part of the road on the way to Punjab.
View from the front seat.
Tailgating :)
Pubjab man watching the traffic go by.
The name of the game on the roads is drive as fast as possible while honking incessantly and pass, pass, pass.
Typical view of what is barreling towards you on every road.
Playing chicken with cows.
Monsoon rains washes out part of the road on the way to Punjab.
View from the front seat.
Tailgating :)
Pubjab man watching the traffic go by.
The Golden Temple
I met up with some of my old traveling peeps and headed off to Punjab state for one last trip together to visit the Golden Temple: the most sacred temple for the Siehks. (We learned about the temple when we did our trek a few weeks ago and met all of the Seihks.) We rented a jeep and driver so that we didn't have to take the god-forsaken public bus for eight hours.
The temple is gorgeous - it sits in the middle of a "lake" and the reflections are breathtaking. The temple complex is about an acre total, with the Golden Temple (leafed with pure gold) sits in the center of it all. There is a public kitchen that will feed anyone and everyone for free -- they wheel in huge buckets of food all day long. And there are beds to sleep in for free so that even poor people can make the trip to the temple and have housing. It's all part of the "compassion and charity" elements of Seihkism. The Seihks are some of the warmest people I've met in India. And they have a crazy facination with collecting pictures of forgieners -- I've taken at *least* 50 pictures with Punjabi Seihks since I got here! They are so nice when they ask it's hard to say no.
The temple is gorgeous - it sits in the middle of a "lake" and the reflections are breathtaking. The temple complex is about an acre total, with the Golden Temple (leafed with pure gold) sits in the center of it all. There is a public kitchen that will feed anyone and everyone for free -- they wheel in huge buckets of food all day long. And there are beds to sleep in for free so that even poor people can make the trip to the temple and have housing. It's all part of the "compassion and charity" elements of Seihkism. The Seihks are some of the warmest people I've met in India. And they have a crazy facination with collecting pictures of forgieners -- I've taken at *least* 50 pictures with Punjabi Seihks since I got here! They are so nice when they ask it's hard to say no.
Four to five musicians and a singer sit in the bottom level of the temple and play for 20 hours each day. They play sitar, small drums and keyboard. (The temple closes with a great ceremony for four hours each night and it’s cleaned and shined from top to bottom, and the floors are washed with milk.) The musicians sit around a sacred book and sing the different hymns and chants from the holy book. The whole temple complex is wired with speakers so the sound is omnipresent all day. The sounds are lovely.
On the roof of the temple there is a room where top Seihks take two-hour turns reading the holy book which takes about 40 hours in total. There are worshippers who stay at the temple for two – three days and listen to the whole duration.
On the roof of the temple there is a room where top Seihks take two-hour turns reading the holy book which takes about 40 hours in total. There are worshippers who stay at the temple for two – three days and listen to the whole duration.
Lakshmi Narayan Temple
More Pics from Dharmasala
A sign in front of the Dali Lama's house talking about his availablility.
Prayer wheels at Tibetan Buddhist temple. Spinning the wheel is equal to saying the prayer locked inside the wheel. There are about one hundred at the temple.
Boy spinning prayer wheels.
Man praying at temple. He will drop down to his stomach and then stand up, over and over for more than an hour.
He (and other worshipers) wear cloth pads on their hands to make it easier to slide their hands out in front of them on the floor and stretch out on their bellies and slide back up again.
Tibetan monk shopping.
Chilling at the tea shop :)
Prayer wheels at Tibetan Buddhist temple. Spinning the wheel is equal to saying the prayer locked inside the wheel. There are about one hundred at the temple.
Boy spinning prayer wheels.
Man praying at temple. He will drop down to his stomach and then stand up, over and over for more than an hour.
He (and other worshipers) wear cloth pads on their hands to make it easier to slide their hands out in front of them on the floor and stretch out on their bellies and slide back up again.
Tibetan monk shopping.
Chilling at the tea shop :)
Tibetan Cooking and a Story of One Refugee
I'm taking a series of three Tibetan cooking classes - so far I've learned to make "momos" which are steamed dumplings and three kinds of bread :)
My teacher is a Tibetan refugee and his story is amazing. He escaped Tibet 10 years ago when he was only 13 y/o, he came alone without any family and his sister financed the trip. He crossed the Himalayas with a group of 10 others and a guide. They had a lot of trouble -- they had to wait for several days in the mountains for Chinese guards to leave an area; they ran out of food and b/c the elevation was so high the older members had a really hard time breathing. Miraculously, a group of Western mountaineers came along and shared some of their oxygen tanks and some food. This helped them continue on. When they got to the Nepal border, they were met by a gang posing as police who took them into custody and took almost all of the group's money they had with them to start their new lives. My teacher hid a small amount of money like 50 YEN in the spout of the tea pot he brought with him, and the Nepalese didn't find it. That was all he came to India with - 50 YEN and tea pot.
He's here now in Dharmasala and is doing really well with his cooking classes. He's married to a gorgeous Tibetan woman who came over six years ago via a similar route. Their families have been interrogated about their whereabouts so they can never go home or contact home again. They seem happy here, but def miss their home.
Pics fo what I've made :)
My teacher is a Tibetan refugee and his story is amazing. He escaped Tibet 10 years ago when he was only 13 y/o, he came alone without any family and his sister financed the trip. He crossed the Himalayas with a group of 10 others and a guide. They had a lot of trouble -- they had to wait for several days in the mountains for Chinese guards to leave an area; they ran out of food and b/c the elevation was so high the older members had a really hard time breathing. Miraculously, a group of Western mountaineers came along and shared some of their oxygen tanks and some food. This helped them continue on. When they got to the Nepal border, they were met by a gang posing as police who took them into custody and took almost all of the group's money they had with them to start their new lives. My teacher hid a small amount of money like 50 YEN in the spout of the tea pot he brought with him, and the Nepalese didn't find it. That was all he came to India with - 50 YEN and tea pot.
He's here now in Dharmasala and is doing really well with his cooking classes. He's married to a gorgeous Tibetan woman who came over six years ago via a similar route. Their families have been interrogated about their whereabouts so they can never go home or contact home again. They seem happy here, but def miss their home.
Pics fo what I've made :)
Dharmasala - Home of the Dali Lama (and another Lama)
Dharmasala is beautiful - it's in the north east of India and at the base of the Himalayas, and is the home of the Dali Lama and the exiled Tibetan government. Prayer flags snap in the wind and the views of the valleys and mountains are spectacular. India gave the Tibetans this town for their refugees and it's a place where they can live peacefully without persecution from the Chinese. Apparently the Dali Lama just walks around town when he's here. He also gives public talks. Unfor. he's traveling until Sept. do I don't know if I'll meet him. :(
Besides the Dali Lama there is another very high holy Lama lives in exile here -- the Karmapa Lama. He's about 22 years old (but in the 17th reincarnation) and leads a branch of Buddhism that offshoots from the Dali Lama's teachings. Today I went to a ceremony at his monastery where he appeared for a few minutes to give blessings and receive donations. The ceremony was very organized. After bowing several times when the Lama first came out into the hall, everyone (including me) assembled into a line and had a white scarf with them. (I didn't know that you needed a scarf so I ran out and got one from someone who finished her blessing already.) As you get up to the front where the Lama is another monk takes the scarf wraps it over your neck and shoulders and then you can approach the Karmapa Lama. You do a quick bow and in return he hands you a red string.
The white scarf is an ancient Tibetan tradition -- the color symbolizes purity of intention and aspiration. The red string is called a protection and blessing cord. The lama ties a knot in the cord, then prays over it and blows the power of his mantra into it. It's supposed to symbolize the lama's protection even after departing from his physical presence.
You weren't allowed to bring cameras so I don't have any personal pictures, but here is one that I plucked from the internet.
Every year thousands of Tibetans make the two-month long trek through the Himalayas in winter first to Nepal and then from there they are transferred here to Dharmasala. They travel in winter b/c the snow is safer to walk on and it's harder for the Chinese guards to spot them. Hundreds get frostbite and have to have limbs amputated. Others don't make it at all. It's facinating to talk to people here and get their stories.
Besides the Dali Lama there is another very high holy Lama lives in exile here -- the Karmapa Lama. He's about 22 years old (but in the 17th reincarnation) and leads a branch of Buddhism that offshoots from the Dali Lama's teachings. Today I went to a ceremony at his monastery where he appeared for a few minutes to give blessings and receive donations. The ceremony was very organized. After bowing several times when the Lama first came out into the hall, everyone (including me) assembled into a line and had a white scarf with them. (I didn't know that you needed a scarf so I ran out and got one from someone who finished her blessing already.) As you get up to the front where the Lama is another monk takes the scarf wraps it over your neck and shoulders and then you can approach the Karmapa Lama. You do a quick bow and in return he hands you a red string.
The white scarf is an ancient Tibetan tradition -- the color symbolizes purity of intention and aspiration. The red string is called a protection and blessing cord. The lama ties a knot in the cord, then prays over it and blows the power of his mantra into it. It's supposed to symbolize the lama's protection even after departing from his physical presence.
You weren't allowed to bring cameras so I don't have any personal pictures, but here is one that I plucked from the internet.
India's Poverty & the Devastating Monsoon
"Seventy-seven percent of Indians -- about 836 million people -- live on less than half a dollar a day in one of the world's hottest economies..."
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070810/wl_nm/india_poor_dc
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070810/wl_nm/india_poor_dc
Monsoon death toll reaches 2,000
The storms have stranded 19 million people in India, Bangladesh and Pakistan. Nearly 243,000 people were still living in relief camps in India, the Home Ministry said... Since the start of this year's monsoon, more than 1,550 people have died in India...
http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/asiapcf/08/10/asia.monsoons.ap/index.html?eref=yahoo
Escaping the Masses
When I got back to Rishikesh after trekking - the number of pilgrims had increased and was only supposed to get bigger in the last week or so of the religious 'holiday" and the temperture was well into the 90s. With the people and heat it was almost impossible to be outside for too long. So most of my trekking group and I decided to head to higher, cooler and less crowded ground back up in the north - to a town called Shimla. A 'proper' old British hill station. After 10 hours on a stinky night bus we arrived and it's great. It feels more like High Street than India -- a really nice break. This is a place where upper middle class Indians come for vaca to get away from the retched summer heat.
It's a shopping mecca here for handsewn saris and custom-tailored men's suits.
Trekking in the Himalayas
In Rishikesh a.k.a. Yoga Town I met some awesome travelers – a girl from NY, a pair of friends from Denmark and a guy from Iceland. On a spur of the moment we decided to go 12 hours north to the Himalayas near the Nepalese border to go trekking in an area called the Valley of Flowers. We got a bus at the crack of dawn -- the bus ride was hellish – hairpin turns on roads that clung to the side of the mountains; oncoming traffic rushing towards us with scientifically no room for two lanes and no guardrails. The seats were so packed together that your knees were wedged into the seat in front of you. It was probably the worst bus ride of my life. BUT the views and scenery were amazing. We wound over deep valleys with the Ganges river and other rivers below, passed by terraced rice paddies and farm lands and by temples with gorgeous Hindi god statues.
When we arrived at the gateway town for the trekking we learned that there was a religous pilgrimage here, too! This time the Sikhs. They have a temple at the top of one of the Himalayan peaks and it is only accessible in July and August b/c the route is snowed in all other months. So we were joined on our “secluded, remote” hike by thousands of Sikh pilgrims walking the 13 miles up to their temple. Here are some new friends I met on the trail :)
After going an intense 8 miles and climbing about 3,000 feet in elevation we stopped and got a room for the night, then the next day we hiked to the Valley of Flowers – a beautiful area (and actually remote - no people! Very, very hard to find in India so far) filled with 80 types of wildflowers, at least 25 waterfalls and big ancient glaciers. It was spectacular. They weather lasted for a few hours and then poured on us as we hiked out ;)
My peeps!
When we arrived at the gateway town for the trekking we learned that there was a religous pilgrimage here, too! This time the Sikhs. They have a temple at the top of one of the Himalayan peaks and it is only accessible in July and August b/c the route is snowed in all other months. So we were joined on our “secluded, remote” hike by thousands of Sikh pilgrims walking the 13 miles up to their temple. Here are some new friends I met on the trail :)
After going an intense 8 miles and climbing about 3,000 feet in elevation we stopped and got a room for the night, then the next day we hiked to the Valley of Flowers – a beautiful area (and actually remote - no people! Very, very hard to find in India so far) filled with 80 types of wildflowers, at least 25 waterfalls and big ancient glaciers. It was spectacular. They weather lasted for a few hours and then poured on us as we hiked out ;)
My peeps!
Rishikesh, India - Yoga Capital of the World
After a few days in Delhi and a day at the Taj Mahal, I took a six-hour train trip to Rishikesh -- the 'Yoga Capital of the World;' a small town nestled at the start of the Himalayas and on the mouth of the Ganges River. In this area there are at least 25 ashrams for yoga and meditation and also each of the guesthouses holds daily yoga classes.
The Ganges River is one of the most sacred elements for Indian Hindus, it is completely revered as “The Mother Ganges.” It is still India though so it is overall loud and dirty, but under that all there is a serene element to be found here.
There are several multi-storied Hindu temples here filled with ceramic gods and bells that you ring as you walk the stairs to each new level. At the top worshippers (and me!) are given water from the Ganges to drink and also given a red bindi dot on their forehead.
There is a nightly Hindu ceremony at the river where musicians play and lead everyone in chants and songs and offerings of flowers and incense are set afloat on the river at sunset. I didn’t have an offering but the man next to me gave me some of his flowers and incense and showed me how to offer it properly to the Ganges. It was really special.
Right now there is a huge pilgrimage going on where boys from the outlying temples come to Rishikesh to gather water from the mouth of the river to take back to their own temples and then wash their statue of god Shiva. They all wear bright orange clothes. They arrive in a town 24 kms from here and have to walk (some of them crawl on their bellies) to here, bathe in the river and then collect the water. Right now there are tens of thousands of pilgrims here -- it is so, so crowded and hard to do yoga b/c the ashrams are filled with the pilgrims. But the ancient tradition itself is really cool to see.
Pilgrims bathing in Ganges and crowded foot bridge.
The Ganges River is one of the most sacred elements for Indian Hindus, it is completely revered as “The Mother Ganges.” It is still India though so it is overall loud and dirty, but under that all there is a serene element to be found here.
There are several multi-storied Hindu temples here filled with ceramic gods and bells that you ring as you walk the stairs to each new level. At the top worshippers (and me!) are given water from the Ganges to drink and also given a red bindi dot on their forehead.
There is a nightly Hindu ceremony at the river where musicians play and lead everyone in chants and songs and offerings of flowers and incense are set afloat on the river at sunset. I didn’t have an offering but the man next to me gave me some of his flowers and incense and showed me how to offer it properly to the Ganges. It was really special.
Right now there is a huge pilgrimage going on where boys from the outlying temples come to Rishikesh to gather water from the mouth of the river to take back to their own temples and then wash their statue of god Shiva. They all wear bright orange clothes. They arrive in a town 24 kms from here and have to walk (some of them crawl on their bellies) to here, bathe in the river and then collect the water. Right now there are tens of thousands of pilgrims here -- it is so, so crowded and hard to do yoga b/c the ashrams are filled with the pilgrims. But the ancient tradition itself is really cool to see.
Pilgrims bathing in Ganges and crowded foot bridge.
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