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McLeodganj, A Buddhist Pilgrimage Tashi delek! Here we are – at the bus
stand, the heart of McLo (short for McLeodganj). This is where you’ll find
yourself when you reach the town. Roads radiate from here to various
points around the town including back down to Dharamsala. You’ll find
Buddhist monks walking around in their burgundy robes, telling a rosary as
they go about their daily business. In the centre of the bazaar, south of
the bus stand, is the Namgyalma Stupa surrounded by golden prayer wheels
that are turned by two main roads – Temple Road and Jogibara
Road.
¤ A Home of
Dalai Lama
McLeodganj is best known as the headquarters of the
Tibetan Government in Exile and home of the 14th Dalai Lama, Tenzin
Gyatso. The Tibetan settlement here is a delightful example of their
agreeable nature.
The community has taken over the hospitality
business and provide cheap and clean hotels and small friendly
restaurants. All this makes McLeodganj is a colourful little town, a
perennial den of tourists – a place you can chill out in and do your own
thing. While you stop to wonder at a Tibetan trinket or a shawl, you’ll
realize that your stomach is involuntarily responding to the lovely smell
of wantons wafting from a nearby joint. McLeodganj is steeped in
Buddhist culture – you can find anything from Tibetan food, good luck
charms and thangkas to Enlightenment. In fact, many disenchanted
foreigners come here seeking solace, meditation or to champion the Tibetan
cause.
¤ Main Attractions of The Town
As for
sightseeing, you’ll be quite agog with the sheer length of the itinerary.
Begin with the quaint church of St John-in-the-Wilderness, and then going
over to the host of Buddhist sites like the Tsuglag Khang, Namgyal
Monastery, Dip Se Chok-Ling Gompa, Gangchen Kyishong with its Library
& Archives andMedical Institute, TIPA, Mani Lakhang Stupa, Nechung
Monastery, Norbulingka Institute, and the Chinmaya Tapovan. If you’re
looking for some classes on the Tibetan language or Buddhism, there’re
enough options for that. The walks around this place are just too good to
be missed. Whether it’s Naddi or Dharamkot, Bhagsu or Triund, Dal Lake or
Kareri Lake, you’ll be nothing less than spellbound.
¤ Take
Care While You are In Dharamsala
With heavy tourist traffic,
Dharamsala is quite cosmopolitan in character. However, a certain decorum
needs to be observed while visiting Buddhist shrines. Walk clockwise
around shrines and stupas and on the left-hand side inside
monasteries. Buddhist monasteries are open to all and you may even
visit the resident lama. But be sure to be dressed modestly. An audience
with the Dalai Lama can be arranged too but one cannot record the event –
no cameras, video cameras or sound recorders allowed.
¤ His
Holiness - The Dalai Lama
The Dalai Lama is the spiritual
leader of Tibetan Buddhism. The title does not belong to any person. As
soon as the Dalai Lama dies, his reincarnation is identified by
traditional means and tests. The Dalai Lama is believed to be a
reincarnation of the Buddha. When he dies, his soul is thought to enter
the body of a newborn boy, who is then declared the new Dalai
Lama.
The first man to
bear the title of Dalai Lama was Sonam Gyatso, Grand Lama of the Drepung
monastery and leader of the Gelugpa or Yellow Hat sect. (Sonam Gyatso
received it from the Mongol chief Altan Khan in 1578. ‘Yellow Hat’ sect
was then applied retroactively to the previous leaders of the sect.) In
1642 another Mongol chief, Gushri Khan, installed the fifth Dalai Lama as
Tibet’s spiritual and temporal ruler. His successors governed Tibet first
as representatives of the Mongols, but from 1720 to 1911 as vassals of the
emperor of China.
¤ Tenzin Gyatso-- The Present Dalai
Lama
The present Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, is the 14th
spiritual leader in line. When China’s Communist regime occupied Tibet in
1950, it came into increasing conflict with His Holiness. The Dalai
Lama left Tibet after an unsuccessful rebellion in 1959 and has since
lived in India. He received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989 for leading the
nonviolent opposition to continued Chinese rule in Tibet. In 1995 the
Dalai Lama came into conflict with Chinese authorities over the
identification of a new Panchen Lama (the second most senior Tibetan
religious authority).
In 1996 he published Violence and Compassion,
in which he and French screenwriter Jean-Claude Carrière discuss topics of
political and spiritual interest.
One look at the Dalai Lama’s
bright beaming face is enough to convince you that if anyone can bring
happiness and solace to this world, it is him.
¤ Fairs
& Festivals
Losar Losar is the Tibetan New
Year, the most popular festival of Dharamsala and Buddhist populated
places like Lahaul. It’s celebrated with great gusto in late
February-early March and its high point are the ritual dances. Homes and
kitchens are cleaned vigorously to appease Thalpa the god of home and
hearth.
The Losar Celebrations A grand feast and ritual
dance are held two days before Losar. The dance, signifying destruction of
evil spirits, is accompanied by drums and radong (long trumpets).
Originally it used to be performed at the courtyard of the Potala
Palace, the main temple in Lhasa. The chhaam dance on the eve of Losar is
a spectacular event with dancers wearing elaborate costumes and masks.
Symbolizing good over evil, the dance marks the killing of a cruel Tibetan
ruler – Langdarma (9th century).
Saga Dawa
The 15th day of the fourth month of the Tibetan calendar is
believed to be a very auspicious and significant day. It was on this day
that Sakyamuni (Buddha) was conceived by his mother Queen Mayadevi; on
this very day 35 years later, Buddha attained complete Enlightenment; and
to top it all off, he passed into parinirvana, the ultimate state of
peace, on the same day.
In fact the whole month is said to possess
such potency that anything you do, good or bad, is said to be multiplied a
hundred thousand times! Consequently, people refrain from eating
non-vegetarian food, so much so that they even buy animals and set them
free. Prayer wheels are set into motion with rare devotion during this
month.
Dal Fair Held near the Dal Lake (1,700m) every
August-September, this fair is especially favoured by Girths and Gurkhas
(hill tribes). There are the usual festivities of feasting and
dancing.
¤ Shopping Hubs - The
Bazaars
Shopping at McLeodganj Bazaar is great fun. It is a
good place to bargain for carpets and handicrafts (metalware, jewellery,
jackets, handknitted cardigans and gloves). Tibetans usually quote a
fair price to start with, so there may be no need for bargaining. Tibetan
textiles, especially carpets, can be purchased from the office of Tibetan
Handicrafts opposite the State Bank of India.
Fine New Zealand wool
carpets and Indian wool carpets are also available. In fact you can even
watch them being made at the same outlet. You can also have a chuba (the
dress worn by Tibetan women) stitched on order.
Books on Tibet, its
religion and culture are easily available in McLeodganj (try Charitable
Trust Bookshop), and so is Tibetan music. You can take your pick from
meditation music, folksongs and Tibetan chants. Look out for Tibetan
herbal incense at the Tara Herbal Gift Shop near the bus stand. At the
Green Store you could pick up some hand painted T-shirts and handmade
paper. But the most interesting shop is undoubtedly the old-fashioned
Nowrojee Store run by a charming old couple. The couple are a storehouse
of information in McLeodganj and are also extremely friendly.
¤ Arts & Crafts
Carpets Here are beautiful
carpets of traditional Tibetan designs. They are delicately woven and are
a riot of colour. Motifs may vary from natural scenes to monuments to
incidents from a folktale or mandalas (traditional Tibetan designs of the
cosmos).
Thangkas McLeodganj is the place for excellent
thangkas. These are actually ritual paintings displayed during certain
Buddhist festivals, but they happen to be extremely popular with foreign
tourists (and cost the earth too!). Thangkas are intricate and brightly
coloured scroll paintings on canvas, edged with a border of rich
silk. They usually depict the Buddha and other deities and the wheel of
life. The painting follows complex dicta like proportional grids for each
diety and traditional vegetable or mineral colours are used. The
Norbulingka Institute is the centre of learning this ancient art of Tibet.
You could also place your orders here.
Woodcarving
Like carpets and thangka painting, woodcarving is also
something which the Tibetans excel in. It is in Dharamsala that the
masters have kept this ancient tradition alive. and the centre for all
these activities is the Norbulingka. The woodcarvers make traditional
and ceremonial carved furniture, like altars of all sizes, elaborate
thrones, folding tables, incense burners and so forth. After the carving
is done the pieces are either polished or painted in bright
colours.
¤ Gastronomic Delights
While
you’re in McLo, the best grub to have is, of course, Tibetan
chef-d’oeuvre. The aroma wafting from Tibetan food joints run by the
locals is enough to tell you that. Try their wide range of delicious,
non-spicy dishes including thukpas (soups), noodle dishes (gyathuk, thin
noodles; thenthuk, flat noodles), steamed or fried momos (dumplings) and
shabakleb (pretty much like flat and round momos).
¤ Eating
Joints However, there’s a lot more on offer. Keeping the taste
of both the international and domestic tourist in mind, McLeod has a wide
range of eateries that serve all sorts of cuisine – Indian, Tibetan,
Italian, Continental, Israeli, to name a few.
Friend’s Corner is
good for breakfast; Hot Spot for fast food; Shambala for cakes and
pancakes; and the German Bakery on MI Road for bread and brown rice (open
till 0100). Aroma on Jogibara Road serves excellent Israeli fare. The
log-shaped, shack-like Chocolate Log surprises with its delectable cakes
and snacks. Try Tibetan Dasang for excellent porridge, fruit muesli and
whole-wheat bread.
¤ Think Globally, Act locally The
residents of this tiny town of McLeodganj are great environment freaks, so
don’t ever throw empty bottles and other garbage just anywhere; drop it
all in the green bins. This new project, started by the Welfare office and
a young Dutch man, is like a boon for this tourist crammed place. Manned
by only a few, this profect does some great work.
The four ‘green
workers’ in the scheme collect about 40-50kg of recyclable stuff from
around the place each day, like paper, glass, plastic and metals. In fact
wherever you stay at McLo, you will find a bin planted by these green
workers. The Nechung and Namgyal gompas, the Dialectic School and Gaden
Chuling Nunnery have special baskets with separate sections for different
materials. These are emptied once a week and the materials are then
separated and sold. However, the money got is little more than one
worker’s salary.
Step into the Green Shop on Bhagsu Road if you’re
an environment freak. The shop, another scheme run by the Welfare office,
sells rechargeable batteries, hand painted T-shirts, natural cosmetics and
boiled and filtered water. In the tourist season the shop to sells some
100-120 bottles a day.
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