Yahoo – AFP,
January 12, 2016
![]() |
| A lama performs the Cham dance during the Gedong festival at the Ganden Sumtsenling Monastery in Shangri-La on January 5, 2016 (AFP Photo/Johannes Eisele) |
Shangri-La
(China) (AFP) - Thousands of metres above sea level, high on the Tibetan
plateau, hundreds of Tibetan Buddhist devotees in brilliant hues of pink and
blue gathered for the Gedong festival.
Lamas young
and old mixed with festival-goers wearing traditional garb to watch the
religious Cham dances at the Ganden Sumtseling monastery in Shangri-La.
Masked,
costumed monks portrayed a host of ghosts and deities from the pantheon of
Tibetan Buddhist mythology, to the sounds of lamas playing traditional
instruments -- crashing cymbals, drums and deep, vibrating ceremonial horns.
Tsering
Choetso, a 52-year-old farmer, said the true meaning of the festival was hard
to explain in a language other than Tibetan, but described it as a chance to
"pay our respects to our deities as well as our departed ancestors".
"A
ghost is a lesser deity in a world that resembles hell," he said. "We
believe that if we come here and watch and dance, we won't be afraid of them if
we encounter them in our afterlife."
Though
Buddhism is one of China's five officially sanctioned religions, the country's
ruling Communist Party accuses the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai
Lama of trying to split the country, calling him a "wolf in sheep's
clothing".
China,
which has ruled Tibet since the 1950s, has been accused of trying to eradicate
the region's Buddhist-based culture through political and religious repression
and large-scale immigration by Han Chinese.
But Beijing
insists that Tibetans enjoy extensive freedoms and that it has brought economic
growth to the region.
During the Cultural Revolution expressions of ethnic identity, such as religious activity or local festivals, were brutally suppressed.
![]() |
Children in
traditional Tibetan clothes watch the Cham dance during the Gedong
festival on
January 5, 2016 at the Ganden Sumtsenling Monastery in Shangri-La
(AFP
Photo/Johannes Eisele)
|
During the Cultural Revolution expressions of ethnic identity, such as religious activity or local festivals, were brutally suppressed.
The 17th
century Ganden Sumtseling monastery -- often called "Little Potala"
for its resemblance to Lhasa's iconic palace -- was itself heavily damaged.
Now it has
been extensively renovated, rebuilt and developed into a commercial tourist
attraction, complete with hefty entrance fees, with the festival promoted as a
key opportunity to visit.
The town in
which it sits, in an ethnically Tibetan area of China's Yunnan province, was
previously known as Zhongdian. But it was renamed in 2001 as a tourism strategy
seeking to capitalise on the fictional mountain paradise described in James
Hilton's 1933 novel "Lost Horizon".
Chinese
security forces, which have sometimes put on huge shows of strength at temple
events, appeared to be entirely absent from the festival.
For one of
the monastery's lamas, who gave his Chinese name as Lurongzhuxi, the event was
a way of bringing the cosmology of his religion to life.
"In
our daily lives, few have the experience of witnessing deities," he said.
"Nevertheless,
we strongly believe they exist and are everywhere. Today's Cham dance could be
interpreted as a reminder of their existence."


No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.