Showing posts with label Ladakh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ladakh. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2024

Shrines of Ladakh - Part IV - Thiksey Monastery

 Over the last few weeks, I have been writing about the shrines of Ladakh I had an opportunity of visiting during my trip with Mantra Yatra in August. This is the fourth and last part of the series. You can read the previous parts here: Part I Part II Part III

This post is about the magnificent Thiksey Monastery in the Indus Valley at an altitude of about 11,800 feet. It is a twelve storied building, comprising of shrines, statues, thangkas, library and nunnery spread across a majestic courtyard.

The walkway leading to the Thiksey Monastery

The Thiksey Monastery is the largest in Central Ladakh, situated about 19 kms from the city of Leh. The building supposedly resembles the Potala Palace in Lhasa, Tibet. The origin of this monastery has a very interesting legend associated with it. In the early 15th century, Je Tsongkhapa (roughly translating to The man from the Onion Valley), the founder of the Gelug school of Tibeten Buddhism, who also came to be seen as the second Buddha after his passing, sent six of his disciples across Tibet and Ladakh to spread the teachings of the Gelug school. He picked one of them, Jangsem Sherap Zangpo, and gave him a statue of Amitayus made from bone powder and his own blood as a gift to the King of Ladakh, directed him to seek support from the King to propogate his teachings in Ladakh. 

The majestic monastery complex 

The king was overjoyed with the gift and immediately asked his ministers to help Zangpo set up a monastery in Ladakh. Soon, in 1433, a small monastery was set up by the name of Lhakang Serpo or Yellow Temple. The Gelugs were called Yellow Hats to denote the golden robes they adorned and one would find the colour yellow being the most prominent across the entire monastery.

One day, when Sherap Zangpo and his disciple, Palden Zangpo were performing sacred rituals near the temple, a crow swooped down and picked up the offerings and carried it away. Startled, the two men ran behind the crow to see where it was taking the offering. The crow flew over the other side of the hill. Considering it to be some form of a divine signal, the men followed the path the crow had taken and found the offerings intact, on a stone in Thicksey. Palden Zangpo decided to build a larger monastery here, considering it to be a holy sign from his master. The monastery has four main shrines - The Maitreya Buddha or Future Buddha, Tara Devi, the main prayer hall and the shrine of the Guardian Deity or Yamantaka. 

Maitreya Buddha: The gigantic 40 feet Maitreya Buddha statue extends to  two floors. The Thiksey Rimpoche, Kushok Nawang Chamba Stanzin was instrumental behind the creation of this beautiful Maitreya Buddha who is seen seated on a lotus. It took thirty people over three years to create this statue with clay and terracotta, decorated in gold and copper colours. The words of the Dalai Lama while consecrating on 26th July 1980, describes the experience of every visitor who stands in awe before this beautiful Maitreya Buddha. 
"Even if you see this Maitreya again and again, you will never see it enough; you will always want to see more - you would never be satisfied" 
Indeed, the image of the Maitreya Buddha and the surreal interiors of the shrine stay with you long after you leave the monastery.
                                        
The 40 feet Maitreya Buddha

Main Prayer Hall: 

The main prayer hall has big drums, rows of low seats for monks and visitors to sit and pray, and beautiful murals on the walls. There is a central shrine of Buddha, flanked by the Boddhisatvas and has several scriptures and sacred texts wrapped in silk. 

Main Prayer Hall 

Buddha flanked by Boddhisatvas in the sanctum

Tara Devi Shrine:

Tara Devi, is considered to be the mother of Sakyamuni Buddha and is said to have been born from the tear of Avalokiteswara when he wept at the sufferings of human beings. She is said to manifest in 21 different forms. In another legend, Tara is truly shown as a symbol of feminism. Born as a princess by name Yashe Dawa, she made offerings to Buddha for so many eons that she reached a state of a Boddhisatva. At this stage, some monks approached her and asked her to pray that she be born a man in her next birth, in order to progress further spriritually. 

At this point, Tara firmly told them that only weak-minded people would think that gender was a barrier for enlightenment and resolved to be always born as a female Boddhisatva. She said, "I have developed bodhicitta as a woman. For all my lifetimes along the path I vow to be born as a woman, and in my final lifetime when I attain Buddhahood, then, too, I will be a woman"
Tara Devi in all 21 forms

 At the Tara Devi shrine, she is seen with images of all her twenty-one forms placed in a wooden cupboard. The top floor of the temple known as the Lamokhang temple, houses all the sacred sculptures to which access is permitted only to the men.

The Guardian Shrine: 

This is by far the most powerful shrine in the entire monastery complex. It comprises of the Vajra Bhairava Ekavira, the Boddhisatva Manjushri appearing in a wrathful form. Manjushri is always depicted as a terrifying and intimidating form, inspiring fear in those who look at his face. Because of this, visitors are not encouraged to face the deity and his face remains covered throughout the year but for the three days during Gustor Festival during October-November. This deity is flanked by the Shaturbuja Mahakala and Yamaraj on either side.

Guardian Deity with Mahakala

The Vajra Bhariva has nine faces, thirty-four hands and sixteen legs. The main face resembles a buffalo, with a red face above, and the top face that of Manjushri. flames swirling about the horns. Three faces are stacked up on either side with three eyes, bared fangs and a wrathful expression. The hair is curled upwards, and the first pair of hands holds a knife and a skullcup with the remaining hands holding a variety of objects, including the hyde of an elephant. Each face is adorned with a skull crown, snake necklace and a garland of fifty heads. The right leg is pressing down eight creatures and the left leg is pressing down eight birds. 

There is also a nunnery in the monastery for the female monks to stay. Apart from these shrines, there is a room on top that is used to teach local children who want to become monks as well as a library with a huge number of sacred texts. The roof top has a beautiful view of the Himalayas and the Indus valley and there is a lovely store and a cafe too here.
View from the rooftop

How to get here: Thiksey Monastery is 19 kms from the city of Leh. Do not forget to include it in your itinerary. The monastery involves a lot of climbing both up to the monastery as well as to each of the shrines.







                          



Saturday, August 31, 2024

Shrines of Ladakh - Part II - Shanti Stupa, Leh

 

Entrance of the Shanti Stupa, Leh

In the series I am writing on the Shrines of Ladakh, which I visited with Mantra Yatra, this post features Shanti Stupa, the World's highest monument of peace. The earlier post on the Gurudwara Pathar Sahib can be accessed here.

The beautiful circular platform surrounding the Shanti Stupa

Shanti Stupa, a beautiful white dome of peace is found atop a hill in Chanspa, about five kilometres from the city of Leh. It was built by the Nipponzan Myohoji Buddhist Order of Japan, founded by Nichidatsu Fujii, popularly known as Fujii Guruji, a close associate of Mahatma Gandhi. Fujii Guruji is best known for establishing Peace Pagodas across the world. He arrived in Calcutta in 1931 and spent the next two years, walking across the city, chanting the daimoku while beating a drum. He met Mahatma Gandhi in 1933 in Wardha when he gifted him a statue of the three monkeys, representing see no evil, hear no evil and speak no evil, which have since been associated with Mahatma Gandhi and his doctrine of peace and tolerance. He built the first peace pagoda in Hiroshima and Nagasaki and since then 80 such pagodas have been built through the Nipponzan Myohoji Buddhist Order.

Steps leading up to the main shrine

Considering the sensitivity of Ladakh region spread across the China, Pakistan and Tibet borders and the need for peace, the 19th Kushok Bakula Rimpoche, the Head Lama, who served as the Ambassador to Mongolia, after whom the Leh Airport is named, approached Fujii Guruji, requesting him to build a Pagoda of Peace in Leh. 

The Foundation of the Shanti Stupa was laid on 25th August 1985. While bulk of the construction cost was supported by the Nipponzan Myohoji Buddhist Order, several Ladakhis, including school children came forward to contribute in cash, kind and labour towards its construction. A vehicular road upto the Stupa was sanctioned by the then Prime Minister, Mrs Indira Gandhi, to enable visitors to reach the Stupa comfortably. The Indian Army and the Government of Jammu and Kashmir supported throughout the construction and the Stupa was formally inaugurated in 1991 by the 14th Dalai Lama Tenzin Gyatso to symbolise 2500 years of Buddhism. The majestic Stupa houses Buddhist relics enshrined by him.

Buddha reliefs around the Stupa

The Stupa, at 11,841 feet above mean sea level, stands as the highest Peace Pagoda in the world. It is built as a two-storied structure, with the first level having a central golden image of Buddha with the Dharma Chakra and deer on either side. 

The main image of Buddha with the Dharma Chakra and Deer

The second level has reliefs depicting the birth, and enlightenment of Buddha. The view from the Shanti Stupa is really breathtaking. The stupa is surrounded by a circular platform with lotus symbols and prayer wheels on which is inscribed "Om Ma Ni Pad Me Hum"

Birth of Buddha depicted at the second level

Getting here: Shanti Stupa is about 5 kms from Leh city. There is a road that goes right up to the Stupa after which one has to climb a few steps to reach the shrine. Alternatively one can choose to climb up 555 steps all the way to reach here.

Fighting the demons to salvation

It is believed that the best time to view the Shanti Stupa is early in the morning around sunrise, when the white dome glistens in the early morning sun, creates a serene and ethereal experience. 

Timings: 5 am to 9 pm

The amazing view of he Himalayas from Shanti Stupa