Title: Laddakh LITTLE TIBETTHE LAND OF GOMPAS
1Life at 11000 feet High
2Laddakhi
3THE LAND OF GOMPAS
As you drive into Leh and after the odyssey of a
long drive, comes a fairy-tale ending. A fort, a
palace and a monastery stand out against the sky,
amidst an avenue of poplars. This is Leh. The
journey has just begun. As the Buddhists
sayWhen you are ready, the teacher will appear
4The Gompas Monasteries
- Like many other religious establishments all over
the world, the gompas too have been gifted
lands, by the ex-rulers of Ladakh. It is from
these lands and public donations that the gompas
derive their income. Cultivation on gompa land
is done by the labourers and not by the lamas,
for ploughing by lamas is considered
inauspicious.
It is believed that in the olden days the
gompas stood on the trading route to Tibet
and offered sanctuary to travelers and traders.
All the thirteen important gompas of Ladakh
celebrate their annual festivals in winter,
except the Hemis Gompa which celebrates it in
June or July, lasting three days. Ladakhis
gather enthusiastically for these gay festivals
and witness folk and religious masked dances.
5HEMIS GOMPA
The Hemis Gompa was built in 1620 by the
king-architect Singe Namgyal who was a great
patron of Buddhism, This is the biggest gompa
of Ladakh. It is situated 44 kms from Leh on the
Leh-Manali road. For a visit to this place one
has to travel 8 kms via Karu, after crossing the
river Indus. Hemis Gompa is not visible from
the road. There are several temples here,
which contain stupas and precious images made of
gold. The art pieces glitter with precious
stones. There is a valuable store of thankas
in this gompa including the biggest in Ladakh.
It is displayed once in eleven years and the next
display will be in 1992. However, they were
soon to be in a pitiable plight for Zorawar
Singh had reached the Hemis Gompa after
plundering and destroying the other gompas on
his route. The manager of the Hemis Gompa
skillfully saved his monastery by surrendering
before any more damage could be done. In
1956, the chief lama of the gompa disappeared
never to be seen again. His absence led to the
deterioration of the condition of the Hemis
Gompa. A twelve-year-old lama was enthroned in
1976. The lamas of Ladakh respect other
religions also. In this gompa important posts
like that of the motbir (manager) were given to
Kadir Sheikh and Akhon Abdul Hussain who
were Muslims. The kitchen of this gompa is
unique. There is a huge vessel of copper whose
diameter is 12 m, capable of cooking rice or
thuppa for 500 people at a time. Buddhist
visitors donate money to the kitchen. There is
is a courtyard in front of the gompa which is 60
m long and 18 m wide. In this courtyard four long
poles are stuck in the ground at equal
distances and four different banners fly atop
these poles. A big worn-out thanka is hung in
front of the temple, on which the picture of
Chapgon Gyalshas, the founder of the Hemis Gompa,
is painted. Three-fourths of the area of the
courtyard is left for religious dances. The
rest of the place is normally full of
spectators on such occasions.
6Likir Gompa
King Lachhen Gyalpo built this gompa in the
11th century. From Leh, on the way to Saspol
there is a road diverting to the right. About 5
km from the crossing of this road lies Likir. It
has 120 lamas. The temple has many Buddha
images of clay in different postures. The wall
paintings of Likir are about a 1000-year-old.
Likir is famous for its earthen pots, which are
in great demand. These pots are sturdy, plain
and beautiful. The pot makers of Likir have
been making their wares for hundreds of
years. The gompa school has about 30 pupils who
learn three languages besides Ladakhi Hindi and
English, as these are the national languages of
India, and Tibetan for religious purposes. The
pupils, some of whom will be selected as lamas,
live part of the time in the monastery and part
of the time with their parents. Likir's head
lama, a younger brother of the Dalai Lama, is
married (against the rule of the sect) and is
permanently absent from the gompa.
7Lamayuru Gompa
Apart from Alchi Likir, this is the oldest
gompa of Ladakh. On the Srinagar-Leh road, after
crossing the highest pass of Fatu, there is a
sharp turn signaling the descent into the
Indus valley. As soon as one comes around
this turn one beholds a strange looking valley
on top of which the imposing building of
Lamayuru gompa is clearly visible. It brings to
mind the palace depicted in James Hamilton's nove
l The Lost Horizon of Shangrilla'. In
Lamayuru, caves have been dug out in the
mountains. For centuries the lamas have been
living in these caves. In some instances,
the chomos have also been using these
caves as habitation. Some of these caves are
still inhabited. The king of Ladakh invited
the great Buddhist monk of Tibet named Rinchen
Zangpo, who established 108 gompas in western
Tibet Ladakh. One of these is Lamayuru, which
had one central temple four other temples at
its Four Corners. The central temple thrived, but
the corner temples were gradually neglected
turned into ruins.
8Alchi Gompa
About a 1000 years back, Rinchen Zangpo built
this gompa. It is about 70 kms away from
Leh. The village of Saspol is situated on the
right side of the Indus river and across this, on
the left bank of the river, is Alchi. Between
Saspol Alchi there is no bridge. A bridge has
been built about 2-3 kms down the river, which
is negotiable, by vehicles. The main temple of
Alchi is comparatively small. The central
pavilion is 3 m long, 3 m wide 6 m high.
Several clay images have been placed on three
walls. On one of its walls thousands of
mini-pictures of the Buddha have been painted.
Wooden statues have been placed at the gate. On
the right side stands the statue of
Avalokiteshwar, which has a thousand arms. The
head of an ibex with four horns, instead of the
usual two hangs here. The ibex was shot by a
soldier presented to the gompa. The Alchi
temple has three images as high as three floors
of the building they stand in a very narrow
space. They are made of clay painted with
different colors. There are thousands of
mini-pictures of the Buddha on the walls of the
third temple. It was situated near Thikse,
about 14 kms away from Leh. This age-old gompa
is in bad shape now. The walls have been
disfigured by rainwater seeping through cracks
in the roof and many wall paintings have been
spoilt. The gompa has no resources to maintain
itself
9Shey Gompa
The oldest palace of Ladakh is located at Shey.
Which is situated at a distance of 16 km on the
Leh-Manali road. King Lhachen Smal Gigun built
this palace. The Shey Gompa is situated on a
hillock, and there is a 7. 5m high Buddha image
in this temple. King Deldan Namgyal, son of
King Singhye Namgyal, built this temple in
A.D.1655 in memory of his father. The statue of
the Buddha is made of copper, platted with
gold, and is the biggest metal statue of its
kind in Ladakh. A lamp with butter burns in front
of the statue throughout the year. A Nepalese
sculpture named Sanga Zargar Wanduk was
commissioned to make this statue. Three
Ladakhi craftsmen- Paldana Shering Gyaso,
Gamani Jal Shring Nakbiri-assisted him. The
castings of the statue were made in Leh at a
place called Zanstin Palace. Zans means copper
tin means to hammer. Actually the copper for
this statue was hammered into plates on a big
rock. For this, copper was collected from
Lingshet other villages of the Zanskar
area. More than 5 kg of gold was used for
platting. This huge statue was built in Zanstil
Palace in parts then transported the Shey
temple, where they were assembled and installed.
10Thikse Gompa
This gompa is situated about 19 kms away from
from Leh on Leh-Manali road. It stands on a
hilltop in the desert and is visible from a
distance. The houses of the lamas are situated
on the slopes of the hill. The gompa is
especially interesting from the point of view
of its architectural beauty. There are several
temples in this gompa containing images, stupas
and wall paintings. The wall paintings of the
main temple are exquisite.
11Shankar Gompa
- Sankar Gompa is a subsidiary of Spitok gompa,
having the same head lama. Sankar is easily
visited on foot from Leh, lying as it does in
Leh's suburbs. About 25 lamas of the yellow-hat
sect are attached to Sankar but only a few live
here permanently. Thus, it is only open to the
public from 7 to 10 am and from 5 to 7 pm. Sankar
gompa is about 90 years old but is located on the
site of a small temple that was built about 500
years ago. - From the street one enters the gompa's front
yard. To the right are a few steps climbing up to
the double doors that open onto the Dukhang or
main assembly hall. The entrance porch has
paintings of the Guardians of the Four Directions
on either side of the entry door. On the left
wall of the veranda is a "Wheel of Life" held by
Yama, the deity that determines a person's future
fate after death. The wall on the right depicts
the Old Man of Long Life.
12Spituk Gompa
About 7km from Leh on the right bank of the
river Indus, this gompa is visible from afar,
standing quite prominently on the top of a
mountain. A new temple has been built here
and the old one renovated. There are some fine
"thankas" in this gompa. The main temple
contains many icons of the Buddha. There is
temple of Mahakal that is about 900 years old.
This temple was built by King Takspa Bung .
It has a images of Mahakal (yamantak)
others. The awe-inspiring image of Mahakal has
35 arms on each side. It has 8 legs on one
side. The face of the Mahakal is covered
throughout the year is shown to spectators
only at the annual function in the month of
January. The walls of the temple are decorated
with beautiful paintings. One of the wall
paintings has human skeletons on it. In this
temple there is a collection of 16 ancient
masks of different animals, gods goddesses. The
temple also has a collection of antique arms. In
a room adjacent to Mahakal's chamber, a big
curtain is stretched between two long poles.
People attach their photographs currency to the
cloth for the fulfillment of their wishes.
13ZANSKAR
A self contained multi-day river adventure down
the spectacular and scenic Zanskar river gorge.
The trip takes you down the extremely desolate,
remote and sheer Zanskar gorge with walls rising
a few thousand feet out of the river bed,
culminating on the mighty Indus river. This,
combined with hikes and visits to various gompas
in the Ladakh and Zanskar region makes this a
fascinating trip to the last and truly lost
horizon of our shrinking planet - Zanskar, "the
land of white copper". This run through Grade
III/IV rapids enhances the experience of
journeying down this otherwise untrekkable gorge.
14Festivals
- Most festivals in Ladakh are religious and take
place at the gompas. Unfortunately for the
tourist, most of these festivals occur in the
winter months. Ladakhi winter is extremely harsh
and most social activities like weddings,
visiting friends and family, indoor handicraft
work and participating in religious festivals is
postponed till the summers. - Traditionally, only Hemis gompa held a big summer
festival but in 1983, Thiksey gompa held its
festival in the summer for the first time. In
addition to the religious festivals, there are
small harvest thanksgiving festivals in the
autumn. In 1983, Leh held its first Tourist
Festival, in the first week of August.
15How to get there
- By Flight
- From Delhi Srinagar - Indian Airlines Jet
airways. - By Road
- Srinagar to Leh via Kargil ( 2-3 days)
- Manali to Leh (2 - 3 Days)
- These are the most beautiful breathtaking road
journey on the worlds highest road, crossing
passes as high as 15000 ft even more.. - Government run busses ply on these roads, or else
you can hire taxi / jeeps or maybe ride your own
way on motor-cycles.
16Visits in around Leh
- TREKS AROUND LEH
- Alchi-Lamayuru Trek ( 5 days)
- Markha valley trek (11 days)
- Hemis Darcha via Rupshu (9 days)
- Manali to Leh via Hemis (17 days)
- Manali to Leh via Lamayurur ( 18 Days)
- Temisgram Trek (Likir) (5 Days)
Excursions around Leh Zanskar valley Nubra
valley - the highest road of the world passes
through . Tsomiriri Lake - a place ready to
shock you out of your world. The following can
be traveled to by jeeps / private vehicles, we
need permits to visit Nubra Tsomiriri Lake with
requirement of minimum 4 pax.
17Sanskriti tour the indian way
Please contact Tarun Raikhy Sanskriti Tours
91 11 6146620 91 98101 29536
tarun_at_sanskritiworld.com