It has been more than a week since my last post, and this is for various reasons. Last week was the Losar, literally “new year,” celebrations and vacation. Technically it was meant to take place from the 14th to the 16th, but was extended to the 17th due to necessary adjustments because of the Tibetan calendar being based on the lunar cycle. However, in actuality it is much longer than just 3 or 4 days and students began to prepare the Monday before, receiving a few days free of class, as well as Monday through Wednesday of last week. To continue these addendums, in Tibet it’s the largest holiday and represents probably more like a week or two of celebrations, if not more in some cases. All together, the point is, it’s a big deal, and usually a big celebration. Pausing on that for a second, after Losar we went on a trip to Bir where we did quite a lot, meaning this post will be long. To whoever is currently tuned in to this blog, firstly I’m glad you’re reading and hope that this post doesn’t prove too drawn out because of the lack of recent updates. I believe it has become somewhat of a surrogate blog for some of my friends, having referred their parents to it, likely because of the pictures (some of which currently only I have because photography is limited at some of our meetings) and the excessive recounting. Thus, this means I have not only my own relatives but also those of several friends to appease so I shall try to keep it steady (and interesting) in the future. It is the 24th while I write this and we’ve been experiencing wonderfully warm weather this past week, except for today which brought a torrential storm of hail and rain—quite the sight—that proved harmless except for its entry in the gap at the bottom of one of my room doors which I subsequently stuffed with my towel to prevent the hail from getting in. Anyhow, back to the Losar celebrations.
The New Year holiday tends to consist of huge celebrations with large feasts, musical and cultural performances, serving of much alcohol, and the lifting of the gender segregation rule within dorms during the day. It’s comparable to carnivale in Brazil where typical social norms get turned upside down for a few days and things that would normally be totally unacceptable become expectations. The alcohol was of particular surprise to me, not only because Buddhism discourages the use of intoxicants, but because Sarha school has a rule forbidding it on campus, citing it as “the root of all evil.” Yet, during Losar, chang, or traditional homemade Tibetan barley beer is typically served at all times of the day, even breakfast where it makes an appearance in the porridge called changbu. I say typically because this year and last year, Losar was a very different experience from previous years. Due to the uprisings in Tibet in 2008, the Chinese government tightened restrictions on Tibetans in Tibet as well as clamping down on the borders to prevent Tibetan refugees from leaving. This is something I have alluded to previously, but as I have found, the politics of the Tibetan situation affect essentially all aspects of life in exile.
As a sign of protest, the Tibetans in Tibet (or the PRC if you prefer) refused to celebrate Losar, signifying their dissatisfaction with the PRC’s government and that they are not existing happily or prosperously in their own land because of their policies. It was also in cooperation with the 2008 March uprisings, which were of course a literal protest in themselves. It is important to contextualize this historically. On 10 March, 1959 the Tibetan people rose up against the Chinese rule in Tibet, causing a violent backlash and signaling to the Dalai Lama that he must flee to India. Subsequently, every year following the Tibetans have celebrated 10 March as “uprising day” and it has often been a rallying point for many renewed protest efforts, such as those in the late 80s and more recently in 2008. In modern Tibet, the PRC government attempts to pay Tibetans to celebrate Losar in order to encourage the belief that Tibetans are living happily in China, continuing in their religious and cultural traditions. Of course, this is not and has not been the case for many years. Monasteries are sites of intense governmental monitoring and as I mentioned before, monks have to sign documents affirming their loyalty to the PRC and denouncing His Holiness the Dalai Lama (an intensely difficult act, especially for someone deeply religious).
Thus, last year in Dharamsala the CTA government stated that there would be no Losarcelebrations, to signify the exile community’s solidarity with those Tibetans still inside Tibet. Let me submit at this point that the vast majority of ethnic Tibetans remain inside the Tibetan region, and only a small percentage exists in Dharamsala, though Tibetans in exile are the ones you are much more likely to hear of or see speaking out, for the obvious reason that anyone inside the PRC would risk severe repercussions and at this time likely imprisonment for several years. It is also typical that if you are a prominent activist in exile with family remaining in Tibet that they will be imprisoned and suffer instead.
This year there was to be Losar, but in somewhat of a last minute announcement the government called for again a limited celebration, hoping to keep it more religious than celebratory. Many people, including our group, had been anticipating an exciting festival of activity, including the sight of our Tibetan schoolmates inebriated around campus for several days. Naturally, it was quite a disappointment to many when the school too decided that there would be neither performances nor any serving of alcohol this year. This was prompted by a group of students more recently from Tibet who called for this to be enacted, as the original plan was to tone it down a little but continue as planned.
There is, however, a counter to this position in the exile community that calls for Losar, saying that the people should not let the Chinese government take it away from them, but I don’t align with that view as much. I see it as more of a public act of social consciousness that the majority of their people remain in the PRC, repressed religiously, certainly politically, and socio-economically marginalized by the masses of Han Chinese that have immigrated into the Tibetan region, speaking Chinese, creating Chinese jobs and serving Chinese needs.
One author, Robbie Barnett, that we have been reading astutely describes that way in which the Tibetan community has created somewhat of a false representation of their people and culture in order to appeal to Western concerns and thereby gather support—the politics of a resistance movement. It is popularly mentioned that in Lhasa, the capital of Tibet and site of the sacred Potala Palace, the streets are now filled with karaoke bars and brothels for the tourists and Chinese soldiers. While it is admittedly an exaggerated image, it is nonetheless based in truth and it is regrettable that such an important Tibetan religious and cultural center has turned into a theme park for Chinese tourists by day and a destination for debauchery by night.
Each person that wants to constructs an altar for Losar, consisting of food as an offering to the gods/Gods/deities, whatever you like, builds it in their room out of khapse, a kind of fried dough not so different from funnel cake, minus the powdered sugar (unfortunately). However they make interesting designs with them and they tend to represent animal body parts. Now, the best part of Losar, at least as I experienced it, is during the visits to teachers’ and friends’ rooms in which they happily invite you inside and offer food and drink to everyone without hesitation and without end until one fervently insists. It’s similar to Thanksgiving in that you catch up with friends and family (students who can go to their families and the rest stay at Sarha) and eat an egregious amount.
On Tuesday I believe, almost our whole group went to visit Kangra Fort on a picnic. It’s on a high ridge so the view all around is quite stunning and beautiful. The weather was great and we had a small run in with a monkey that I fed some bread so I could take a picture of it, but when it had finished it made an agressive move toward me so I ran, but unlike with the cow, there was probably some risk involved.
-Alex perched precariously on a stone ledge at Kangra Fort. -
-the monkey that went rogue shortly after finishing the bread I gave him-
We also paid a visit to Dema Lochoe Rinpoche in Mcleod Ganj during the Losar weekend to receive a teaching from him. It was surprisingly short, though well translated by Ani Kelsang Wangmo-la. He repeated the motif that effort and enthusiasm are important in one’s studies, and that if one doesn’t find oneself to be very smart, dumb even, that effort can change that and they can be as smart as they wish.
After the ceremony we travelled to Bir and stayed until the 20th. Our trip consisted of four main events: a talk from Tai Situ Rinpoche, visiting the local Tibetan Children’s Village (TCV) school, receiving another talk from Ani Tenzin Palmo-la and touring her nunnery, and finally visiting the Tashi Jong temple and settlement where a renowned yogi is embalmed and on display for those who wish to venerate him.
We stayed at Palpung Sherabling monastery, in the new institute building that hasn’t been opened officially yet and that reminded us all of a hotel because of its hot showers and long hollow corridors. Truthfully if I had seen two creepy girls in identical blue dresses waiting at the end of the hall I wouldn’t have been that surprised.
Actually the site was acquired by Tai Situ Rinpoche because Indian developers didn’t want it because it was the site of an past battle, somewhat of a massacre I’m told, so there was the belief that the site was inhabited by ghosts. Anyhow, Sherabling was established and it now primarily acts as a monastery for many monks of Himalayan origin. The majority are not Tibetan by birth, but are from the fringe areas that one might consider ethnographic Tibet and they are receiving education in Tibetan language and Tibetan Buddhist tradition, which serves to both continue Tibetan religious tradition and provide those children with an education that would otherwise be unavailable to them. This is often a reason for young children being sent to monasteries, as well, of course, as the merit that it brings them and their family.
The whole place became an unlikely scene of screaming and explosions, filled with the laughter and excitement of all the young monks, as well as our own. They were quick to include us in their fun by tossing the small firecrackers behind our feet to scare us. When it worked, they found that it brought them a lot more entertainment than when done to their friends. That was when we became the focus of many young, firework-wielding monks and every five seconds had to jump away from a lit cracker tossed behind or in front of us. We were very much surrounded, with firecrackers being tossed from a dark window in which the glow of a lighter silhouetted the shadow of two small monks lighting firecrackers in preparation to toss them at those below.
Everyone loved the noise and the excitement, but after about fifteen minutes we had to retreat to our rooms to escape the attacks of our small friends. While there was never again as much commotion as that first night, throughout the rest of our stay every now and then we would hear one of the big booms echo in the distance from a monk who had saved his for postponed satisfaction.
He did seem to enjoy giving us quite complex responses to our questions, leaving some wanting for more clarity. Yet in this way he made it clear that concepts like emptiness of the self, which I asked about, are really, quite complex, so it is foolish to expect a simple answer to a complex question. Hopefully, I can get the video uploaded and then those who wish can experience more clearly what I’m talking about. I’m afraid if I were to try to explain his talk, most of it would not come out so well, so it’s best to listen and perhaps watch.
So while the children are at TCV they live in houses with many of the other students, and each house as a surrogate mother who takes care of the kids, making them meals and watching over them, etc. However there’s also a lot of kids taking care of kids amongst the adult supervision, older ones helping the younger ones to wash, leading to a strong growth of responsibility and maturity. While they enjoy themselves here it is inarguably sad to be separated from home and family for so many years. TCV also provides a lot of scholarships to its graduates to attend schools like Sarha for free, as long as they keep their grades up. If one is looking for an organization to donate to within the Tibetan community in exile, the Tibetan Children’s Village is certainly one of the best.
Anyway, so eventually they asked a lama about this problem, not knowing what the plant was, only that it refused to die, and he suggested that they just let it grow. It grew next to the stupa but then went inside of the cement and through the opening allowing people to have a small window in, and finally straight through the top—really a very precarious path. As it turned out, it was a bodhi tree, named so because the Buddha became enlightened under such a tree. Obviously this was seen as very auspicious and so it has been left to grow as it pleases, though it is now still young. I was able to pick up one of its fallen leaves and press it in a book. The leaves are shaped like hearts and the seeds like small brains, so it has provided some obvious metaphorical correlations with these characteristics.
So it was a good trip and left us with a lot to think about and me with a lot to write about. This past weekend we all went down with the Sarha students to the Gaggal airport to welcome His Holiness back to Dharamsala from his talks with Obama in America. Then on Sunday we went to his teaching at the Namgyal temple on the Jataka tales. That’s another post, as this has been enough.