Royal Mountain Travel Magazine Royal Mountain Travel Magazine Issue 2 | Page 10

Mount Kailash Mount Kailash: Offering to the Sacred Mountain Offering to the Sacred Mountain Saga Dawa Festival us, topping it with offerings of yak butter, bricks of black tea, sugar and spices which fill the air with fragrant incense. As the first rays of sun strike the snow cap of Mount Kailash, Lobsang Rinpoche begins the ritual chants (accompanied by the bell that represents the elementary sound of the universe and ritual mudras) which precede our offering to the lake. Arms ache, though we are warmed by the exercise of flinging each of the thousand barley bundles into the sacred waters and my poor throwing ability causes much amusement, but is excused on the grounds of being a woman. Catherine Spence The following morning long Tibetan horns sound amid the clash of drums and brass gongs, all accompanied by the cheers of thousands as the 13 meter flag pole is again raised at Tarboche, festooned with new flags of red, yellow, blue, green and white (representing the five elements). The angle of the new pole dictates the fortunes of Tibetans for the following year so it is a complex process (often taking a couple of hours) as trucks pull, instructions are shouted and men climb up and down the pole and supports to adjust the ropes. All the while pilgrims circle in a clockwise direction and monks chant prayers and play instruments. It is a rigorous journey to Kailash, but this is one of the reasons that it is so special. Regardless of religious inclination (or lack of) it is truly a pilgrimage and one of the few journeys left in the world where all cannot be predicted and guaranteed. This is the most important time for pilgrimage to Mount Kailash as on the 15th day of the month of Saga Dawa (the fourth month of the Tibetan calendar), it is the day of the full moon when the birth, enlightenment and earthly death (parinirvana) of the Shakyamuni Buddha is celebrated. Believed by the Bonpo to be the place where their founder descended to earth and first taught, Kailash, which they call Yungdrung Gu Tse (Nine-Storey Swastika Mountain) continues to be venerated by his followers long after the establishment of Buddhism in Tibet. In the 11th century, with the revival and ascendancy of Buddhism in Tibet, Milarepa the poet, mystic and teacher, followed a prophecy of Shakyamuni Buddha naming Kailash as the abode of Chakrasambhava and challenged his Bonpo archrival, Naro Bonchung over control of the mountain. A contest of magical powers left the question of supremacy unresolved until the final challenge, a race to the summit at dawn. Bonchung appeared before dawn riding his magic drum. Milarepa waited until the first rays of sun struck and rode them to the top of the mountain in an instant. So shocked was Bonchung, he fell from his drum, which dropped from the sky gouging out the vertical pits and crevices visible on the south face. He conceded jurisdiction and was granted a neighboring mountain to the east. From the 12th century the Kagyupa flourished around the mountain. Monasteries and retreats sprang up and pilgrims arrived in large numbers to pay homage to Kang Rinpoche. As well as Buddhists, Bonpo continue to regard Kailash as a place of pilgrimage (circumambulating in a clockwise direction) as do Hindus, for whom the mountain is Mount Kailash. Photo: Rajendra Gurung. Long shrouded in myth and mystery, Tibet lies on the roof of the world, surrounded by the mountain ranges of Central Asia. Amid this grandeur, rising alone from the western Tibetan Plateau, stands Mount Kailash (Kang Rinpoche) – the most sacred mountain in the world and earthly manifestation of the cosmic Mount Meru. Center of a vast tantric mandela, it is a place of pilgrimage and rebirth; revered by Bon, Buddhist, Hindu and Jain alike. Thirteen hundred long, dusty kilometers west of Lhasa your cars top a small rise and suddenly this most spectacular and sacred sight is before you. Prayer flags are raised in honor of the first glimpse of Mount Kailash standing alone and distinctive before you and the vast blue waters of Lake Manasarovar below. Collectively known as Kangri Tsosum, Lake Manasarovar and Mount Kailash are said to be the heart of the ancient Shangshung Kingdom, the supposed land of origin of the pre-Buddhist Bonpo and one of the sources of the legend of Shambhala. It is here too that the great rivers of Asia are born. The Indus, the Sutlej, the Tsangpo (Brahmaputra) and the Karnali (tributary of the Ganges) flow from the four cardinal directions. Tibetans consider all these rivers sacred and their sources even more so – named for the animals that provide vehicles for the gods – the horse, the peacock, the elephant and the lion. As dawn breaks, offering light and very little warmth to the icy air, the three-dimensional, seven-tiered mandala we are constructing from one thousand 2kg packets of barley is almost complete. Each of the packets has been wrapped with silk ribbons and is carefully oriented as we build. Lengths of red, blue, white, yellow and green silk (representing the five elements) are wrapped around the completed top layer. It stands on the shores of Lake Manasarovar, the highest and holiest lake on earth, conceived from the mind of Brahma. Nearby we set light to the mound of juniper branches we have brought with Mount Kailash. Photo: Rajendra Gurung. 10 www.royalmt.com.np May 2014 ROYAL www.royalmt.com.np 11