Download Trip Notes

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more

www.blackdiamondexpedition.com Enjoy the fascinating culture, sights and [email protected] stories in Tibet BLACK DIAMOND EXPEDITION +977-01-4440476 / 4440534 Explore the Great Wall of China via train to the the Roof of the World Experience the major cities of Xi'an, Lanzhou and Xining, and the Qinghai Plateau Explore the colorful, mysterious and historic holy city of Lhasa Enjoy the fascinating culture, sights and stories Experience the Buddhist learning View the most enchanting monasteries in Tibet Enjoy the incredible views of Yamdrok Lake, a mystical perfect mirror of the sky above see contemporary Tibetan life in the backstreets: pop music, cows, 'cowboys' on motorbikes, kids and monks all mingled in a lively mix of cultures Tibetan Adventure Nepal, Private Day Tour, 17 Days Trip Duration= 17 Days Group Size=1-15 person Accommodation=11 Nights Hotel, 2 Night train,2 Night guest house, 1 Nights Camp Meals=17Breskfast VIEW DATES, PRICES & BOOK YOUR HOLIDAY HERE www.blackdiamondexpedition.com [email protected] BLACK DIAMOND EXPEDITION Overview Tibet adventure is considered the collective form of an adventure to Mt. Kailash, Lhasa & Everest Base Camp is awesome places to explore, place of His Holiness Dalai Lama. You will have an opportunity to sightsee the entire area of Tibet. You will begin the trip by flying from Kathmandu to Lhasa, further ahead after Sightseeing in Lhasa. You will explore Potala Palace, Jhokang Temple, Sera Monastery, Barkhor Market Area in Lhasa. You will have an opportunity to explore view from Lhasa to Gyantse passing via Yamadroke Lake. You will explore Pholkor and Kumbum monastery while moving ahead from Gyantse to Shigatse. There will be an opportunity to visit Panchen Lama’s Tashilhumpu Monastery and Shakya Monastery, world’s highest Rongbuk Monastery. Hike from Rongbuk to Everest Base Camp can be completed either via walk or rent a horse and explore Everest Base Camp Northern Tibetan Side and descend back to Rongbuk from where we further drive to Tingri. You will have an opportunity to sightsee Manasarovar Lake. This trek offers an opportunity to explore the colorful, mysterious and historic holy city of Lhasa. You will enjoy the fascinating culture, sights and stories in Tibet. www.blackdiamondexpedition.com [email protected] BLACK DIAMOND EXPEDITION About Leader You are really fortunate to spend time with our guides who hold strong communication skills. They are great at projecting their voices across a group in a cler and easy to understand manner. They are gifted with what you call to be the great conversationalists with outgoing personalities. We ensure you that you feel open and comfortable talking to whoever accompanies you as your guide. Our guides possess a great experience of almost all the travel and trekking sites of Nepal. They can disseminate their awesome knowledge and experiences to you. They are not only enthusiastic but at the same time are humorous as well to relieve you from the often tiresome walks. We never compromise when it comes to time. Our guides are always punctual and perform things in time. They have keen sense of direction and can easily lead you in whichever route you follow them. Mostly, we assign the local guides who can bring their own knowledge, gain a genuine experience. Tibetan adventure/Itinerary Day 1: Beijing Nimen Hao! Welcome to China. The capital of the most populous country on earth, Beijing is quickly shedding its historical face in favour of modernity. However, there are still plenty of places that give an insight into the nation's ancient past. Your adventure begins with a welcome meeting at 6 pm, where your insurance and next of kin details will be collected. Please look for a note in the hotel lobby or ask the hotel reception where the meeting will take place. Any free time today in Beijing is at your leisure, so you can start your explorations of this vast city. Day 2: Exploring the Great Wall No trip to China would be complete without a visit to the Great Wall. Today you’ll take an early morning visit to one of the best- preserved areas, the Mutianyu section (approximately 2 hours), and featuring guard towers dating back to the Ming dynasty. An incredible piece of engineering, the wall stretches 6,000 km westwards from the mountain ridges north of Beijing. It was originally constructed to protect Chinese empires from the 'barbarians' of the north and even though it failed in this purpose, it is still without a doubt one of the country's most remarkable achievements. It's a 30-minute climb up some steep steps to the wall itself, but it’s well worth the effort. You will need good walking shoes for this. There’s also the option of taking a chair lift or cable car to the top and back if you’re after a more leisurely experience. Head back into the city in the afternoon, then this evening transfer to the Beijing West railway station (one of the biggest and busiest in the world!) to board the train to Lhasa (approximately 45 hours). This first www.blackdiamondexpedition.com [email protected] BLACK DIAMOND EXPEDITION night you'll pass through provincial towns, through Xi'an, and then directly into the mountains, sometimes through tunnels that can last for minutes at a time! Day 3: Train to the Roof of the World The train to Lhasa is one of China's greatest recent engineering feats. It’s the highest railway in the world, traversing some incredible mountainous and remote terrain. The journey takes you through the major cities of Xi'an, Lanzhou and Xining, and across the Qinghai Plateau before arriving in Lhasa. Luxuriate in the feeling of accomplishment without having to do anything – go to bed and wake up 1,000 kilometers away. Stop briefly in Lanzhou, the crossroads of journeys along the Silk Road and the Tibet-Qinghai plateau, and head on past the immense city of Xining. On this second night you’ll climb in altitude and your breath with likely be taken away by the landscape outside the windows – snow-dappled black cliffs and mountain peaks illuminated by the moonlight. Day 4: Train arriving in Lhasa The train will travel through a wide brown grassland complemented by terracotta foothills, with a speckling of grazing yaks, sheep and goats and the occasional punctuation of lakes and streams. This same landscape, only sparsely populated by clusters of brick village houses, treeless and vast, will accompany you nearly all the way to Lhasa, where you’ll arrive sometime after lunch. The colourful and historic holy city of Lhasa is situated in a small valley, and for many years it was a mysterious place, virtually unknown to the outside world. Even the most adventurous and hardy of explorers rarely reached the city without being turned away, either by the treacherous terrain or the fierce warrior monks that protected Tibetan territory from intruders. While now welcoming tourists and much modernized, Lhasa remains an intriguing city with a deeply fascinating culture, sights and stories. Check in to your hotel and begin to get acclimatized with a free night tonight. Day 5: Lhasa: Sightseeing Potala palace/ Jokhang Temple Today you will jump straight into sightseeing of the TAR capital with visits to both the incredible Potala Palace and Jokhang Temple. Potala Palace is the former home of Dalai Lamas that’s perched 130 metres above the city. The palace is divided into two parts, the White Palace (secular and used as offices and the like) and the Red Palace (home to chapels, shrines, and tombs of Dalai Lamas). Although the palace is not freely explored, and a strict viewing schedule must be adhered to, this in no way lessens the impact of seeing what a wonder of the architectural world is truly. As you witness the gold and jewel-filled rooms and take in the views from the roof, you’ll rub shoulders with excited Tibetan pilgrims making offerings at the altars along with plenty of Chinese tourists. For the rest of the day you can deepen your perspective of Lhasa's holy sites with a trip to the Ganden or Drepung Monasteries. Alternatively, perhaps visit the Norbulingka, the Summer Palace of Dalai Lamas. Your leader will help arrange activities for your free time. www.blackdiamondexpedition.com [email protected] BLACK DIAMOND EXPEDITION Day 6: Lhasa: Visiting Sera Monastery Travel the short distance by public bus out to the base of Pubuchok Mountain to visit one of the most important university monasteries in Tibet. The name Sera means wild rose in the Tibetan language, and the monastery is said to have taken the name because when it was built, the hill behind it was covered in wild roses in bloom. The monastery is best known for its dramatic daily debates between monks – as part of their training they come together in a central courtyard to contest the finer points of Buddhist learning. Junior monks sit on the floor while senior monks drill them on their knowledge, dramatically slapping their hand in a signal to respond, which makes the temple much livelier and noisier than many others. After Sera Monastery, you will learn how to make momos (steamed dumplings) in a cooking demonstration and class. Momos are one of the staples of Tibetan cuisine, and these delicious little parcels of meat are often served with a tomato-based chutney dipping sauce or a hot sauce called c-momo. Today we will also visit one of our very own Intrepid Foundation Projects, 'Braille without Borders'. Braille without Borders deliver a preparatory school for blind children, a self-integration project, facilitating attendance at local mainstream schools and home life, and vocational training projects including a farm and a bakery, giving blind people the skills to generate their own income.
Recommended publications
  • Source 10:10 Kopi

    Source 10:10 Kopi

    Back to Source Journeying Tibet 22th of April to the 11th of May 2019 Back to Source Journeying Tibet 22th of April to the 11th of May 2019 Yamdrok Lake This is an invitation to a rare and fantastic journey, into one of the most important and deep spirituel cultures, in the world – the ancient Tibetan culture. Monastory of Ganden Journeying Tibet 22th of April to the 11th of May 2019 The Invitation The culture on the top of the Everything experienced in a world – is a culture that for human life, is experienced many years have lived an through one self and witnessed isolated life – it is going deep from the consciousness through into the very core of human and awareness – that’s the individual beyond human experiences. journey. It is also an invitation into Together, we travel on our own spirituality - exploring the only individual journey. This spirituality there is – your own. togetherness gives everyone support and courage to accept This journey will day by day all the gifts, that Tibetan culture lead you deeper and deeper into has to offer. the unknown By doing this things starts to By accepting this invitation you build up and our common will be a part of a group that journey becomes the vehicle for will be traveling together, on this deeper and higher experiences, 21 days journey and possible transformations. - a journey that might be, the journey of your life Monastory of Sera Journeying Tibet 22th of April to the 11th of May 2019 The journey This is fantastic ! Fantastic because of the beauty By connecting with this of the culture – fantastic environment and such a deep because of the energy ruling on tradition for energy work, as the the different places.
  • 'A Unique View from Within'

    'A Unique View from Within'

    Orientations | Volume 47 Number 7 | OCTOBER 2016 ‘projects in progress’ at the time of his death in 1999. (Fig. 1; see also Fig. 5). The sixth picture-map shows In my research, I use the Wise Collection as a case a 1.9-metre-long panorama of the Zangskar valley. study to examine the processes by which knowledge In addition, there are 28 related drawings showing of Tibet was acquired, collected and represented detailed illustrations of selected monasteries, and the intentions and motivations behind these monastic rituals, wedding ceremonies and so on. ‘A Unique View from Within’: processes. With the forthcoming publication of the Places on the panoramic map are consecutively whole collection and the results of my research numbered from Lhasa westwards and southwards (Lange, forthcoming), I intend to draw attention to in Arabic numerals. Tibetan numerals can be found The Representation of Tibetan Architecture this neglected material and its historical significance. mainly on the backs of the drawings, marking the In this essay I will give a general overview of the order of the sheets. Altogether there are more than in the British Library’s Wise Collection collection and discuss the unique style of the 900 numbered annotations on the Wise Collection drawings. Using examples of selected illustrations drawings. Explanatory notes referring to these of towns and monasteries, I will show how Tibetan numbers were written in English on separate sheets Diana Lange monastic architecture was embedded in picture- of paper. Some drawings bear additional labels in maps and represented in detail. Tibetan and English, while others are accompanied The Wise Collection comprises six large picture- neither by captions nor by explanatory texts.
  • HANOI to EVERST BASE CAMP: an ADVENTURE with NZCFS March April 2021

    HANOI to EVERST BASE CAMP: an ADVENTURE with NZCFS March April 2021

    HANOI TO EVERST BASE CAMP: AN ADVENTURE WITH NZCFS March April 2021 NZCFS Tours are QUALITY TOURS, providing REAL experiences, with enthusiastic companions in a cohesive small group, escorted by knowledgeable people who provide an in depth understanding of China and (in this case) Vietnam! NZCFS are pleased to offer this special tour, travelling from Hanoi in Vietnam, through Yunnan Province to Lhasa in Tibet, and on to Everest Base Camp for those who elect to take this extension. An adventure tour of three parts. Highlights include: A. Vietnam Part A is 6 days in the north of Vietnam. Hanoi Part B takes us from the Vietnamese Halong Bay, Catba Island border with Yunnan to Lhasa. Travel Sapa Hill Town from Shangrila to Lhasa overland, or by flight and a road trip to the South East of Tibet, is yet to be confirmed. B. Yunnan Province Yuanyang . Part C, Lhasa to Everest Base Camp, is Jianshui old town an optional extra. We appreciate that not Kunming everybody will wish to experience the Lijiang higher altitude of this four day excursion. Shangrila Please indicate which sections you wish to travel. Shangrila to Lhasa Overland, or flight? We will travel the roads and At this stage we are very hopeful that the sites of SE Tibet. See over for draft itinerary... borders will be open, and we can travel freely on this itinerary in China’s spring 2021. C. Tibet Autonomous Region Cost estimate from $8250. Includes Lhasa all travel (including international), The Southeast region of Tibet all meals, accommodation (4* or Gyantse, Shigatse best available), site entry fees.
  • Interview #27C – Jigdal Dagchen Sakya, His Holiness November 15, 2014

    Interview #27C – Jigdal Dagchen Sakya, His Holiness November 15, 2014

    Tibet Oral History Project Interview #27C – Jigdal Dagchen Sakya, His Holiness November 15, 2014 The Tibet Oral History Project serves as a repository for the memories, testimonies and opinions of elderly Tibetan refugees. The oral history process records the words spoken by interviewees in response to questions from an interviewer. The interviewees’ statements should not be considered verified or complete accounts of events and the Tibet Oral History Project expressly disclaims any liability for the inaccuracy of any information provided by the interviewees. The interviewees’ statements do not necessarily represent the views of the Tibet Oral History Project or any of its officers, contractors or volunteers. This translation and transcript is provided for individual research purposes only. For all other uses, including publication, reproduction and quotation beyond fair use, permission must be obtained in writing from: Tibet Oral History Project, P.O. Box 6464, Moraga, CA 94570-6464, United States. Copyright © 2015 Tibet Oral History Project. TIBET ORAL HISTORY PROJECT www.TibetOralHistory.org INTERVIEW SUMMARY SHEET 1. Interview Number: #27C 2. Interviewee: Jigdal Dagchen Sakya, His Holiness 3. Age: 85 4. Date of Birth: 1929 5. Sex: Male 6. Birthplace: Sakya 7. Province: Utsang 8. Year of leaving Tibet: 1959 9. Date of Interview: November 15, 2014 10. Place of Interview: Sakya Monastery, Seattle, Washington, USA 11. Length of Interview: 1 hr 19 min 12. Interviewer: Marcella Adamski 13. Interpreter: Jamyang D. Sakya 14. Videographer: Tony Sondag 15. Translator: Tenzin Yangchen Biographical Information: His Holiness Jigdal Dagchen Sakya was born in the town of Sakya in Utsang Province. He is a descendant of the Khon lineage called the Phuntsok Phodrang.
  • Membership at Sakya Monastery 25 Email: Monastery@Sakya.Org Tara Meditation Center on Whidbey Island 27 Website

    Membership at Sakya Monastery 25 Email: [email protected] Tara Meditation Center on Whidbey Island 27 Website

    p~âó~=jçå~ëíÉêó=çÑ=qáÄÉí~å=_ìÇÇÜáëã= Introductory Guide Through the practice of Vajrayana Buddhism, may the flower of Tibetan culture be preserved for the benefit all beings. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 3 Background on H.H. Jigdal Dagchen Sakya 6 Short Overview of Tibetan Buddhism 9 Guide to the Main Shrine Room 13 Becoming a Buddhist 17 p~âó~=jçå~ëíÉêó=çÑp~âó~=jçå~ëíÉêó=çÑ==== qáÄÉí~å=_ìÇÇÜáëã Meditation Practices at Sakya Monastery 19 Special Tibetan Buddhist Ceremonies 22 Address: 108 NW 83rd Street Virupa Educational Institute 23 Seattle, WA 98117 Children’s Dharma School 24 Tel: 206.789.2578 (Open Mondays - Fridays, 8:00 am - noon) Membership at Sakya Monastery 25 Email: [email protected] Tara Meditation Center on Whidbey Island 27 Website: www.sakya.org © 2010 Sakya Monastery of Tibetan MESSAGE FROM THE CO-DIRECTORS Buddhism, All rights reserved. Welcome to Sakya Monastery! One of the key goals of Sakya Monastery is to provide access to the Buddha’s teachings to enable people to develop their inner spiritual qualities and progress to enlightenment step by step. When people first come to Sakya Monastery, they have lots of questions about Tibetan Buddhism, our Lamas, Sakya Monas- tery and the spiritual practices we do here, and how to act when attending one of our meditations. This booklet has been created to answer many of those questions so that you will be comfortable and feel welcomed whenever you visit Sakya Monastery. We look forward to seeing you soon and often! Adrienne Chan & Chuck Pettis Co-Executive Directors Ntu Ntu PURPOSE Introduction The purpose of Sakya Monastery Sakya Monastery provides access to the Buddha’s teachings and is to share and preserve Tibetan guidance in a community of practitioners.
  • Tibet Destination Guide

    Tibet Destination Guide

    Tibet Destination Guide Overview of Tibet Key Facts Language: The official language is Mandarin Chinese, but there are hundreds of local dialects. Passport/Visa: Currency: Electricity: Electrical current is 220 volts, 50Hz. Plug types vary, but the two-pin flat blade and oblique three-pin flat blade plugs are common. Adapters are generally required. Travel guide by wordtravels.com © Globe Media Ltd. By its very nature much of the information in this travel guide is subject to change at short notice and travellers are urged to verify information on which they're relying with the relevant authorities. Travmarket cannot accept any responsibility for any loss or inconvenience to any person as a result of information contained above. Event details can change. Please check with the organizers that an event is happening before making travel arrangements. We cannot accept any responsibility for any loss or inconvenience to any person as a result of information contained above. Page 1/5 Tibet Destination Guide Travel to Tibet Climate for Tibet Health Notes when travelling to China Safety Notes when travelling to China Customs in China Duty Free in China Doing Business in China Communication in China Tipping in China Passport/Visa Note Page 2/5 Tibet Destination Guide Getting around in Tibet Page 3/5 Tibet Destination Guide Attractions in Tibet Potala Palace Opening time: Daily 9.30am-2pm Address: 35 Beijing Middle Rd, Chengguan, Lhasa, Tibet Telephone: 139 899 87403 Website: http://www.potala-palace.com Jokhang Temple Address: Chengguan, Lhasa Telephone: 891 633 6858 Website: jokhang.org Tashi Lhunpo Monastery Address: 7 Jijilangka Road, Shigatse Website: http://www.tashilhunpo.org Mount Everest Pelkor Monastery Address: Gyangze, Shigatse Lhasa Page 4/5 Tibet Destination Guide Currency Exchange rate for 1 CNY - Chinese Yuan 0.15 BMD 0.14 EUR 0.15 USD 0.11 GBP 16.55 JPY 0.20 CAD Bermudan Dollar Euro U.S.
  • Heart of Tibet September 28 - October 9, 2019 (12 Days)

    Heart of Tibet September 28 - October 9, 2019 (12 Days)

    Ann Taylor Ann Cathy © Heart of Tibet September 28 - October 9, 2019 (12 days) Dream-like and enchanting, the Tibetan Plateau is a place of desolate beauty and spectacular snowcapped peaks. Crystal-clear air, a pristine environment, and the ever-changing light will surely leave you breathless. It is truly a magical realm, with equally impressive people, and it holds a special place in the heart of trip leader Cathy Ann Taylor. On this cultural journey, you’ll delve deep into Tibet’s heart and soul as you explore ancient monasteries and impressive cultural monuments, mingle with the Tibetan people in lively bazaars and at popular pilgrimage sites, and encounter the arid yet haunting scenery of the vast Tibetan Plateau. TRIP DETAILS ModerateCultural explorations at high altitude, rugged road travel, light walking, maximum elevation 17,100’; accommodations in hotels ________________________________________________________________________________________________________ CATTARA PO Box 1366 ~ Sausalito, CA 94966 Phone/Fax (415) 331-9539 ~ [email protected] - 1 - ITINERARY (You will likely need to leave the U.S. on September 26 or 27 depending on the routing in order to arrive in Chengdu on September 28.) If you arrive a day early you can do the optional panda tour. Day 1, September 28Chengdu, China Arrive in Chengdu, China, and transfer to the hotel. Chengdu Airport Hotel Day 2, September 29Lhasa, Tibet (11,800’) Early morning transfer to the Chengdu airport and fly to Gongkar, Tibet. Upon arrival in Gongkar, you will be met by your local guide and driver and transferred one hour to our hotel in Lhasa, the “sacred city” of Tibet.
  • Looking for Interpreter Zero: Imperial Intermediaries

    Looking for Interpreter Zero: Imperial Intermediaries

    Looking for Interpreter Zero: Imperial Intermediaries The quest for Interpreter Zero in modern times takes us to the Everest Expeditions of the 1920s and 1930s, and the remarkable interpreter Karma Paul. Christine ADAMS. Published: May 29, 2019 Last updated: May 29, 2019 Recent histories of exploration and colonisation have acknowledged that early accounts tended to privilege intrepid outsiders grappling single-handedly with the unknown; scholars now recognise that these were often complex undertakings involving different kinds of intermediaries. It is interesting to consider interpreters as one of several different kinds of go-betweens as a way of understanding the role they played. The British Raj provides us with some interesting cases, allowing us to set the scene for the quest for Interpreter Zero in modern times, beginning here with the Everest Expeditions of the 1920s and 1930s. I – Karma Paul and the 1922 British Himalayan Expedition When he was Karma he was a Buddist … When he was Paul he was a Christian [1] The British Everest Expeditions of the 1920s and 1930s can be understood as a by-product of Empire. While the climbers’ ambitions were to scale the world’s highest peak in an exploit to match the conquests of the North and South Poles earlier in the century, they relied on the manpower and infrastructure of the Raj. It was in 1852, in the course of its observations of the peaks of Nepal, that the Office of the Trigonometrical Survey discovered the world’s highest mountain. Known to Tibetans as Chomolungma, it was named Mount Everest after Sir George Everest, a former Surveyor-General.
  • Establishing Lineage Legitimacy and Building Labrang Monastery As “The Source of Dharma”: Jikmed Wangpo (1728–1791) Taking the Helm

    Establishing Lineage Legitimacy and Building Labrang Monastery As “The Source of Dharma”: Jikmed Wangpo (1728–1791) Taking the Helm

    religions Article Establishing Lineage Legitimacy and Building Labrang Monastery as “the Source of Dharma”: Jikmed Wangpo (1728–1791) Taking the Helm Rinchen Dorje The Center for Research on Ethnic Minorities in Northwest China, The College of History and Culture, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou 730000, China; [email protected] Abstract: The eighteenth century witnessed the continuity of Geluk growth in Amdo from the preceding century. Geluk inspiration and legacy from Central Tibet and the accompanying political patronage emanating from the Manchus, Mongols, and local Tibetans figured prominently as the engine behind the Geluk influence that swept Amdo. The Geluk rise in the region resulted from contributions made by native Geluk Buddhists. Amdo native monks are, however, rarely treated with as much attention as they deserve for cultivating extensive networks of intellectual transmission, reorienting and shaping the school’s future. I therefore propose that we approach Geluk hegemony and their broad initiatives in the region with respect to the school’s intellectual and cultural order and native Amdo Buddhist monks’ role in shaping Geluk history in Amdo and beyond in Tibet. Such a focus highlights their impact in shaping the trajectory of Geluk history in Tibet and Amdo in particular. The historical and biographical literature dealing with the life of Jikmed Wangpo affords us a rare window into the pivotal time when every effort was made to cultivate a vast network of institutions and masters across Tibet. This further spurred an institutional growth of Citation: Dorje, Rinchen. 2021. Buddhist transmission, constructing authenticity and authority thereof, as they were closely tied to Establishing Lineage Legitimacy and reincarnation lineage, intellectual traditions, and monastic institutions.
  • Tibet-Travel-Guide-Tibet-Vista.Pdf

    Tibet-Travel-Guide-Tibet-Vista.Pdf

    is located in southwest China with Tibetans as the main local inhabitants. It is Tibet situated on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, which is called the "roof of the world". Tibet fascinates tourists from home and abroad with its grandiose natural scenery, vast plateau landscape, charming holy mountains and sacred lakes, numerous ancient architectures and unique folk cultures, and the wonders created by the industrious and brave people of various nationalities in Tibet in the course of building their homeland. Tibet is not only a place that many Chinese and foreigners are eager to visit, but also a "paradise" for photographers. Top Spots of Tibet Catalog Lhasa Before you go The Spiritual and Political Capital of Tibet. 02 Best time to Go 03 Why Travel to Tibet Namtso 04-06 Tibet Permit & Visa “Heavenly Lake” of Tibet, its touching beauty 07 Useful Maps should not be missed by any traveler who visits 08 Getting There & Away Tibet. 09 Luggage Allowance 10-11 Food & Drinking Everest Nature Reserve 12 Shopping Once-in-a-life journey to experience the earth's 13 Where to Stay highest mountain. 14-15 High Altitude Sickness 16-17 Festivals & Events Nyingtri 18 What to Pack „Pearl of Tibet Plateau‟, where the climate is 19 Ethics and Etiquette subtropical, rice and bananas are grown, four 20 Money & Credit Card seasons are seen in the mountains. 21-22 Useful Words & No. 22 Tips for Photographing Tsedang The cradle of Tibetan civilization. Experience Real Tibet Mt. Kailash & Lake Manasarovar 23-25 Top Experiences Ttwo of the most far-flung and legendary travel 26-29 Lhasa & Around destinations in the world.
  • VEI Catalog Summer 2019.Pub

    VEI Catalog Summer 2019.Pub

    Summer 2019 at Sakya Monastery of Tibetan Buddhism 108 NW 83rd Street Seattle, WA 98117 Tel: 206.789.2573 Website: www.sakya.org Email: [email protected] In this quarter’s catalog: Prayer, Faith & Devotion A teaching by H.H. Jigdal Dagchen Dorje Chang, “Three Types of Faith and Connection to the Guru” 3rd Annual North American Sakya World Peace Monlam Tsuktor Barwa Initiation Saka Dawa Retreat Guru Rinpoche Bumtsok Special Teaching on the Aspiration of Samantabhadra by Geshe Jamyang Tsultrim Fifty Verses of Guru Devotion Setting Up a Home Shrine And more! The Marici Fellowship: The Marici Fellowship Summer Camp - not to be missed! Monthly Meal Service Speaker Series Young Sakya Monk in Lumbini 2010. Photo by Teresa Lamb. What Sakya Monastery Offers From the foundation laid by His Holiness Jigdal Dagchen Sakya Dorje Chang (1929 - 2016), it is the aspiration of our Head Lama, His Eminence Avikrita Vajra Rinpoche, that Sakya Monastery continues to provide multiple pathways for all who are interested in studying the Buddhadharma. In honor of the Sakya World Peace Monlam, we focus on prayer, faith and devotion for this quarter. We have included a special teaching by H.H. Jigdal Dagchen Dorje Chang the founder of Sakya Monastery, Seattle. For those new to Sakya Monastery, you can find out about all our regular activities and practices through our Sunday morning introductory classes. These are listed under Welcome to Buddhism at Sakya Monastery. Special Ceremonies and Events shows empowerments, retreats and special rituals. Dharma classes and teachings are listed under Explorations in Dharma. Small group Study Intensives will continue in the Fall Quarter.
  • Sakya Monastery – Tibetan Buddhism

    Sakya Monastery – Tibetan Buddhism

    Background on Sakya Monastery Introduction Sakya Monastery of Tibetan Buddhism is a place to learn from highly qualified Tibetan lamas in a traditional setting. The Monastery occupies a beautiful renovated building, which houses a pristine example of a Tibetan Buddhist shrine that is one of only a few in North America. It is located in Seattle’s Greenwood district near the intersection of Greenwood Avenue North and North 85th Street. While called a monastery, it is primarily a lay community of practitioners, with various levels of experience in the Buddhist tradition. It is led by its founder, His Holiness Jigdal Dagchen Sakya (called Rinpoche, meaning “Precious One” in Tibetan). He is a head lama of the Sakya School of Tibetan Buddhism, one of Tibetan Buddhism’s four main Schools. [See background information sheets on H.H. Jigdal Dagchen Sakya, and also on Tibetan Buddhism.] The term “Sakya” derives from Rinpoche’s family name and spiritual lineage, and ultimately from the original Sakya Monastery in Sakya, Tibet, built by one of Rinpoche’s ancestors in 1073. It received the name Sakya because it was constructed on a patch of earth (sa) that was pale (kya). The Monastery in Seattle is a seat of the Sakya School of Tibetan Buddhism in North America. It is also a non-sectarian religious center, and hosts visits and teaching from leading lamas of all four Schools of Tibetan Buddhism. The Virupa Educational Institute (VEI) was founded by the Monastery, and is its educational branch. Purpose The purpose of the Monastery is to share and preserve Tibetan Buddhism and Tibetan culture.