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Sakya Monastery :
This monastery is a "must
see" for visitors to Tibet. The
monastery lies 130 kilometers (80
miles) southwest of Shigatse. Sakya,
meaning "Grey Soil" in Tibetan since
the soil surrounding it is gray; it
is the central monastery of Sakyapa
sect of Tibetan Buddhism. Its walls
were painted in red, white and grey
strips, which represent Manjushri,
Avalokiteshvara and Vajrapani
respectively. Since the monastery
has a colossal collection of
highly valuable art pieces, it is
deemed as the "Second Dunhuang". The
Drum River divides it into the
Northern Monastery and the Southern
Monastery. Established first, the
Northern monastery was founded by
Khon Konchog Gyalpo in 1073, from
which Sakyapa rose and once ruled
Tibet. Unfortunately, it is nothing
but ruins now due to its severe
destruction during the Cultural
Revolution (1966-1976). However the
ruins still reflect its glory and
splendor
Tashilhunpo Monastery : Tashilhunpo
Monastery, meaning "Heap of Glory",
was commissioned in 1447 by Gedun
Drub, the nephew of the founder of
the Gelug sect, who was
retroactively entitled the First
Dalai Lama. As such, it is one of
the six main monasteries of this
Yellow-Hatted sect along with
Drepung, Sera and Ganden in Lhasa
and Kumbum and Labrang in Amdo.
Tashilhumpo is a vast monastery with
its own streets, housing sectors,
plazas, back alleys and complex of
temples and halls. Tashilhumpo is
located in the town of Sigatse and
was founded by Gedun Drup, a
disciple of Tsongkapa, the founder
of the Gelungpa Sect in Tibetan
Buddhism. Gedun Drup was later
recognized as the first Dalai Lama.
The monastery was built in 1447 and
continuously expanded by the
subsequent Panchen Lamas. The Ngagpa
College (Tantric College), one of
its four monastic colleges, was the
residence of the Panchen lamas. One
of the most attraction of
Tashilhumpo monastery is the giant
Maitreya (Future Buddha) erected by
the 9th Panchen Lama in 1914 which
took 4 years to complete. This
twenty six meters tall statue is
very big where lots of precious
things like pearls, turquoises,
corals and ambers were used with its
275 Kg. of solid gold.
Shalu Monastery : Lying 20
kilometers (12 miles) south of
Shigatse, the monastery was founded
in 1040 by Chetsun Sherab Jungnay.
Shalu, meaning New Bud in Tibetan,
was named after a story. His teacher
suggested him to built a monastery
where his arrow hit. The flying
arrow finally hit a new bud. In
1320, Buton Rinpoche, one of the
greatest religious scholars was
invited to be abbot of the
monastery. Buton's religious
knowledge covered so wide a range
that he brought together the one
hundred and eight volumes of the
fundamental texts of Buddhism,
Kanjur, and the two hundred volumes
of "treaties and commentaries",
Tenjur, and attracted over 3,000
monks to attend his teachings.
Shulupa, or Butonpa took form under
his leadership. However since he had
no interest in politics, his sect
was not very influential. The most
magic feats of Shalupa were monks
learned to raise their body
temperature to such a level that
they wore the simplest clothing to
resist coldness and to run at
superhuman leaps to cover a long
range without rest. In 1329, the
monastery was demolished in an
earthquake and in 1333, Buton
rebuilt it under the patron the
Chinese Mongolian emperor. Since
many Chines Han artisans
participated the reconstruction the
monastery combined Tibetan and
Chinese style of the Yuan dynasty
(1271-1368) together, the only one
of its type existing in Tibet.
Shalu Lakhang is the center of the
monastery. On the ground floor, in
the Tshomchen, Sakyamuni and his
disciples are enshrined. The chapels
flanking it houses Tanjur and Kanjur
respectively. Chapels on the roof
floor are typical Chinese blue tiled
structures, housing Sakyamuni, Buton,
and Arhats. Massive delicate and old
murals cover the walls of the
monastery, mostly depicting stories
from the life of the Buddha.
Restoration and preservation are
badly needed to protect those arts.
Shalu has four treasures, which are
a sutra board, which is 700 years
old and cannot be reassembled once
broken apart, a piece of sutra
printed against the board regarded a
good luck; a brass urn, which is
usually covered with a piece of red
cloth and sealed, the holy water may
clean 108 filths and is changed
every 12 years; a stone basin, which
was Chetsun Sherab Jungnay's
washbasin; and a stone tablet, which
was uncovered in the first
construction of Shalu and on which a
mantra, om mani Padme Hum and four
dagobas are carved.
Drepung Monastery : The monestary
was established in 1416 by Tsong
Khapa's disciple Jamyang Qoigyi, who
was versed in both Esoteric and
Exotoric Buddhism and became the
first Kampo there. With the support
of plutocrats, it developed as the
richest monastery of Gelugpa and
became the mother temple of Dalai
Lamas. In 1546, the third Dalai was
welcomed as the first Living Buddha
into the monastery. At the
invitation of Mongolia's king, he
went to Qinghai Province to preach.
He was dignified with the title 'the
third Dalai Lama' the first and
second Dalai were entitled, too. It
is the very place that the second,
third, and the fourth Dalai Lama
held the Sitting-in-Bed Ceremony, as
well as the residence of the fifth
Dalai before his nomination by the
government of the Qing Dynasty (1644
- 1911).
The ground of the monastery is
organized on the caves and temples
for Jamyang Qoigyi, together with
two magnificent white pagodas. The
buildings of the monastery are
centered on these pagodas, The major
buildings are Ganden Potrang, Coqen
Hall, the four Zhacangs (or Tantric
colleges), and Kamcuns.
The Ganden Potrang, in the southwest
corner of the monastery, was built
under the supervision of the second
Dalai Lama Gendun Gyaco around the
year of 1530. It became the
residence of the second, third,
fourth, and the fifth Dalai Lamas.
After the fifth Dalai Lama moved to
the Potala Palace, it was served as
the meeting place for the local
regime for both politics and
religion.
Sera Monastery : Sera, one of the
three largest monasteries of Gelugpa,
sits at the foothills of Tatipu. It
is as prestigious as Drepung and
Ganden, which both have longer
histories. Sera, in Tibetan, means
"Wild Rose Garden" since opulent
wild rose woods once grew around it.
A legend says that Tsong Khapa and
his two disciples traveled in the
area, spreading their religion. One
day, they heard a horse whinnying
underground when they were taking a
walk in the rose woods. They dug up
a statue of Hynagriva (a
horse-headed demon-god) and Tsong
Khapa began construction of a
monastery to enshrine Hynagriva.
However, the truth is that in 1414,
Jamchen Chojey (or Sakya Yeshe), one
of Tsong Khapa's disciples, visited
Emperor Chengzu as Tsong Khapa's
emissary. The Emperor Chengzu
granted him a title of Dharma King
of Great Mercy, sutras, and a set of
sandalwood Arhats. In order to
preserve them, Tsong Khapa
instructed Jamchen Chojey to build a
monastery to house the treasures.
The Sera monastery was completed in
1419.
Sera is designed around a Main
Assembly Hall, or Tshomchen in
Tibetan, which is the grandest hall
of Sera, occupying a floor space of
1,000 square meters. The
four-storied hall has four chapels
in which Arhats, Manjushri, Tsong
Khapa, and Chenrezi are enshrined.
Later, a huge Maitreya was enshrined
in the hall during the reign of the
Seventh Dalai Lama. The valuable
Buddhist sutras that Jamchen Chojey
brought back from Beijing are kept
in a sutra pigeonhole adjacent to
the hall.
Samye Monastery : Situated in
Dranang, Samye Monastery was
completed in 779 under the patron of
Trisong Detsen. At the time of
Samye's construction, Buddhism had
been transmitted into Tibet, but
there were no formal Buddhist
priests or rituals. Trisong Detsen
decided to invite Santarakshita and
Padmasambhava, both Buddhist
figureheads in India, to promote
Buddhism in Tibet and participate in
the construction of a monastery.
Padmasambhava chose the construction
site while the design was done by
Santarakshita. After the
construction was completed, Buddhism
became the official religion in
Tibet. Learned monks from inland
China and India were invited to
Tibet to translate Buddhist sutras
into Tibetan. Trisong Detsen
selected seven nobles to be the
first monks in Tibet. Samye became
the first formal monastery that
established "triratna", referring to
the Buddha, the Dharma and the
Sangha, or Buddhist priesthood.
Samye means "unimaginable" in
Tibetan. It was said that when
Tritsong Detsen asked for
suggestions about the construction
of the monastery, Padmasambhava,
exerting his magic power, showed the
king an image of a monastery in his
palm. That is the origin of the
name.
The monastery combines the styles of
China, Tibet and India, and the
layout was designed to represent the
ideal universe described in Buddhist
scriptures. "Utse", the Great Hall
symbolizing "Sumeru" in perfect
Buddhist universe, is the largest
structure in the monastery. The Sun
and Moon chapels encircle the large
hall, and four "stupas" of different
styles stand at each corner of the
room. These "stupas" are colored in
red, white, black and green to
represent the four Heavenly Kings.
Four larger halls and eight smaller
ones, evenly distributed around "Utse,"
represent the oceans in that
universe. The monastery is secluded
from the outside world by a circular
wall with thousands of Buddha
statues sitting on it. This wall
represents a mountain near the
border of the universe.
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