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Fair & Festivals |
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In
Ladakh every occasion marriage, birth, harvesting,
commemoration of head Lamas founding of the monastery,
Losar (new year) and flowering is marked by feasting,
dancing and the singing of folksongs that forms a part of
its living heritage. Most of the festivals are held in
winter but some popular festival take place in summer too.
The monastic festivals are the heart of all the festivals.
They are performed by Monks wearing colorful silk garments
and different facial mask. |
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Hemis Festival |
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Hemis
festival is one of the most famous monastic festivals in
June to commemorate birth of Guru Padmasambhava, the
founder of Tantric Buddhism in Tibet. The sacred dance
drama of the life and mission is performed wearing facial
masks and colorful brocades robes. The three-day festival
takes place from 9th to 11th. Especially the monkey year
festival, which comes in a cycle of 12 years. During it
the four-storey thanka of Guru Padma Sambhava is hung in
the courtyard and other precious thankas are also
exhibited. |
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Thiksey, Karsha and Spituk
Gustor |
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Gustors take place at Thiksey, Spituk and Karsha in
different months of the year. The festival takes place for
two days. The celebration is to mark the victory over
evils. The mask worn by the dancers represent the
Guardians, Protectors and the Gods and Goddesses. The
festival ends with the symbolic assassination of evils and
burning of the effigy of evils. |
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Dosmochey
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Dosmochey is
celebrated in Leh (Leh Palace), Liker (Lower Ladakh) and
Deskit (Nubra valley) monasteries in February. The most
famous among all is Leh Dosmochey, which is celebrated for
two days in the courtyards of the Leh palace. The monks
from different monasteries perform the Chams every year
turn by turn. The festival takes place in the end and
starting of the Tibetan New Year. The monks of Takthok
monastery prepares the offering with Thread crosses which
binds all the evil, hungry ghosts and guard against
natural disaster in the coming year. On the second day of
the festival, the offerings are taken out of the town in a
procession and burn it while people whistle to chase away
the evil spirits. |
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Matho Nagrang |
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Matho
Nagrang is celebrated on the 15th day of the 1st month of
Tibetan calander, at Matho monastery, the only monastery
of the Sakya School of Tibetan Buddhism. During these two
days of festival mask dances are performed by monks of the
monastery wearing colorful silk brocaded robes and mask in
different forms of God and Goddesses. The festival is
famous because of appearance of the two oracles during the
festival after full month meditation in complete
isolation. The two oracles appear in the courtyard
accompanying mask dancers and predict future events and
people from far and away come to seek advice to perform
ritual to tackle with disasters. |
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Stok Guru Tsechu |
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The monks of
Stok and Spituk monasteries also celebrate Stok Gruru
Tsechu for two days with mask dances performed. It is also
held in Feb. around a week before the Matho Nagrang.
During the festival two oracle appears, but they are
laymen from the same village prepared by monks to receive
the spirit of the deities. |
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Phyang Tsedup |
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Phyang Tsedup
takes place in July / August. Like other monasteries, monks
wearing colorful brocade robes and Mask in the form of
different god and goddesses perform mask dances. The huge
thanka of Skyoba Giksten Gonbo is hung in the courtyard
during the festival. |
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Yuru Kabgyat |
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The 2-day
festival takes place in July in Lamayuru monastery around
125 kms. from Leh. Monks like other monastic festival
perform mask dances. During the festival monks perform
prayer and rituals to get rid of disaster and peace in the
world. |
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Losar Celebration |
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The Losar (New Year) celebration is followed by Galdan Namchot,
the birth anniversary of Tsogkha pa who introduced
Gelukpa
School of order. During Namchot people illuminate their houses, monasteries and
mountains and make offerings in the houses and
monasteries.
The Losar festival is celebrated in the eleventh
month of Tibetan calendar, two months ahead of Tibetan New
Year. In early 17th century, King Jamyang
Namgyal decided to lead an expedition against the
Baltistan forces in winter; therefore he decided to
celebrate the festival two months before. Later it became
a tradition and being celebrated in the eleventh month.
The festival lasts for around a month, during which Gods,
deities, ancestors and even the animals are fed without
fail. Images of Ibex are made as auspicious symbol, walls
of the kitchens are dotted and are believed to bring
prosperity in coming year. The Metho (procession of
fire) is thrown out chanting slogans and chasing hungry
ghosts and evil spirits, and they return with rocks of ice
as auspicious symbol and these are kept in the store. In
some villages there is a tradition of making Old men and
women, from this snow which last for a week. Over all the
Losar all children and young and olds enjoy and
celebrate the festival. All family members get together to
celebrate if someone missing will have their cups filled
with tea by their name. |
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Ladakh Festival |
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Ladakh festival takes place in September 1-15 every year
in Leh and villages. The inauguration ceremony takes place
in Leh on large scale with the procession of various
cultural troupes from different part of Ladakh. It passes
through Leh Market dancing, singing with traditional
music, in colorful traditional Ladakhi dresses, and
finishes at Polo ground after performing their best dances
and songs. The festival last for 15 days with regular
program in different villages. The program includes
Archery, Polo, and Mask Dances from the monasteries,
traditional dances by cultural troupes from Villages.
There are series of musical concert and dance program in
Leh town. |
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Sindhu Darshan (Visit Indus) Festival
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Sindhu
Darshan is
three-day festival held from 1st to 3rd June, in Shey
Manla around 8 kms. from Leh on the bank of Indus river.
For the first time it was organized in October 1997, as a
symbol of unity and Communal harmony and national
integration. Whilst promoting domestic tourism in Ladakh.
It is also a symbolic salute to brave soldiers of India
who have been fighting not only with enemies in the in the
human form but also in the form of nature.
During this festival artists from different parts of the
country perform traditional dances and people from all
religions, castes and regions participate. |
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