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About Kailash
The Holy Mt. Kailash - Mansarovar Yatra
Introduction
Mt. Kailash,
6,740 m. is situated to the north of the Himalayan
barrier, wholly within Tibet. It is the perfect
mountain with awesome beauty, with 4 great faces. It
is the spiritual center for four great religions:
Tibetan Buddhism, Hinduism, the Jain religion and
the pre-Buddhist animistic religion - Bonpo. To
Tibetans it is known as Khang Rimpoche (Precious
Jewel of Snow) and they see it as the navel of the
world. It is said that a stream from the mountain
pours into a nearby lake and from here rivers flow
in the four cardinal directions. The River of the
Lion Mouth to the North, the River of the Horse
Mouth to the east, the River of the Peacock Mouth to
the south and the River of the Elephant Mouth to the
West. Strangely enough, four major rivers do indeed
originate near Kailash, the Indus, the Yarlung
Tsangpo (Brahmaputra), the Karnali and the Sutlej.
Tibetans believe that it is the residence of Demchog,
a fierce looking tantric deity who lives there with
his consort, Dorje Phagmo. For the Tibetans also, it
is a particularly special place in that their poet
saint Milarepa, spent several years here meditating
in a cave.
For the Hindus Mount Kailash is the earthly
manifestation of Mt. Meru, their spiritual center of
the universe, described as a fantastic 'world
pillar' 84,000 miles high, around which all else
revolves, its roots in the lowest hell and its
summit kissing the heavens. On the top lives their
most revered God, Shiva, and his consort Parvati.
For the Jains, an Indian religious group, Kailash is
the site where their first prophet achieved
enlightenment. For the older, more ancient religion
of Bon, it is the site where its founder Shanrab is
said to have descended from heaven. It was formerly
the spiritual center of Zhang Zung, the ancient Bon
Empire that once included all of western Tibet. Bon
people walk around the mountain in a counter
clockwise manner, unlike the other religions. Over
the centuries pilgrims have constantly journeyed
immense distances to achieve enlightenment or
cleanse themselves of sin, braving enormous
distances, particularly harsh weather and bandit
attacks. |