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Friday, May 19, 2017

Monkey Temple Or Swayambhu

Perched atop a hill on the western edge of the Kathmandu Valley, the ancient Swayambunath Stupa (known to tourists as the Monkey Temple) is Kathmandu's most important Buddhist shrine. The sleepy, all-seeing Buddha eyes that stare out from the top have become the quintessential symbol of Nepal.

Swayambhu (Devanagari: स्वयम्भू स्तूप; Newar: स्वयंभू; sometimes Swoyambhu) is an ancient religious architecture atop a hill in the Kathmandu Valley, west of Kathamndu city. The Tibetan name for the site means 'Sublime Trees' (Wylie: Phags.pa Shing.kun), for the many varieties of trees found on the hill. However, Shing.kun may be a corruption of the local Nepal Bhasa name for the complex, Singgu, meaning 'self-sprung'. For the Buddhist Newars in whose mythological history and origin myth as well as day-to-day religious practice, Swayambhu occupies a central position, it is probably the most sacred among Buddhist pilgrimage sites. For Tibetans and followers of Tibetan Buddhism, it is second only to Boudha.

Swayambhunath, Monkey Temple is a melting pot of Nepal since ages. Thousands of devotees visit this historical  and spiritual  place every day.
History of Swayambhunath Stupa
When this temple was founded about 2,000 years ago, Kathmandu Valley was filled with a great lake. According to Buddhist legend, a single perfect lotus grew in the center of the lake. When the bodhisattva Manjusri drained the lake with a slash of his sword, the lotus flower settled on top of the hill and magically transformed into the stupa. Thus it is known as the Self-Created (swayambhu) Stupa.
The earliest written record of the Swayambunath Stupa's existence is a 5th-century stone inscription, but scholars believe there was probably a shrine here as early as the 1st century. Even before that, it is likely that animist rites took place on this hill. Swayambunath is one of Nepal's oldest Buddhist temples and it has an ancient atmosphere, especially when one approaches on foot with the pilgrims.

What to See at Swayambhunath Stupa

The primary approach to the temple is from the eastern side, where 365 ancient steps lead up the steep forested hillside. The base is about a 20-minute walk from the center of Kathmandu. This staircase is the only route pilgrims would consider and is the most memorable way for any visitor to experience the stupa. However, an alternative is to drive or take a taxi to the west side, where there are only a few steps to climb to the top.
At the bottom of the eastern stairway is a brightly painted gate containing a huge Tibetan prayer wheel nearly 12 feet tall. It takes two people to turn it and a bell sounds during each revolution. Around the gate are dozens more smaller wheels. Devotees spin prayer wheels to release prayers and mantras to heaven - visitors are welcomed to do so as well.
The staircase is presided over by three painted Buddha statues from the 17th century near the base (women perform prostrations before them in the early morning); another group further up are from the early 20th century.
Strewn along the staircase are numerous mani stones, inscribed with the Tibetan mantra Om mani padme hum ("Hail to the jewel in the lotus"). Merchants sell smaller versions of the stones to tourists. The stairs run through a beautiful forest, which is populated with the hundreds of monkeys that give the temple its nickname.
The central buildings and decorations of Swayambhunath are rich with Buddhist symbolism. The whitewashed dome of the main stupa represents the womb of creation, with a phallic complement in the square tower. Rising from the tower is a spire made of 13 golden disks, representing the steps to enlightenment. The umbrella on top symbolizing enlightenment itself; some say it contains a bowl of precious stones.
The famous Buddha eyes gazing out sleepily from each side of the tower (oriented to the four cardinal directions) are those of the all-seeing Primordial Buddha. Between each of the pairs of eyes is a symbol that looks like a question mark - this is the Nepali number "1" and represents the unity of all things. Gold plaques rising above the eyes like a crown depict the Five Dhyani Buddhas, celestial buddhas who are associated with the five senses, the four cardinal directions plus the center, and many other symbolic groups of five.
The Five Dhyani Buddhas are further honored with special shrines at the base of the stupa. They face the four cardinal directions, plus one slightly left of east to represent the center direction. Between them are shrines to four of the Buddhas' consorts. Linking all nine shrines together is a chain of prayer wheels and butter lamps. The five main shrines are enclosed in beautiful gilded copper repoussé work, for which the Kathmandu Valley is renowned.
Filling the platform around the main stupa are numerous other shrines and votive structures, most of which have been donated by kings and lamas in the last four centuries. Five of them are associated with the five elements: earth, air, fire, water and sky.
Notable among these is the Harati Devi Temple, dedicated to the Hindu goddess of smallpox and other epidemics, as well as a protectress of children. The small brick pagoda is very popular among both Hindus and Buddhists, especially mothers seeking blessings for their children.
Petitioners toss flower petals, rice, colored powder and holy water over the Harati image, then receive a tika from the resident priest. Monkeys, stray dogs, and pigeons fight over the rice and the food offerings, contributing to the chaotic atmosphere. The image of the goddess dates only from the 19th century; it replaces the original that was smashed by King Rana Bahadur Shah after his wife died of smallpox.
Food offerings for Harati (typically stew, rice and bread) are cooked in a kitchen on the bottom floor of a gompa (monastery prayer room) on the west side of the complex. Visitors can climb stairs to the gompa roof, which is level with the Buddha eyes. From here there are fine views over the stupa and Kathmandu valley.
Northwest of the main stupa is another important shrine, associated with a fascinating legend. Shantipur is a small, plain, box-shaped temple said to contain a great treasure - a living holy man who has been meditating in there for 1500 years. Legend has it that Shanti Shri, who lived in the 5th century, locked himself in a vault beneath the temple, vowing to remain there until the Kathmandu Valley needed him. Entering a mystic state, he has achieved immortality and remains there to help the local people when needed.
In 1658, King Pratap Mella descended into the chamber alone to seek Shanti Shri's help with a drought. The king reported making his way through several underground rooms, each more frightening than the last. The first contained large bats and hawks, the second was home to hungry ghosts that clutched at him in agony, and the third was full of snakes that chased him until he pacified them with milk. The king found the saint in the last room, skinny as a skeleton but still alive and meditating. Shanti Shri presented the king with a mandala, which brought the needed rain.
The outer sanctum of the rather ominous temple can be visited. It is decorated with faded frescoes from the Swayambhu Purana, a 17th-century scripture that recounts the creation myths of the Kathmandu Valley. Shantipur is also called Akashpur (Sky Place) and it represents the fifth element.
The two bullet-shape temples (shikra) on each side of the stupa, known as Pratappur and Anantapur, were given by King Pratap Malla to help him earn a victory over Tibet in the 17th century. The story of his success is inscribed on the twin bells in front.
At the northeast corner of the complex is the Shree Karma Raj Mahavihar, an active Tibetan monastery with a big Buddha statue and yak butter candles lit by pilgrims. The resident monks chant around 3 or 4pm daily. The northwest corner is home to Agnipur, a neglected shrine to the ancient Hindu fire god Agni, who relays burnt offerings to heaven. Between these two, north of the main stupa, is Nagpur, a small tank with a snake idol at the bottom. This helps appease the valley's notorious snake spirits.
At the top of the eastern steps is a great bronze vajra (thunderbolt), a Tantric symbol of power, decorated with the signs of the Tibetan zodiac.

 

"Western Side Of  Kathmandu Seen From Swayambhu" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Harati Temple" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Prayer Flags & Kathamndu" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Tourists" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Pursuit Of Equanimity" © BIKESH DESHAR
"Swayambhu" © BIKESH DESHAR


"Tourist Shops" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Stupa" © BIKESH DESHAR

A Boy & Medieval Buddhist Stone Chaityas" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Passing By Hanging Paintings" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Lady Tourist At Swayambhu" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Prayer Wheels"

"Little Buddhas" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Monkey Temple" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Harati Temple" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Distraction" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Buddha On Meditation" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Blur" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Bajra" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Little Arts" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Wisdom Eyes" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Dipankar Buddha" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Visitors" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Shops Around Swayambhu" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Way To Swayambhu" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Illuminated Stupa" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Illumination Of Stupa On Buddha Jayanti" © BIKESH DESHAR

© BIKESH DESHAR

"Spirit Of Swayambhu" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Buddha" © BIKESH DESHAR

"7th Century Dipankar Buddha" © BIKESH DESHAR

"Light Up" © BIKESH DESHAR



When to Go

The weather is most pleasant in Kathmandu in spring and fall. Swayambhunath is most atmospheric in the morning (before 9am), when it hosts more pilgrims than tourists. If possible, visit on a Saturday, the only day Nepalis have off from work. This is the primary day of activity around the Harati and other shrines.

Festivals and Events

The two main festivals celebrated at Swayambhunath are Buddha Jayanti(in April or May) and Losar (in February or March). During these times, many pilgrims visit the temple and the monks create a lotus pattern on the stupa with saffron-colored paint. Also important is the month-long Gunla celebration (August or September) marking the end of the rainy season.



Friday, January 20, 2017

Hope For Life



  
People who are from rich background can't see these kinds of images in their daily life as they want to live their life in absence of this sort of atmosphere. Is it true? 

This is the first time that I saw monks were donating something (money) to the people who were waiting for someone to surprise them.


 Most of the time or usually, we offer things to the monks. Here, you can see totally opposite images. There are few continuous photos that I have taken on last trip to Birthplace of  Buddha, Lumbini. And they were my moving  images. I can see hapiness, love, offering, help, hope  and truly Buddha's path. These images reflect so many things of human beings and their feelings. How they live their daily life, monks and poor people, economically. 



Hope is being able to see that there is light despite all of the darkness. 
D. Tutu

“No one has ever become poor by giving.”
― Anne Frank
“No one is useless in this world who lightens the burdens of another.”
― Charles Dickens














Friday, December 16, 2016

Effortless

If you never have been poor, you don’t have to work like this, from cold dawn to dusk. What will you do when you see the underage kids working in brick industries? In order to have foods or to live somewhere, they work. These children come here in brick industry with their parents who work and make copious number of bricks. Yes, everyone needs a job/work for bread and butter. So, the people who are economically poor or from lower class family come to this place in every winter and live there in temporary huts for 5 to 6 months. And to resist from the cold, they out paddy straws on the roof which makes them warm. During this time, the children go to nearby school and some of them do not. I don’t have any ideas whether it is because of their economic crisis or are their parents illiterate? Instead they work all day with their parents and play with other kids who also do not attend the school. Few years ago, I visited this place as I walk around this brick industry area every year. I saw some underage girls were loading and carrying brick rubbles from the bunker to the other place. Fortunately, I got a chance to photograph them working. But, I couldn’t say anything about what they were doing. They were probably from inner terai which is very far from Kathmandu valley where there are many problems regarding all aspects. This year also, I visited around this place and did some photography stuffs. What I saw again was, there were still some underage kids working in brick industries. More will arrive soon. This cannot be denied to be honest. They subsist on poor quality foods and at the same time, some of them skip their meals…..you know, I have seen and heard this kind of story. Most of them work from early in the morning till dusk. There is story behind it, you know, the more bricks they make, the more will be their remuneration or money. Talking about their housing, they live in temporary huts where there is little space and cook foods and do other things in same room. This is little unbelievable for those who have not seen those huts in their life. Child labour in Nepal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The incidence of child labour in Nepal is relatively high compared with other countries in South Asia.[1] According to data from the Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) and other national surveys, Nepal has 34% of its children between the age of 5 and 14 who are involved in child labour, compared with 12% in the South Asia region as a whole. There are more female than male child labourers, and the situation is worse in rural than urban areas. In 2010, 44% of children age 5 to 14 were involved in child labour activities in the mid- and far-western regions of Nepal. According to the Nepal Labour Force Survey (NLFS) in 2008, 86.2% of children who were working were also studying and 13.8% of the children work only. A comparison over the years of child labour force participation rate across gender and residence is shown in Table 1 below: Table 1: Child Labour Force Participation Rates over time Year Total Area of Residence Area of Residence Total Male Female Urban Rural 1996[2] 41.7 36.1 47.6 23.0 43.4 2004[3] 32.0 30.2 32.5 12.4 33.9 2008[4] 33.9 30.2 37.8 14.4 36.7 2010[5] 44.0 41.0 48.0 31.0 46.0 Most children (60.5%) work up to 19 hours in 2008, while 32.2% worked 20 to 40 hours a week and 7.3% worked for more than 40 hours in a week. This trend is consistent in both rural and urban areas. In the 2003/2004 Nepal Living Standards Survey Statistical Report Volume II, it was found that children from the poorest consumption quintile has the highest percentage (18.7%) of children who worked for more than 40 hours a week as compared with the rest of the consumption quintile. According to Ray (2004),[6] child schooling and child labour force participation rates are negatively correlated as there is a trade-off between the two variables. Thus, an increase in labour hours would mean lesser time for schooling, and lesser work hours equals to an increase in time spent for schooling. Industries in which children work The NLFS also found that 88.7% of the working children are being employed in the agricultural sector. 1.4% of employed children work in the manufacturing sector, 0.3% works in construction sector, 1.6% is employed in wholesale and retail trade, 1.0% works in hotels and restaurants, 0.1% are working in private households with employed persons, and 6.9% work in other types of industries. Those who are working in the agricultural sector are mostly subsistence farmers. About 78.1% of these working children are engaged in subsistence farming. In 2013, the U.S. Department of Labor reported that children in Nepal are engaged "in agriculture and the worst forms of child labor in commercial sexual exploitation".[7] The report indicated other industrial activities like mining and stone breaking, weaving, and domestic service. In 2014, the Department's List of Goods Produced by Child Labor or Forced Labor reported bricks, carpets, embellished textiles and stones as goods produced in such labor conditions by both child laborers and forced workers. There are various INGOs and NGOs who are working and committed to securing social justice for children of Nepal. But it is going in slower rates and why? Some children of Nepal are forced into child labor by the poverty that obliges their parents to send them to work instead of attending school. To sum it up, this is just an example of one or some children who are forced into child labor, not just of Brick Industries. There are so many places, they are being forced into child labor, for instances, public buses, restaurants, private houses of high classes, textiles industries, agricultural sectors, construction places etc. Yes, they are vulnerable children: who they are, where they live, and what puts them at risk………… Do anybody help us, If yes………. when………? References: 1. United Nations Children's Fund, Retrieved 28 January 2012. 2. Central Department of Population Studies, Tribhuvan University. (1997). Child Labour Situation In Nepal p.34. Archived March 3, 2016, at the Wayback Machine., Retrieved 28 January 2012. 3. Government of Nepal, Central Bureau of Statistics, National Planning Commission Secretariat. (2004). Nepal Living Standard Survey 2003/04 Statistical Report Volume II p.53., Retrieved 18 January 2012. 4. "Government of Nepal, Central Bureau of Statistics, National Planning Commission Secretariat. (2009). Nepal Labour Force Survey 2008 Statistical Report p. 135. Archived February 14, 2012, at the Wayback Machine., Retrieved 28 January 2012. 5. Government of Nepal, Central Bureau of Statistics/The United Nations Children's Fund. (2011). Findings from the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2010 in the Mid-and Far-Western Regions, Nepal p.14., Retrieved 28 January 2012. 6. Ray, R. (2004). Child Labour and Child Schooling in South Asia: A Cross Country Study of their Determinants., Retrieved 18 January 2012. 7. Nepal, 2013 Findings on the Worst Forms of Child Labor