Saturday, February 16, 2008

The Monasteries of Lijiang

We decided to spend our week at home seeing new sights around Lijiang and in essence this became the Monastery tour. Most monasteries were destroyed during the Cultural Revolution and are either in disarray or have been recently rebuilt. Some have just one Buddhist Monk, others have many. Some have been developed for tourism and others are tucked away and welcome a few stray visitors. Each one was different and it gave us a much better perspective of our "home" and our surroundings. One highlight was Fuguo Monastery. This monastery used to be the largest in the Lijiang Valley but was completely destroyed. It is now overseen by an 80 year old Monk whose favorite English expression is "Nice to Meet You". It sits high up on a hill which defeated us on bicycles months ago but which a minivan was able to negotiate. The monk warmly welcomes people into the second floor of his house with tea and incense and visitors' registers. It seems many people found their way to his home while biking up the hill in a rain storm. Li and Silas had their photos taken with this Lama and we all received blessings. Yufeng Monastery boasts a Camelia tree reported to have 10,000 blossoms in the spring, when we were there it was up to about 25. Wenbi Monastery was fascinating because we arrived during an active Buddhist ceremony. Li liked the Tibetan woman who took off her shoes to enter the temple and had on bright purple socks! There are many trails that offer hiking opportunities on the mountain and spectacular views of the Valley. Bai Ta Monastery is being built solely as a tourist destination (trap). We found Puji Monastery on our bicycles. After being told there wasn't much to see we hiked uphill on a well tramped goat trail and found a beautiful monastery with a rather taciturn 14 year old monk tending it. He was pretty adept at trying to extort money as well!

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