Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Monks, families gather for Bhutan holiday

-

Thousands of Bhutanese dressed in traditional clothes and carrying their children flocked to monasteries on the weekend to commemorate the death of Ngawang Namgyal, credited with unifying the remote Himalayan nation.

Bhutan holds a national holiday every year to honour the Tibetan Buddhist lama, who is said to have brought together the region's various warring fiefdoms for the first time before his death in 1651.

At the small Simtokha Dzong monastery near the capital Thimphu, young, maroon-robed monks unfurled a giant, colourful tapestry depicting Namgyal on Saturday.

Inside in the monastery, which Namgyal built in 1629, about 60 monks seated on cushions chanted during a prayer ceremony that included bells, flutes, drums, traditional trumpets and horns.

Mothers with children strapped to their backs and the elderly gathered from early morning to pay their respects and receive blessings from the monks.

Most of the women wore traditional and brightly coloured Kira or ankle-length dresses and the men Gho, a knee-length robe, along with scarves.

Many donated money or brought food offerings in this deeply religious country.

Britain's Prince William and his wife Kate met with Bhutan's king and queen during a two-day visit to the kingdom that ended on Friday.

Bhutan, famously the last country to get television, is home to just 750,000 people.

It held its first elections in 2008 and is known for pursuing a unique economic development model of "Gross National Happiness", which aims to balance spiritual and material wealth.

Thousands of Bhutanese dressed in traditional clothes and carrying their children flocked to monasteries on the weekend to commemorate the death of Ngawang Namgyal, credited with unifying the remote Himalayan nation.

Bhutan holds a national holiday every year to honour the Tibetan Buddhist lama, who is said to have brought together the region’s various warring fiefdoms for the first time before his death in 1651.

At the small Simtokha Dzong monastery near the capital Thimphu, young, maroon-robed monks unfurled a giant, colourful tapestry depicting Namgyal on Saturday.

Inside in the monastery, which Namgyal built in 1629, about 60 monks seated on cushions chanted during a prayer ceremony that included bells, flutes, drums, traditional trumpets and horns.

Mothers with children strapped to their backs and the elderly gathered from early morning to pay their respects and receive blessings from the monks.

Most of the women wore traditional and brightly coloured Kira or ankle-length dresses and the men Gho, a knee-length robe, along with scarves.

Many donated money or brought food offerings in this deeply religious country.

Britain’s Prince William and his wife Kate met with Bhutan’s king and queen during a two-day visit to the kingdom that ended on Friday.

Bhutan, famously the last country to get television, is home to just 750,000 people.

It held its first elections in 2008 and is known for pursuing a unique economic development model of “Gross National Happiness”, which aims to balance spiritual and material wealth.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Business

There’s a lot to like about nanophotonic computing.

Tech & Science

Canada produces promising digital health tools, but a new report says procurement barriers and fragmented systems hold them back from scaling

Tech & Science

AI-designed metamachines developed, which are capable of self-repair

Entertainment

Kiernan Fagan chatted about his theatrical directorial debut with his new short film "Echoes of the Snow."