Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Weaving in Rural India

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2RseegKbxiA

Click on the above link to learn about NGO near Rishikesh India that trains rural impoverished women to weave textiles in their homes.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Day 8 - Still in Dharmsala - growing roots in Mcleod Ganj

I saw an eagle from my room today, its call demanded my attention away form my computer. Unable to stay too far from my room because of the inevitable gastrointestinal challenges to my body, I stayed home today and enjoyed the peacefulness of my room with a view. I use my computer to organize my photos and my thoughts, as I've begun a routine of writing about each of my days here in this very special country. I am luckyto have this room. I have seen many of the other rooms around town and mine has an unobstructed view of the mountain range, and along with that a hill that the locals; human, goats and cows, traverse daily up and down the path between the stream below and the village above. I hear the sound of rushing water coming down the hill from the almost daily rains. The monsoon brings thunder that rolls across the mountain range like nothing I have ever heard before in my life. I could listen to it all day. The goats cry when they become too wet from the rains, birds sing, and  black crows often land in the large pine that stands directly in front of my room. The electricity goes out again and I am forced to put away my computer, especially a computer. In a place like this, it just doesn't seem right to be on a computer anyway. 

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Dharmshala

Dharmshala Sept 7 - Yesterday I met 27 year old Tibetan refugee, Kelsang, who showed me the proper way to circumambulate within the temple of the Dalai Lama. he taught me the mantra - Om Mani Padma Hum - explaining the karmic power of this most important mantra that is to be repeated continuously while walking and counting the beads of the mala. You can buy a mala anywhere, but it must be blessed by a monk or preferably by the Dalai Lama himself. The mala is made up of prayer beads, usually rosewood, and when blessed it holds the power to release those prayers for others and for the world. It also protects you- this is why Buddhist wear the malas either around the neck or on the wrist.
Kelsang wants to teach me more about Buddhism and his culture. He misses Tibet. It is very beautiful here but it is not his home. When he was a child his parents paid much money to have someone take him here. he crossed the Himalayan mountains to Nepal and then to on to Dharmshala where he and the other refugees were brought to the Dalai Lama who asked him if he would like to become a monk or if he would like to go to school and have an education. Kelsang chose an education. He is now on summer holiday and will return to Delhi next month to finish his final testing for his college degree. Then he plans to find work for the government of India. He would like to visit his homeland in Tibet but it is very difficult, may times dangerous and almost impossible. He says that you must apply for a visa, pay a lot of money and wait for a long time, many times never to receive the permission. Many Tibetans try to return because they miss their families and want to help them. If caught, they are often arrested, beaten, and imprisoned by the Chinese police.