Festivals
in Tibet
The
Tibetan year is based on a lunar calendar of twelve months
with the new year usually in February. Each month consists
of 30 days with the full moon on the 15th day and the new
moon on the 30th day.
The majority of Tibetan festivals are religious in nature.
The 8th, 15th and 30th of each month are important and most
monasteries will have offering ceremonies – tshok
for the Medicine Buddha, Amitabha and Sakyamuni respectively
and on the 25th day offerings are made to the dakinis.
On the 10th day of every month Nyingmapa sects celebrate
Guru Rinpoche days.
Losar: Tibetan New Year
- Feb. 8 2005
The largest and most popular non-religious festival of the
year. Losar is primarily family oriented, celebrated at
home and with friends eating special food and drinking plenty
of chang. In Lhasa pilgrims throng to the Jokhang on the
first day of the new year bringing offerings of butter and
juniper to the great incense kilns around the Barkhor. Everyone
dresses in their best and parades around the Barkhor. On
the third day pilgrims climb into the hills around Lhasa
to light fires of juniper and in town small incense fires
burn everywhere and new prayer flags are hung.
Monlam Chenmo: The Great Prayer
Festival
Inaugurated in 1409 by Tsongkhapa to celebrate the miracles
performed by the Buddha at Sravasti, Monam Chenlo is the
greatest ritual event of the year. In the past up to 20,000
monks would crowd into Lhasa for the festival. Monlam Chenmo
has been discontinued in Lhasa, following shooting during
the 1988 celebrations. It is still celebrated in Amdo.
Chotrül Düchen:
The Butter Sculpture Festival
The first full moon of the year is one of the four great
annual festivals (düchen) celebrating events in the
life of Sakyamuni Buddha. This festival celebrates the miracle
of Sravasti, when he subdued the heretics and taught the
dharma. Traditionally great sculptures were created from
yak butter and displayed around the Barkhor for the day
and night, being removed just before dawn). Although the
festival no longer occurs in Lhasa pilgrims still come to
perform kora for the first full moon of the year.
Jampa Dendren: Invitation
to the Future Buddha
One of the last events of Monlam Chenmo is an offering to
the Future Buddha requesting his speedy arrival on earth.
A silver image of Jampa (Maitreya), which was unveiled once
a year, was carried around the Barkhor. The State Oracle
would go into a trance and offer a katak to the statue.
Cham Dances at Tsurphu
On the following day a large banner of Sakyamuni Buddha
is displayed.
Saga Dawa: Buddha’s
Enlightenment and Parinirvana – May
23 2005
The Saga Dawa full moon is one of the four düchen and
celebrates the Buddha’s attainment of enlightenment
and his passing into nirvana on his death. Thousands of
pilgrims crowd into the Jokhang and the Lingkor circumambulation
route around Lhasa has a steady flow of worshippers throughout
the day. Picnics are popular, especially near the Lukhang
behind the Potala. Many other pilgrimages take place throughout
Tibet on this day, one of the most important is the kora
of Mount Kailash preceeded by the raising of a new prayer
flag covered pole at Tarboche. The straightness of this
pole indicates the fortune of the coming year.
Gyantse Horse-Racing Festival
–
The largest annual festival in Gyantse with horse-racing,
yak races and cham dancing. An enormous fourteenth century
appliqué thangka is hung one morning at sunrise from
the giant thangka wall at the back of the monastic enclosure.
The festival also marks the anniversary of the 1904 battle
with Colonel Younghusband’s invadingBritish troops.
Tashilhunpo Thangka Festival
–
The huge appliqué thangkas of the Buddhas of the
Three Eras are displayed on three consecutive days and cham
dances take place in the lower courtyard.
Dzamling Chisang: The Universal
Incense Offering –
Commemorates Guru Rinpoche (Padmasambhava) subduing the
obstructive deities and spirits of Tibet and converting
them into protectors of Buddhism in preparation for the
founding of Samye. Cham dances are held at Samye and incense
is burned throughout Tibet.
Drukwa Tsezhi or Chokor Düchen
–
Celebrates the Buddha ‘Turning the Wheel of Dharma’
by teaching his first sermon in the deer park at Sarnath
after attaining enlightenment. This is one of the four düchen
and is a day of pilgrimage. In Lhasa, a large progression
of pilgrims journeys from Phabongkha Monastery to Sera Tse
hermitage an on to the Dode Valley. Others climb the holy
mountain behind Drepung to make offerings of incense and
prayer flags on the summit. A giant thangka is displayed
at Ganden.
Drepung Thangka Festival
–
The huge thangka is displayed for a few hours in the early
morning and marks the start of Shöton. After the thangka
comes down opera performances start in the main courtyard.
Pilgrims make the pilgrimage to Sera and around midday the
thankga at Sera is displayed.
Shöton: The Yoghurt (or
Opera) Festival –
The Norbulingka is the site of week-long picnics. The food
and drink is accompanied by Ache Lhamo (Tibetan opera) performances
in the gardens.
Chabshuk: The Bathing Festival
– end of the Seventh Month to middle of Eighth Month
Tibetans camp beside rivers and lakes and perform ritual
bathing for purity and longevity in this thanksgiving festival.
The festival begins when the constellation Pleides rises
at dawn above Mindruk Tsari (Lhasa’s highest peak),
converting water into karchu, a long-life ‘star-water’
ambrosia.
Ongkor: The Harvest Festival
–
Throughout Tibet farmers dress in their finest clothing
and carry prayer texts in processions around the perimeter
of their fields and make incense offerings for a good harvest.
The day ends with drinking, dancing and general merriment.
Cham Dances at Tashilhunpo
–
Traditional cham dances are performed in the main courtyard.
Lhabab Düchen: The God’s
Descending Festival –
One of the four major Düchen festivals which celebrates
Sakyamuni Buddha’s descent back to earth from the
Trayastrimsha Heaven where he had spent three months teaching
Buddhism to his mother and the gods.
Pelhe Ritro: The Pelden Lhamo
Feast – 15th day of the Tenth Month
A celebration of the protectress Pelden Lhamo. Special prayer
ceremonies are held at the Jokhang and a statue of the deity,
which remains covered through the rest of the year, is carried
in procession around the Barkhor.
Ganden Ngamcho: The Festival
of Lights – 25th day of the Tenth
Month
Lamps and candles are lit on the rooftops of monasteries
and homes to celebrate the death and entry onto nirvana
of Tsongkhapa.
Banishing of the Evil Spirits
– 30th day of the Twelfth Month
A day for exorcising the evils of the old year so that the
new year will begin on a good note. Homes are cleaned and
bad spirits chased out to leave room for the benevolent
ones. Cham dances are held on the 29th day at Tashilhunpo
and Tsurphu and on the 30th a giant thangka displaying the
protectors Gompo and Pelden Lhamo is unfurled at Tsurphu.