While planning our vacation there was a brief moment in which Susi and I considered not going to Tibet. To enter Tibet we would have to get special visas and a private tour guide for our group. This, when added to the train tickets to and from, and the cost of saying in youth hostels, was making this part of our journey far too expensive. Eventually, we bit the bullet and decided to join four of our friends, Paul, Wido, Georg and Magnus on the trip to Tibet.
I can now say without a doubt that Tibet was worth every cent. Never have I fallen in love with any place as quickly or as deeply as I fell in love with Lhasa. The city is surrounded with astonishing mountains. Making my way through the bustling market that surround Barkour street was a challenge unlike any I had previously experienced. No intersection was perpendicular. No street was strait. There was never a stretch longer than three feet that was devoid of a booth selling shoes, prayer flags, jewelry, yak butter, meditation devices, or clothes. Within ten minutes I could tell that this city was constantly in utter chaos. In these ten minutes I was captivated. My elation was so intense that I briefly entertained the idea of asking our tour guide Sonam for his hand in marriage so that I would be able to live forever in that marvelous city.
One might expect that after a few days in Lhasa the magic would fade. I would get used to the commotion, or perhaps I would get annoyed with how touristy Tibet was. However, throughout my weeklong stay in Tibet my elation grew exponentially. While I was initially enthralled by the juxtaposition of the commotion in the streets and the serenity of the scenery, in the end, I was most impressed by the authenticity of Tibet.
If you ever plan to visit Tibet I heavily suggest you visit in the winter. While it may be warmer and more comfortable in the summer, I am certain that you will find the monasteries filled with other tourists. Potala Palace will be abuzz with Americans, Germans, French, and Chinese people observing monuments. However, in the winter you will be surrounded by pilgrims, on their yearly journey to worship in the holiest sites of Buddhism. When I visited Lhasa the market streets were filled not with tourists, looking to buy souvenirs, but with pilgrims, buying jewelry and fruit to sacrifice in the monasteries. When someone bumped against me in the streets it was not a rushed American hurrying to his next sight. It was a Tibetan woman doing her prayer rituals through the streets.
Here I was able to see a culture and a lifestyle unlike anything I had ever seen before, and I fear unlike anything I will ever see again.
The pilgrims were unbelievably devoted and kind, and they seemed truly at peace in their religion. The most striking examples I saw of this devotion were in Potala Palace. This is the former home of the Dali Lama, and according to our guide Sonam, its name means levels of mercy. It is the central site of Lhasa, and also one of the most holy places for those living in Tibet. The Buddhists living in Lhasa make the two hour journey through the palace daily. Many of them are too old and fragile to make it up and down the massive staircases without a great deal of help. However, they do not seem to let this stop them. In contrast, there are many pilgrims in palace who only make the journey once a year, if that often. To me these two groups were indistinguishable, because everyone was totally immersed in reciting prayers and mantra to their gods.
As I walked through the palace which was filled with impressive statues, tombs, and monuments, I truly felt like I was witnessing something real and holy. In fact, in SARA monastery, one of the most holy sites in Buddhism, the sensation of Authenticity was so strong that I actually became uncomfortable. Those surrounding me were immersed in worship, and I felt like an intruder. I was merely a disruption to the otherwise concentrated and holy atmosphere.
After one week in Tibet I was left with a deep respect for Buddhism, as well as a longing to truly understand the beliefs and devotion of it.