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Jokhang
Temple is the spiritual center of Tibet. Everyday pilgrims from every
corner of Tibet trek a long distance to the temple. Some of them even
progress prostrate by body length to the threshold of the temple. Pilgrims
fuel myriad of flickering butter lamps with yak butter, or honor their
deities with white scarves (Kha-btags or Hada) while murmuring sacred
mantras to show their pieties to the Buddha.
It lies at the center of the old Lhasa. Built
in 647 by Songtsen Gampo and his two foreign wives, it has a history of
more than 1,300. It was said that Nepal Princess Tritsun decided to build
a temple to house the Jowo Sakyamuni aged 12 brought by Chinese Princess
Wencheng. Princess Wencheng reckoned according to
Chinese astrology that the temple should
be built on the pool where the Jokhang now locates. She contended that
the pool was a witch's heart, so the temple should be built on the pool
to get rid of evils. The pool still exists under the temple. Then goats
were used as the main pack animals, as is the reason the city is called
Lhasa. The construction took 12 months. However it was originally small
and had been expanded to today's scale in later dynasties. When the Fifth
Dalai Lama took reign, large-scale reconstruction and renovation had been
done. The temple is a combination of Han, Tibetan and Nepalese architectural
techniques. Visitors will see sphinx and other weird and sacred sculptures.
The
temple keeps many invaluable cultural relics. The most famous and valuable
one is the Jowo Sakyamuni aged 12, which is circumambulated by thousands
of pilgrims day and night. On his sides, there are altars of Songtsen
Gampo and his two wives who introduced Buddhism into Tibet. The murals
in the main hall are also worth seeing, depicting the procession of Princess
Wencheng arriving in Tibet and the building of the Jokhang Temple while
other murals tell Jataka stories. Two thangkas imaging Yamantaka and Chakrasamvara
from the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) still remain in perfect condition. The
gold bumpa (a vase) upon which the reincarnations of Dalai Lama and Panchen
Lama are decided, musical instruments brought into Tibet by Wencheng and
other important stuffs are also kept here.
Every year, the Great Prayer Festival will
be held in the Temple. The rites of Dalai Lamas and Panchen Lamas' initiation
into lamahood are also held in the monastery.
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