必威体育

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Tibetan custom
Posted: March-18-2009Adjust font size:

Presenting Hada

Present hada is a common practice among the Tibetan people to express their best wishes on many occasions, such as wedding ceremonies, festivals, visiting the elders and the betters, and entertaining guests. The white hada, a long narrow scarf made of silk, embodies purity and good fortune.

Present hada is a common practice among the Tibetan people to express their best wishes. (Xinhua Photo)

Proposing a Toast and Tea

Proposing a Toast and Tea When you come to a Tibetan family, the host will propose a toast, usually barley wine. You should sip three times and then drink up. To entertain guests with tea is a daily etiquette. The guest has not to drink until the host presents the tea to you.

Norbu Cering (L) takes a tea break with other villagers in a newly harvested field at a village in Quxu County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, Aug. 12, 2008. It is now the harvest season of winter wheat and coleseed along the Yarlung Zangbo River and in the Lhasa River valley in the region.

Norbu Cering (L) takes a tea break with other villagers in a newly harvested field at a village in Quxu County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, Aug. 12, 2008. It is now the harvest season of winter wheat and coleseed along the Yarlung Zangbo River and in the Lhasa River valley in the region.(Xinhua Photo)

Greetings

Greetings don't forget to add "la" after saying hello to the Tibetan people to show respect. Make Way to others. Try not to make any sounds while eating and drinking.

Sky Burials

Sky burial is a common form in Tibet. There are many prohibitions. Strangers are not allowed to attend the ceremony. Visitors should respect this custom and keep away from such occasions.

Photo by Yvon Haze (France)
Debating Buddhist scriptures, Sera Monastery

Tibetan Buddhism

Also known as the Lamaism, the Tibetan Buddhism was introduced to Tibet from the mainland and India in the seventh century. The Tibetan Buddhism consists of four major sects, the Ge-lug-pa (Yellow) Sect, the Nying-ma-pa (Red) Sec, the Saturday-kya-pa (Variegated) Sect, and the Ka-gyu-pa (White) Sect.

Pilgrimage

The immediate motivations of pilgrimage are many, but for the ordinary Tibetan it amounts to a means of accumulating merit or good luck. The lay practitioner might go on pilgrimage in the hope of winning a better rebirth, cure an illness, and end a spate of bad luck or simply because of a vow to take a pilgrimage if a bodhisattva granted a wish.

In Tibet there are countless sacred destinations, ranging from lakes and mountains to monasteries and caves that once served as meditation retreats for important yogin. Specific pilgrimages are often proscribed for specific ills; certain mountains for example expiate certain sins. A circumambulation of Mt. Kailash offers the possibility of liberation within three lifetimes, while a circuit of Lake Manasarovar can result in spontaneous Buddha hood.

Source: China DailyEditor: Lydia
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