religions
Article
Where the Heroes and Sky-Goers Gather: A Study of
the Saurat.a Pilgrimage
Paul B. Donnelly
Department of Comparative Cultural Studies, Northern Arizona University, Box 6031, Flagstaff, AZ 86011, USA;
Paul.Donnelly@nau.edu
Received: 3 July 2017; Accepted: 16 August 2017; Published: 21 August 2017
Abstract: Tibetan and Himālayan Buddhist doctrine and meditative traditions have been extensively
studied and are well-known even to non-scholars, but pilgrimage and other non-elite practices
have received far less attention. Pilgrimage is one of the most important practices for Tibetan and
Himālayan Buddhists, whether traditional scholars, ordinary monks, lay yogis, or Buddhist laypeople.
Scholarship on pilgrimage has increased significantly since the 1990s, and has tended to focus on
territories within the political boundaries of the Tibetan provinces of the People’s Republic of China.
This study looks at a pilgrimage in what was once the far western end of the Tibetan empire, but is
now within the political boundaries of India. Being outside of the People’s Republic of China, this
pilgrimage escaped the disruption of such practices that occurred within the PRC during the Cultural
Revolution and after. Having interviewed people in the region, and performed the pilgrimage myself,
this study shows that this pilgrimage possesses features common to Tibetan pilgrimage to sites of
tantric power, but also has its own unique qualities. This study provides new data that contributes to
the growing body of knowledge of Tibetan pilgrimage and to our understanding of such practices
among the Buddhists of Himālayan India.
Keywords: pilgrimage; Tibetan Buddhism; Himālayan Buddhism; tantra
1. Introduction
In the opening of his book Pilgrimage in Tibet, Alex McKay (McKay 1998, p. 1) asserts that
pilgrimage is a core element of religious practice in the Himālayan cultural world. McKay concludes,
that “through an examination of pilgrimage in Tibet we can, therefore, gain great insight into a wide
variety of aspects of Tibetan history, culture, and identity, as well as illuminating wider fields and
disciplines of study.” The doctrinal and meditative traditions of Himālayan Buddhism have been
available for study in the west largely through the cooperation of the monastic and scholarly elite
members of these traditions. Information about the popular practices that constitute the religious
lives of most Himālayan people, whether monastic or lay, has been far less available or sought.
Such practices, and the underlying worldview, are found throughout the Himālayan regions and form
the basis of a unifying culture across them, with pilgrimage being one of the most central and pervasive.
The scholarly study of Tibetan pilgrimage is a relatively new field of inquiry. A few scholars
such as Guiseppe Tucci (e.g., Tucci 1988) and Robert Ekvall (e.g., Ekvall and Downs 1987), were
working before the Chinese takeover of Tibet, but after 1959 scholarly access to Tibetan pilgrimage
practices was severely restricted. Beginning in the mid–1980s, the PRC began to relax restrictions on
Tibetan religious practices, and scholars were able to observe pilgrimages, though the question of how
restricted or transformed these practices were since the pre-Chinese period now needed to be taken
into consideration. The mid to late 1990s were a landmark period for scholarship on Tibetan pilgrimage.
In 1994–1995 Tibet Journal published four special editions on sacred space in Tibetan cultural regions.
The articles were subsequently published in 1999 as, Sacred Spaces and Powerful Places in Tibetan Culture:
Religions 2017, 8, 157; doi:10.3390/rel8080157
www.mdpi.com/journal/religions
Religions 2017, 8, 157
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A Collection of Essays (Huber 1999a). Mandala and Landscape (Ramble 2007a), building on the foundation
established by Tucci’s Theory and Practice of Man.d.ala (Tucci 1971), contains a wide-ranging set of articles
concentrating on Tibet, but also includes articles on India, China and Japan. The same year, another
important volume, Pilgrimage in Tibet (McKay 1998), collected papers presented at the 1996 conference
of the Institute for Asian Studies in Leiden. In 1999, Toni Huber published the first book-length study
of a Tibetan pilgrimage, the Tsari pilgrimage in southeast Tibet (Huber 1999b).1
Himālayan people living outside the borders of Tibet have the same reverence for pilgrimage, and
in these regions they have not encountered the disruptions to religious observances as Tibetans have
since the occupation and repression by the government of the People’s Republic of China. Compared to
studies of Tibetan pilgrimage within the modern political boundaries of the People’s Republic of China,
pilgrimages in culturally Tibetan areas of India and other Himālayan countries (Bhutan, Nepal and
Sikkim) have received relatively little attention. The pilgrimage under consideration here is located on
the Indian side of the Indo-Chinese border, so its study offers a glimpse into the practice of Tibetan
pilgrimage that has not been interrupted by outside forces and provides a case study of pilgrimage
in western Tibet that will contribute to the broader knowledge of the practice of pilgrimage across
the Tibetan cultural areas. Having talked to people in Nako village over the past decade, performed
the pilgrimage with two well-informed pilgrims,2 and read and translated the pilgrimage guidebook
(gnas yig) (see Appendix A), it will be shown that this Himālayan Buddhist pilgrimage is consistent
with many of the features of other Tibetan pilgrimages, but that there are some unique characteristics
as well.
2. Pilgrimage in the Tibetan Cultural Regions
Like its usage in other religions, “pilgrimage” in Tibet refers to a journey to a place that is
regarded as sacred. In the Tibetan language, the terms used for this ritual journey are nékor (gnas skor)
or néjel (gnas mjal), meaning to go around (skor) or encounter/meet (mjal) a né or sacred place (gnas).
Circumambulation as a religious practice can of course be traced to earlier Indian Buddhist practices
directed toward stupas and other relics of the Buddha. Né means simply “place” but the term carries
the implicit meaning of being a place where sacred power dwells.3 The sacredness of a né may arise
from a number of different sources, including that of autochthonous deities of place, the physical
hierophany of high tantric deities, the residual power of a great ancient Buddhist master, or even
a living Buddhist master. A né may also be understood differently across time, or between different
groups, e.g., between Buddhists and Bön-pos.
The sources of this power can be understood in a number of ways, which may overlap.
Most broadly, scholars have repeatedly observed that Tibetans understand the natural world as
teeming with powers, both benign and hostile, with which humans have to interact in myriad ways.
From subterranean water spirits (klu), to local terrestrial spirits (sa bdag, gzhi bdag), to mountains
identified with territorial gods (yul lha), the Tibetan landscape is alive with awesome presences, with
which humans must cohabit, to their benefit or peril. Territorial gods and their mountains are important
recipients of pilgrimage, either being identified with a high Buddhist deity or simply continuing to
exist as the territorial god alongside the later Buddhist understanding of the site. Spirits of this sort are
1
2
3
For a comprehensive bibliography on Tibetan pilgrimage, see Buffetrille’s entry on Oxford Bibliographies online
(Buffetrille 2013).
I have visited Nako village yearly since 1996 as part of a study abroad trip that I lead to Himachal Pradesh. My interest in and
knowledge of the Saurat.a pilgrimage slowly grew over this period. When I was eligible for sabbatical, this project was my
first choice for further study. My principal informants were Mrs. Chimed Dolma; Mr. Arjun Negi; Mr. Chewang Dorjé Negi,
President of the Hangrang Buddhist Association; Mr. Shanta Kumar Negi, former Head of the Nako Youth Club; and
Lama Ngawang Negi, a village authority on the pilgrimage, and the transcriber of the pilgrimage guide. The latter two
were my guides for the pilgrimage that I did on 12–13 September 2014.
For a discussion of this term and its implications, see “Putting the Gnas Back into Gnas-skor: Rethinking Tibetan Pilgrimage
Practice”, in (Huber 1999a, pp. 79–80).
Religions 2017, 8, 157
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sensitive to impurity or insult, and may inflict harm upon the offender. More dangerous are numerous
classes of demons, male and female, who are also quick to harm and are by nature malevolent.
Above these local spiritual presences are indigenous Tibetan deities who were subdued by the
legendary tantric Buddhist master Padmasambhava or Guru Rinpoché, in the 8th century. At first
inimical to the new religion, these warrior gods, mostly of a class of deity known as the “haughty ones”
(dregs pa), were tamed by Padmasambhava and bound by oaths to protect Buddhism. These gods
were integrated into the Tibetan Buddhist pantheon as dharma protectors. While serving the cause of
religion, these gods remain worldly protectors (‘jig rten pa’i srung ma), i.e., they are not awakened, and
so must be approached with caution and respect, constantly being reminded of their vows to protect
Buddhism. Another class, the supermundane protectors (‘jig rten las ‘das pa’i srung ma), are understood
to be above samsaric limitations and concerns, and are often said to be manifestations of Buddhas or
Bodhisattvas. In some cases, these higher protectors are regarded as tantric meditational deities, or
yidam (yi dam), worthy of being objects of refuge, and more likely to be the source of power of a né.
These deities were brought to Tibet from India as Buddhism was propagated in Tibet in the 8th
century and then again in the 11th century. Vajrayāna meditative praxis centers on the visualization of
tantric deities with their retinues in their mandala palaces. The imposition of this Vajrayāna conception
transformed indigenous nés along Buddhist lines in a process that has been called the “mandalisation”
of Tibetan sacred sites, and is part of a broader “Buddhacisation” of Tibetan religion. While these
processes largely overwrote indigenous or Bön narratives of sacred sites, the process was not complete
in all cases, with some sites being understood as Buddhist, Bön, or folk religion.4
The foremost deity and mandala that was imposed on Tibetan sacred sites was Denchok Khorlo
5
Dompa (bde mchog ‘khor lo sdom pa, Sanskrit: Cakrasam
. vara), hereafter referred to as Khorlo Dompa.
Khorlo Dompa is central to the practice of the Sakya (sa skya), Kagyü (bka’ brgyud), and Geluk (dge lugs)
sects, and it is particularly important to the Drukpa (‘brug pa) subsect of the Kagyü, which was
instrumental in establishing some of the major pilgrimage sites and routes, including the pilgrimage
discussed here. The Khorlo Dompa Tantra is a yoginı̄ tantra, a class of tantric text/teaching that
emphasizes goddesses and transgressive sexual and mortuary imagery. In the mandala, the central
deity couple, Khorlo Dompa and Dorjé Pakmo (rdo rje phag mo, Sanskri: Vajravārāhı̄), ecstatically
dancing in sexual union in their palace, fanged, and bedecked in skulls, are surrounded by wrathful
goddesses called khandromas, or “sky-goers.” (mkha’ ‘gro ma, Sanskrit: d.ākinı̄). The presence of the
khandromas figures prominently at numerous nés, protecting the sites, and if appeased, bestowing
blessings and empowerments.
Another important aspect of this tantra is its mapping of twenty-four pilgrimage sites (pı̄tha-s),
corresponding to the parts of the deity’s adamantine body or that of the tantric yogi, onto the Indian
subcontinent. The concept of a network of pı̄t.has first arose in Śaiva and Śākta circles—where the
sites were places empowered by the presence of Śakti and Śiva, and were destinations for pilgrims
and yogis. This idea and some of the very same sites were then imported into Vajrayāna Buddhism.
The Sanskrit term pı̄t.ha was translated into Tibetan as né, homologizing the indigenous concept with
the new Vajrayāna one. These sites would be remapped onto the Tibetan landscape, subjugating and
sacralizing the Land of Snows with the power and authority of the Khorlo Dompa tantra, its practices,
and its advanced practitioners.
A useful indigenous concept for the understanding of the power of a né, and its transformative
effect on the pilgrim is that of jinlap (byin rlabs) often translated as “blessing,” though here perhaps
4
5
See Katia Buffetrille, “Reflections on Pilgrimages to Sacred Mountains, Lakes and Caves”, in Pilgrimage in Tibet, in
(McKay 1998, pp. 18–34). For a discussion of the contested status of Tisé between Bönpos and Buddhists, see Charles Ramble,
“The Politics of Sacred Space in Bon and Tibetan Popular Tradition,” in (Huber 1999a, pp. 3–33).
The Tibetan translation of the Sanskrit includes two different readings of the name Cakrasam
. vara. Though it is common
in Tibetan Buddhist scholarship to privilege Sanskrit, we will prefer Tibetan names and terms. For a discussion of the
complexities of this name, see David Gray’s discussion (Gray 2007, pp. 35–37).
Religions 2017, 8, 157
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“empowerment” is a better term. The early Tibetan kings were said to possess jin, “splendor” or “glory,”
which flooded the landscape, the state, and its inhabitants. In Buddhism, the concept developed early
that the charisma and power of the Buddha was transformative. After his death, his mortal remains,
regarded as powerful relics, were interred in large reliquaries (stūpa), which became pilgrimage sites at
the major places associated with his life. The relics of other great masters came to possess a similar
power, and the stūpas housing them were venerated across the Buddhist world. In the Vajrayāna
context, the power of Khorlo Dompa and his mandala subdue the spot as a Buddhist site and empower
the environment and pilgrims who come there.
3. Benefits of Performing the Pilgrimage
What one gains from the performance of pilgrimage depends on the relative spiritual status of
the pilgrim. Pilgrimage is a much more common practice than the sophisticated Vajrayāna forms of
meditation practiced by the religious elite, but it would be a mistake to equate pilgrimage exclusively
with ordinary practitioners. Pilgrimage guidebooks often describe these two categories of people as
“ordinary people” (so skye bo) and “excellent” or “holy people” (skye bo dam pa). It is important to
note here that the different experiences to be had by the relatively more or less advanced practitioners
does not necessarily correlate to a difference between monks and lay people. Throughout the Tibetan
literature about pilgrimage, it is assumed that advanced yogis have much to gain from travelling
to a né and that their experience of them will be more profound than those of the uncultivated lay
person or monk. Tibetan conceptions of the pı̄t.has of the Khorlo Dompa corpus always allowed for an
interiorized understanding, with the pı̄t.has being present in the body of the yogi. The yogi could “visit”
these sites in his or her own body, rendering the travel to the actual places (whether understood to be
in India or elsewhere) unnecessary. Nonetheless, yogis have always visited such sites. Their presence
at them aided their progress in advanced meditation, and for the greatest of them, their realizations
contributed to the power of the place. The power of Khorlo Dompa mandala, the charismatic power of
realized masters and the presence of the khandromas all contribute to the yogi’s accelerated progress
along the path to realization.
For the less-advanced lay person or monk, the benefits sought from visiting a né tend to be
more mundane. Despite the orthodox Buddhist discourse of karma as exclusively determining one’s
good or bad fortunes, the indigenous Tibetan conceptions of evil (sdig pa) and pollution (grib) are
often employed when discussing the benefits of pilgrimage. Evil here refers to the results of moral
transgressions, while pollution refers to an embodied negativity that results from angering various
kinds of supernatural beings, including transgression of social norms or bodily substances. Many kinds
of ritual action can mitigate or remove evil and pollution, but pilgrimage is said to specifically do so
by the often-arduous physical work of the pilgrim’s body and by the general transformative effect
of contact with the empowered landscape and its empowered substances, such as soil, rocks, plants,
and water.6
4. Location of the Research
The pilgrimage discussed here is in the Hangrang region of the Kinnaur district in the Indian
state of Himachal Pradesh (Figure 1). The Hangrang region comprises the Kinnaur district’s portion
of the Spiti valley. Hangrang contains only eight villages at different elevations above the Spiti river.
Moving north and west along NH 22, the Spiti river intersects the Sutluj coming in from Tibet to the
East at Khab. At Khab bridge, the river is at an altitude of approximately 8800 feet. From here the
road cuts through a deep canyon before moving up, via switchbacks to a higher plane along the river.
From the main road, Nako is accessed via a seven-kilometer spur of the road that leads up to the village
and its sister village, Maling. Nako sits at just under 12,000 feet and is the highest village in Hangrang.
6
See Huber’s discussion (Huber 1999b, pp. 14–20) of the general benefits of pilgrimage.
Religions 2017, 8, 157
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Hangrang, Lahaul and Spiti were closed to tourism from 1947 until 1992, and foreign visitors still must
obtain a permit to visit, with limits on how long one can stay in the region.
Figure 1. Map of Himachal Pradesh and surrounding areas.
Along with Lahaul and Spiti, the neighboring regions to the north and west, Hangrang played
an important part in the 2nd propagation of Buddhism into Tibet from India.7 Though Buddhism
had been established in Tibet in the eighth
century,
at the instigation of the early Tibetan kings and in
Śā
ṣ
association with the scholar-monk Śāntaraks.ita and the siddha Padmasambhava, it was regarded by the
pious king of the western Tibetan kingdom of Gugé, Yeshé Ö (ye shes od, 959–1036), as having become
corrupt and in need of reform. The King invited the temple-builder and translator Rinchen Zangpo
(rin chen bzangs po, 958–1055) to Tibet to purify Buddhism by establishing a translation academy to
translate texts from Sanskrit in Tibetan to serve as the basis of an orthodoxy and by re-establishing
monastic Buddhism in Tibet.
The monastic complex in Nako is locally considered to be one of the 108 monasteries founded by
Rinchen Zangpo, though modern scholarship attributes the compound to shortly after the death of
Rinchen Zangpo,8 and it is one of the major features of the village’s religious identity and practice.
This monastic complex has received a significant amount of art historical attention, and
a multi-year preservation/restoration project based at the University of Vienna. The Nako Preservation
Project website is an invaluable resource on the Nako monastic complex.9 There has been relatively
little attention on the village’s other sites, or the religious lives of its inhabitants. The published
records of Tucci’s expeditions to the area between 1933 and 1939 (Tucci 1988) are significant sources of
knowledge about Nako, but here again the emphasis was on the monuments rather than what people
in Nako had to say about their own religious lives or any documentation of what people were doing.
The monastic complex is now more museum than monastery. I was told that this was at least partially
7
8
9
Though as Davidson (Davidson 2003) has pointed out, the emphasis on the western re-introduction, at least partially
a product of Geluk concern to link itself and its purity to that of the Kadam, tend to downplay the equally crucial
reestablishment that came from the monks returned from the east.
See, for example, Laxman S. Thakur (Thakur 1996).
http://www.univie.ac.at/fsp-programm/wmf/ (Klimburg-Salter 2002).
Religions 2017, 8, 157
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because of people stealing the bits of gold from the paintings over the years had caused the village
to guard the structures more carefully. Currently, two young monks from the Drukpa monastery at
Bhuntar are posted at the ancient monastery. I was told by one of them that he and the other monk
had just arrived recently and would have to stay for a year, after which time someone new would
be sent. The young monk’s knowledge of the images and paintings in the complex was rudimentary,
which is not terribly surprising, but more interestingly, he either did not know, or did not like the
idea, that one of the four buildings was the shrine to the mountain deity Riwo Purgyel.10 There is
a shrine dedicated to the Dharma Protectors, but daily rituals are done in the old assembly hall on
a daily basis, and the space was still used from time to time for special occasions. A new assembly hall
stands nearby, as does the residence constructed for the Dalai Lama, both of which were consecrated
by the Dalai Lama in 2006. The residence is only used for the Dalai Lama, though the other quarters
belong to Lochen Rinpoche, who lives in the region and is the current incarnation of Rinchen Zangpo.
The sectarian affiliation of the pilgrimage, consistent with much of the region, is with the Drukpa sect.11
5. The Druk Lineage and the Opening of the Saurat.a Né
The Druk (‘brug) lineage is one of the sub-sects of the Marpa Kagyu (mar pa bka’ ‘gyur). It was
established by Tsangpa Gyaré Yeshé Dorjé (gtsang pa rgya ras ye shes rdo rje, 1161–1211), who was one
of the disciples of Pakmodrupa Dorjé Gyelpo (phag mo gru pa rdo rje rgyal po, 1110–1170). The name
Drukpa (‘brug pa) came from a vision had by Tsangpa Gyaré in which he saw nine dragons (‘drug) fly up
from the earth into the sky when he was on pilgrimage. Tsangpa Gyaré’s lineage flows down from the
great systematizer of Kagyu, Gampopa Sonam Rinchen (sgam po pa bsod nam rin chen, 1070–1153), who
united the more ecstatic siddha lineage that he received from Tibet’s great yogi Milarepa (mi la ras pa,
1040–1123) with that of the monastic Kadam tradition. However, Tsangpa Gyaré and the Druk lineage
emphasized the siddha-based tantric teachings and practices that are traced to Milarepa’s second great
disciple, Rechungpa Dorje Drakpa (1085–1161). This connection flows through Lingrepa Pema Dorje
(gling ras pa padma rdo rje, 1128–1188) who was a married tantric practitioner, and more immediately in
the form of a cycle of treasure texts concealed by Rechungpa that was discovered by Tsangpa Gyaré.
Tsangpa Gyaré’s disciple Götsangpa Gönpo Dorje (rgod tshang pa mgon po rdo rje, 1189–1258) was
a traveling musician and actor in his youth. He eventually became disillusioned with worldly life and
sought out Buddhist teachings. Götsangpa spent many years in retreat and also traveled extensively
to Buddhist sacred sites on the Tibetan plateau, such as Mount Kailash, where he established the
definitive circumambulation route. He established sites in Lahaul, and travelled down to the Indian
plains, most notably to Jalandhara, which is one of the twenty-four sacred sites associated with the
Cakrasamvara tradition, and which is also regarded as a Śākta pı̄t.ha.
A né is considered to be hidden or closed until a spiritually advanced being makes it available for
himself and others as a site for pilgrimage and practice. The opener of the Saurat.a né was a disciple of
Götsangpa—Chöjé Shelgompa (chos rje shel sgam pa).12 Shelgompa was sent to Nako by his teacher to
open this né, which the latter identified as one of the twenty-four places associated with Cakrasam
. vara.
When Chöjé Shelgompa came to the region, people were unaware of the né and their proximity to
it. The story goes that when Chöjé Shelgompa first came to the region, he asked what the name
of the place was. The answer was “Embankment Mountain” (ri rags), but Shelgompa corrected the
person, “no, this place is “the seat of the né” (gnas gdan) Continuing on to the village of Maling, he
met an elderly woman, whom he asked, “What is the name of this place? She gave the name as
10
11
12
Tucci (Tucci 1988, p. 144) says that his informants said that the structure was dedicated to the mountain deity.
Klimburg-Salter (Klimburg-Salter 1990, p. 149) says that in Tucci’s time Nako was predominantly Nyingma, but Tucci’s own
observations (Tucci 1988, p. 19, and map) indicated that Nako and the surrounding area were primarily Drukpa Kagyü.
The paintings in the two mani wheel temples in Nako village are both adorned with images of Drukpa masters, and deities
favored by the Drukpa Kagyü sect.
The transliteration here and throughout reflects the pronunciation of the Tibetan-speaking people of this region.
Religions 2017, 8, 157
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Maling, but again he corrected his informant, saying “No, it isn’t Maling, it is the outer fringe of the
né” (gnas gling).”13 Reaching the village of Nako, the pattern continued, with Shelgompa correcting
his informant, “No, it isn’t Nako, it’s “the doorway to the né” (gnas sgo). He explains the auspicious
location saying, “At the top is the eastern mountain, the lower part is the western mountain, in the
front is the turquoise lake. At the rear is the constructed temple,” the latter presumably referring to the
11th century structure attributed to Rinchen Zangpo.
6. The Saurat.a Nékor
The name Saurat.a is a Tibetan pronunciation/spelling of Saurās.t.ra, which is one of the twenty-four
pilgrimage sites named in the Cakrasam
. vara corpus. The pilgrimage guide calls the né Saurat.a, but
among the inhabitants of Nako village, it is more commonly referred to Somang. This is likely to be
due to Somang being the name of the incarnate lama who owns the site, and leads the yearly group
pilgrimage there.14 Beginning in the village (Figure 2), the path climbs the ridge of the mountains to
the east of the lake to a pass where it crosses to the other side of the ridge. As one begins the climb
up from town there are rows of chörtens and mani walls,15 and a large new mani wheel16 that is
wind-powered on the promontory that juts out overlooking the lake and the village. Just behind this,
and presumably older, is a large cairn (la btsas) topped with a bundle of juniper branches adorned with
white silk offering scarves (kha btags), that is probably a shrine to a local deity, though my informants
did not mention it, and it is not mentioned in the pilgrimage guide. In front of this is a tall, stripped
tree trunk with a tall vertical prayer flag (dar chen). From this point, the path is clearly marked and
very well-maintained. This is so for the route for some time beyond the pass and on along the other
side of the mountains as the path runs more or less level.
Just before the pass is the first of the self-arisen (rang byung)17 stone features of the né. A tall narrow
stone stands to the right of the path. On this stone is an image of Padmasambhava, with a demoness
holding an eight-year-old child in her mouth, under his foot. It is said that when Chöjé Shelgompa
began to explore this né, the forces of darkness rallied to try to stop him from his task. Here at the
beginning of the route we see Padmasambhava appear in his well-established role of subduer of
demons, aiding Chöjé Shelgompa in his efforts, not in bringing Buddhism to the region, but rather
in opening up a new sacred space that will benefit others. Throughout the route, Padmasambhava is
present to protect, encourage, and welcome Chöjé Shelgompa. Moreover, we see his mere presence
here as a major source of the power that makes this a né.
Just up the path toward the top of the pass are two large standing stones, one leaning against
the other. The lower one is said to be Dzambhala, the regent of the northern direction and the god of
wealth. As is usual in his depiction, he holds a mongoose in his left hand. This is the most obvious
feature that is recognizable in the rock, as the mouth of the mongoose is easily seen and there are two
black dots on the stone that are its eyes. Lodged between the two large standing stones is a small,
nearly square stone that is said to be a single dice. These are said to be messages, but just what the
messages mean was not clear to my informants nor is it explained in the pilgrimage guidebook.
13
14
15
16
17
The word gling has a range of meanings referring to place, but one informant explained it as being like the fringe or border
on an article of clothing, i.e., indicating an outer piece or place.
For a brief biography of Somang Rinpoché, see: http://www.drukpachoegon.info/rinpoche-biography/somang-tulkubiography.aspx.
These are piles of stones with the mantras of Buddhist deities carved on them. The mantra of Chenrezik (spyan ras gzigs,
Sanskrit, Avalokiteśvara), the Bodhisattva of Compassion (om
. man.i padme hum
. ) are particularly prevalent, hence the name
man.i wall. For an examination of this mantra and its importance see Donald Lopez’s discussion (Lopez 1998, pp. 114–34).
A chörten (chos rten) is the Tibetan form of the stupa. A man.i wheel is large wheel with the man.i mantra on the surface,
and contained within. Spinning these, and/or circumambulating them, is a popular merit-making practice in the Tibetan
Buddhist world.
A “self-arisen” feature is manifestation in rock thought to appear because of the sacred power of the place. These are
a common feature of Tibetan pilgrimage sites.
Religions 2017, 8, 157
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Figure 2. Map of Saurat.ṭa in relation to Nako and Tashigang.
ṭ
At the top of the pass is a large cairn (lab rtse) with many strings of prayer flags connecting the
bundle of sticks and juniper branches with the surrounding peaks and boulders. Nothing was said
about this monument. The three large rock columns surrounding the cairn are said to be like the
three legs of the tripod of a local cooking stove.
A large boulder just down the slope was said to
Śā
when they
be a copper cooking vessel that was used by the Buddha Śākyamuni and his entourage
Śā
Śā
prepared food for a tantric worship gathering (tshogs mchod) here. This is one of two appearances
Śā
of Śākyamuni at this pilgrimage site. About an hour further on there is a very large boulder with
ā ofā Guru Rinpoche and his
three deep indentations that are said to be the bodily imprints (sku rjes)
consorts, Khandro Yeshe Tsogyel (mkha’ ‘gro ye shes mtsho rgyal) and princess Mandāravā, (Figure 3)
ā ā
who came here to welcome and encourage Chöjé Shelgompa. They gave him Dharma teachings and
tantric empowerments, and showed him the way to continue.
Figure 3. The body-imprints of Guru Rinpoché and his consorts.
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The imprints are quite deep into the surface of the boulder, and like most of the other self-arisen
images, don’t appear to have been colored or accentuated to make them more visible. The imprint of
Mandāravā, however, is thickly coated with oil (a common gesture of worship along this pilgrimage),
which makes the image more visible. There are also coins stuck to the surface (another common
practice) where her face would be, and there are khataks wedged between the rocks at the edge near
her. Yeshe Tsogyel’s image is less clear, but there is a small stack of flat black stones at the bottom of it,
with a few lighter ones placed on top of the stack. There are prayer flags strung between the top of the
stone and others around and a wooden pole on the other side of the path.
About two hours later, one comes to a huge boulder on the exposed underside of which is said to
be the imprint of Chöjé Shelgompa’s hand grasping his walking stick. At this spot, khandromas hurled
this boulder at Chöjé Shelgompa because they did not want him intruding into their territory. He said,
“Don’t do this!” and held up his walking stick, stopping the boulder and imprinting it with his hand.
His command ended with the sound “a,” which is an imperative particle in colloquial Tibetan, and
this letter is said to be imprinted far up on the mountain’s face above this spot. Further on, is a rock
face with many small niches in it. This is said to be imprints of the Buddhas of the Forunate Aeon
(bskal bzang gi sangs rgyas) who came here to welcome Chöjé Shelgompa. It is said that a virtuous and
realized person will be able to see butter lamps burning in each of these niches. It is also at this spot
where one catches the first glimpse of Tashigang (bkra shis sgang) monastery, which is situated along
the route and is typically included in the pilgrim’s itinerary. There is a ridge here at which pilgrims do
prostrations in the direction of Tashigang and rest of the route further on.18
Tashigang requires a steep climb up from this point. The main structure is quite small, but there is
new construction going on just below it. The focal point of the main assembly hall is a small image of
Milarepa that is said to have been made by one of his disciples during his lifetime. He made three such
images, and all three are said to be in the area of Hangrang. The other two are supposed to be in the
possession of private individuals and only brought out occasionally, so this one is important because it
is accessible. The image is said to have hair that grows back if cut. It is located in a cavity in the chest
of a large statue of Shākyamuni, covered with a glass door. The shrine contains a number of other
statues, including a large Guru Rinpoché with consort, and a finely detailed Chenrezik (spyan ras gzigs,
Sanskrit, Avalokiteśvara).
Continuing on from Tashigang, the next site is a small spring coming down to the path from
above, forming a small pool. It is said that there were a pair of tantric practitioners (dpa’bo/dpa’ mo,
Sanskrit vı̄ra/vı̄rā) who were living here, and they transformed themselves into the form of a brahmin
couple. They did this in order to hide who they really were, specifically so that Chöjé Shelgompa would
not recognize them or judge them. When Chöjé Shelgompa reached this spot, he was very hungry
and thirsty. He did not know at this point where Saurat.a was, and he had not brought enough food
and water. The couple either created or revealed this spring, and offered water to Chöjé Shelgompa,
saying that it would be like the blessed water that is given during a tantric empowerment or like the
elixir of immortality. Drinking his fill of this water, Chöjé Shelgompa felt completely satisfied and
energized. A little further on, there is a naturally-arisen image on the rock face of the old Brahmin
couple (Figure 4).
Climbing up toward the final destination, there is a place where one sees an image in the mixture
of light and dark stone far up on the rock face. Against a white background there is a long thin dark
shape coming down that is said to be a poisonous snake. Just below, but rising up into the white area
are two dark shapes that are said to be a golden fish and a turquoise fish. The white background is said
to be a lake of milk. The meaning of all this was not explained by my informants or the pilgrimage
guide, other than that it is a landmark to help locate the next site, the spring created by Guru Rinpoché.
18
There is no mention of Tashigang in the Saurat.a pilgrimage guide, but my informants said that people generally include it.
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Figure 4. Image of the Brahmin couple on the rock surface.
ṭ
The spring known as tsechu (tshes bcu) is the last site before arriving at Saurat.a né. Guru Rinpoche
created a spring here for Chöjé Shelgompa, who, when he
this water, became so happy that
ṇ drank
ū
he said it was like the feast offering (tshog mchod, Sanskrit: gan.a pūja) celebration
on the tenth day
ṭ
of the lunar month in honor of Guru Rinpoché, thus this is what this spring is called. This site is
ū Rinpoché painted and carved on the
more elaborate than the previous spring, with mantras ofṇGuru
large boulder, khataks tied around the tree, and prayer flags decked across the site. The spring itself,
however, was not flowing. There was a plastic soda bottle propped up where the water should have
ṭ bottle was empty.
been coming, but there was no stream and the
Finally arriving at the heart of Saurat.a eleven hours after departing the village, one enters through
a rough wooden gateway surrounded by lush
ṭ greenery studded with small dandelion-like flowers
(Figure 5). The site is a short distance up the valley from the confluence of the Sutlej and Spiti rivers,
directly across the Sutlej gorge from Shipki pass, which is the border between India and China and
is now controlled by the Chinese military (Figure 6). The space is situated on a steep hillside, with
several levels of flat ground on which the structures sit. On the level where one enters is a three-room
guesthouse and the caretaker’s quarters. The caretaker’s quarters consisted of a fairly large room with
a stove and sitting and sleeping space. Behind this room was a cave, which is one of the five main caves
of the né. At first sight the cave seemed to be no more than a storage area, with several car batteries,
and numerous other practical things piled up, though there were several khataks draped across the
space, including one hanging from a spot in the rock ceiling. It was only later that we learned that this
was one of the caves of the né circuit.
Figure 5. Entrance gate to the circuit of the five caves.
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Figure 6. View from Saurat.aṭacross the Sutlej river gorge. The Chinese border is on the ridge.
Up a level, and further on than
ṭ the caretaker’s quarters is the shrine room that seemed to serve
as the focal point of regular worship at the site (Figure 7). The caretaker filled the water bowls and
lit the oil lamps daily, and the room was well-maintained. It seemed however, that there was not
always a caretaker ṭpresent, as we had to wait for several weeks to do the pilgrimage for the caretaker
to return to Saurat.a from his home in Nako. In a windowed vestibule, there is a small rock ledge with
oil lamps, and numerous
coins pressed on the rock wall above. The stucco-like wall of the vestibule
ṭ
was said to be the result of Chöjé Shelgompa blowing his nose in his hand and flinging it out the
door of the shrine, creating the rough surface of the wall. Entering the tiny doorway one comes to the
ś
shrine itself, which hold five or six people. The central image is an eleven-headed, thousand-eyed
Chenrezik (spyan ras gzigs, Sanskrit: Avalokiteśvara). In front of it are a few smaller images, including
ś previous Somang Rinpochés. This is the incarnation
a Guru Rinpoché, and photos of the current and
lineage associated with the site. Up on a cabinet to the left of the ṭmain image was a large book in very
poor condition and several others. On a small puja table near the window was a book that was said to
be the original of the pilgrimage guidebook (gnas yig) of Saurat.a. The text in the appendix here is the
ṭ
translation of the transcribed text done by Lama Ngawang Negi.
Figure 7. The Shrine Room.
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Towering over the entire site are two massive stone formations, each split into two conjoining
parts. One is said to be a Denchok “father-mother” deity couple in sexual embrace (yab yum) and the
other is Tamdrin (rta ‘grin, Sanskrit: Hayagrı̄va) and Dorjé Pakmo (rdo rje phag mo), Sanskrit: Vajravārāhı̄).
Higher up, but often hidden by clouds, is a peak called Khorlo Dompa because the stone bears his
image along with his consort and there is a lake in which the image is reflected. Surrounding the peak
is a path that the khandromas circumambulate. This spot is said to be difficult to reach but is visited
by some pilgrims. It is mentioned in the pilgrimage guidebook in reference to Drölma Cave, but is not
emphasized as a central feature of the né.
In addition to the temple, there are the residence of Chöjé Shelgompa and numerous footprints
(rje zhabs) and “self-arisen” (rang ‘byung) images along the way. The central features of the né,
however, are the five caves. The organization of the caves into a mandala-like form is typical of
many Tibetan pilgrimage sites, and is often discussed in terms of this functioning to “buddhacise”
a perhaps-previously indigenous sacred site.19 The center is Yeshe Gönpo (ye shes mgon po, Sanskrit:
jñānanātha) Cave, with Drölma (sgrol ma, Sanskrit: tārā) Cave in the east, Pakmo Cave in the south,
Tamdrin Cave (rta ‘grin phug) in the west and Jakhyung Cave (bya khyung phug) in the north. Of the
five, Pakmo cave is actually far away and seldom visited by pilgrims. In it there is the self-arisen breast
of Dorje Pakmo. It was said that the cave was quite far from the center of the circuit and the breast was
not very clearly manifest, so few include it in their circuit. The rest of the caves are quite close together,
the circuit taking under three hours to complete.
The first site one comes to is Tamdrin Cave. The route circles clockwise from the west (exempting
the southern cave) and finishes in the center. This cave is where group rituals are performed when
a large local group, led by Somang Rinpoché, comes to Saurat.a during full moon in May/June each
year. Tamdrin is often considered to be an emanation of Chenrezik, as a wrathful form. He is a widely
encountered protective deity and meditational deity (yi dam, Sanskrit: is..tadevatā) throughout Tibetan
and Himālayan Buddhism. There are paintings of him in two of the three Nako village shrines. There is
a self-arisen image of Tamdrin in the ceiling of the cave, but my guides did not point out any features,
other than that it was in a rather unkempt state.
From Tamdrin Cave, one goes back out the gate and climbs up and begins the clockwise
circumambulation path. The first self-arisen image is of Dorje Pakmo’s breast. It is a small portion
of a medium-sized boulder that is easily spotted since it is darkened from having been rubbed with
oil. A little further on is a large flat boulder on which there are gouges that are said to be from when
Buddha Śākyamuni cut up a demon on the rock’s surface. Next, one comes to a very large vein of
smooth white rock coming down from the mountain with the appearance of a river. It is quite striking
against the darker and more gravelly surroundings—six to eight feet across and hundreds of feet
long from beyond where one can see above to over the rim below. Where the path crosses this rock
“river” is a small pool of water that is said to be the khandromas’ washing basin. Just after this feature
was a large cleft rock that was said to be the vulva of a khandroma (Figure 8). It was nearly five feet
tall and pilgrims had rubbed one side of it with oil and affixed coins. I was told by one informant
that sometimes a spring flowed from this feature, though there was no evidence of that when we
were there.
19
See Katia Buffetrille (Buffetrille 1988) for a discussion of this process.
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Figure 8. The khandroma’s vulva.
The next major self-arisen image is a large and prominent wrathful image of Guru Rinpoché
ḍ
surrounded by flames.20 One then comes to Jakhyung (bya khyung, Sanskrit: Garud.a) Cave. The cave is
partially walled-in, with four chörtens (chos rten) on the outer edge of the cave floor. Against the inner
wall are hundreds of clay votive icons (tsa tsa) that were made by monks who stayed in the cave for
an extended period of time in the past (Figure 9). On the ceiling of the cave is a self-arisen image of
Jakhyung’s head and wings. The image has been rubbed with oil, and coins have been pressed on the
surface (Figure 10) as worship by pilgrims. My informants said that a wish made in this cave would
definitely be granted, as long as that wish would have no negative impact on anyone. The next stop is
said to have been Chöjé Shelgompa’s residence. This is a well-built dwelling of several rooms, partially
built into a cave in the cliff face. Unlike many openers of nés, Chöjé Shelgompa never left this place, or
if he did, he returned to live out his days here. My informants said that when he died, the Buddhas of
the Five Lineages (rgyal ba rigs lnga) came and prepared his corpse for the funeral. Markings on the
wall are said to have been made by the Buddhas as they performed this service for Chöjé Shelgompa.
The pilgrimage guide book says that Chöjé Shelgompa “feigned illness” at the end of his life and
transformed into light, which was imprinted on the rock wall of the cave. It also mentions the imprints
of the Five Buddhas “pulling up and pressing down,”without elaboration on what they were doing.
My informants did not point out the image from Chöjé Shelgompa’s transfiguration, and I did not see
it. These two elements of the story suggest that Chöjé Shelgompa left behind bodily remains, but I saw
no large chörten and none was mentioned.
20
My informants said this this form was Guru Drakpur (guru drag phur). Guru Drakpur is a wrathful form of Guru Drakpo
(guru drag po) discovered as a treasure teaching (gter ma) by the great 16th Drukpa hierarch Pema Karpo (padma dkar po,
1527–1592). The pilgrimage guide identifies the image as Dorjé Drolö (rdo rje grol lod), one of the eight primary manifestations
of Guru Rinpoché.
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Figure 9. Tsa-tsas in Jakhyung cave.
Figure 10. Coins affixed to Jakhyung’s head.
Moving on from Chöjé Shelgompa’s residence, one comes to a self-arisen image illustrating the
well-known story of Milarepa and the hunter Khyirawa Gönpo Dorje (khyi ra ba mgon po rdo rje).
The image is quite high up on the rock face, so pilgrims apply oil and coins lower down on the rock.
Next is another prominent self-arisen image of Guru Rinpoché on the cliff face. He is said to be riding
on the sun, so like the previous image of him said to be surrounded by flames, the dark image of the
Guru stands out against the red rock surrounding it. Above the image is a round indentation in the
rock in which is said to be concealed the golden key which some holy being in the future willāuse to
ā
open a new né. A little further on from here is a large cave said to be the palace of the Yama Rāja, the
Lord of Death. On the wall of the cave is a light patch of rock with black spots on it. The light surface
is said to be the mirror
on which one’s good and bad actions in this life are tallied as white and black
ā
ā
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stones.21 Yama Rāja judges the person after death based on this accounting, and one goes accordingly
to heaven or hell. This image is said to teach this important lesson. Above the cave is a small hole,
with a red streak coming down from it. This is said to be the menstrual blood of an eight-year-old
khandroma (Figure 11).
The next cave is Drölma Cave. One day while Chöjé Shelgompa was living in his residence,
he heard a man’s voice coming from the cave below
ā ā while he was meditating. Going to investigate,
he looked into the cave and saw the twenty-one Tārās dancing in a circle around Khorlo Dompa.
Upon being seen, Khorlo Dompa flew up into the rock of the ceiling, blessing the
ā ārock and leaving
a self-arisen image of his “secret part,” i.e., his phallus (Figure 12). The twenty-one Tārās dissolved
into walls of the cave. Women who are unable to conceive come to this place to become fertile, and the
cave is said to bestow blessings on all who come there. Just inside the door is a broom with which to
sweep the dirt of the floor as one leaves. The next person who enters looks at the floor, and if she is
lucky, she will see footprints of khandromas in the dirt. One of my informants noted that earlier, the
sightings of the footprints was quite common, but more recently it was becoming less so. At the rear of
the cave is a small passage between an upper and lower boulder. It is said that if one is without sin, he
or she will be able to squeeze through the space. A sinful person will not be able to pass through.
ā
Figure 11. The palace of Yama Rāja and the menstrual blood of the khandroma.
21
This scene illustrates a common Tibetan Buddhist understanding of the judging of one’s past actions after death, determining
the subsequent rebirth. The pilgrimage circuit at Amnyé Machen also has this feature (Buffetrille 2007). For a classical
expression of this narrative, see the account in the so-called Tibetan Book of the Dead (Coleman and Jinpa 2007, pp. 279–81).
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Figure 12. The phallus of Khorlo Dompa.
Finally,
ā ā one reaches the center, Yeshé Gönpo Cave. “Yeshé Gönpo” is another name for Mahākāla,
and the Drukpa lineage generally emphasizes the four-armed form of this protector and yidam. This is
ā ā
a very large and well-appointed cave, with a wooden floor and central altar (Figure 13). When a large
group of people do the pilgrimage in May/June led by Somang Rinpoché, he leads the puja and feast
āḥ space. Just inside the door is a small stove, that conceals a self-arisen letter “āh” on the
offering in this
.
floor. This was
āḥ placed here to prevent people from stepping on the image. In the ceiling of the cave is
the self-arisen face of Yeshé Gönpo (Figure 14).
Figure 13. Yeshé Gönpo Cave.
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Figure 14. The face of Yeshé Gönpo.
7. Common and Unique Features
ṭ . a né are largely consistent with those found at other sacred
The characteristics of the Saurat
sites across Tibetan cultural regions. The most notable is the identification of the site as one of
īṭ
ṇḍDompa man.d.ala. Like other major pilgrimage sites on the
the twenty-four
pı̄t.has of the Khorlo
ṭ 22 Saurat.a’s transformative power (byin rlaps)
Tibetan plateau, particularly Tisé, Tsari, and Lapchi,
arises fundamentally from Khorlo Dompa, the other deities of theṇḍman.d.ala, and the presence of
ṭ . a also grants blessings due to the spiritual presence of great yogis, such as
the khandromas. Saurat
Padmasambhava, Milarepa, and Chöjé Shelgompa.
The extensive presence of lithic hierophanies is common to the major nés as well. Footprints and
other body impressions, self-arisen images in stone, and edifying or auspicious scenes in stone are
found at Tisé, Lapchi, and Tsari, as well as other nés. The keyhole containing the key to a further
sacred land is also present at Tisé. (Huber and Rigzin 1999, p. 129). The perhaps most remarkable
stone features, the khandoma’s vulva, and the phallus of Khorlo Dompa, have parallels at both
Tsari (Huber 1999b, p. 67) and Lapchi (Huber 2007, p. 267). The same is true of springs and other
water features, which dispense blessed water, or “attainment water,” and Tisé features a khandromas’
bathing pool (Huber and Rigzin 1999, p. 135).
Perhaps the most significant difference between these great Khorlo Dompa-associated nés and
Sauratṭ. a is the insignificance of the mountain in the circuit. At the other sites, the peak is considered
ṇḍ
the center of the man
. d.ala and the palace of the Khorlo Dompa and his retinue. This is particularly
remarkable in that the mountain, Riwo Purgyel, the highest peak in Himachal Pradesh, towers above
the Hangrang region, and is regarded as its territorial god (yul lha). The process of “mandalisation”
mentioned above would suggest that this peak would, over time, have been overwritten with the
Khorlo Dompa narrative either partially or completely, but this has not occurred. Other remarkable
peaks across the Tibetan plateau (including the nearby Kinner Kailash peak) came to be local
instantiations of the paradigmatic Khorlo Dompa peak, Tisé. While this “mandalisation” has occurred
22
ṭ
For a translation of the pilgrimage guide to Tisé, see Huber and Rigzin (Huber and Rigzin 1999). For Lapchi, see Huber
(Huber 2007). For a comprehensive study of Tsari that includes translations of portions of the pilgrimage guide, see Huber
(Huber 1999b).
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to varying degrees at major sites in Tibet, for whatever reason Riwo Purgyel has resisted this process
and plays no part in the Saurat.a pilgrimage that lies on its slopes. As an interesting aside, I was told
by two of my informants that the position of the Nako oracle of Riwo Purgyel had been vacant for
some time. The position was traditionally held by a member of one of several families but no one
had stepped up to take on this responsibility because of its stringent purity demands. I was told
that the families in question had recently encountered misfortune because of this dereliction of duty.
Nonetheless, Riwo Purgyel still had no voice as of the time I spent in Nako. While the yul lha has so far
resisted “buddhacization,” the deity’s standing in the region is uncertain.
Lakes are typically also central, with the mountain being the male feature and the lake being
female (Buffetrille 1988, p. 18). The lake in Nako is part of the village circumambulation route, being
a place where Padmasambhava once meditated, but other than being mentioned in the pilgrimage
guide as an auspicious feature outside the né, it does not play a part in this site.
Rather than a mountain serving as the center of the man.d.ala, at Saurat.a it is a cave, in a circular
arrangement of caves. Caves are common features at Tibetan pilgrimage sites, but with rare exceptions,
they are seldom the focal point of the né.23 Though it has become commonplace in the scholarship on
Tibetan pilgrimage that “mandalisation” serves as a traditional interpretive concept imposed upon
Tibetan sacred sites, it important to note here that while the caves are laid out in a man.d.ala-like
form, this is not a man.d.ala in the same sense as when the Khorlo Dompa man.d.ala is overlaid on a
mountain and its surrounding features. Saurat.a is itself held to be one of the twenty-four sacred sites of
Khorlo Dompa Body Man.d.ala, but there doesn’t seem to be any sense that it is regarded as a man.d.ala
itself. The Saurat.a pilgrimage guide never uses the word “man.d.ala” (Tibetan: dkyil ‘khor) to describe
the caves, it just locates them at the cardinal directions.
The deities of the five caves at Saurat.a are also found at the other great pilgrimage sites in
Tibet, but it is noteworthy that since the five caves form the core of the site, one would perhaps
expect the central cave to be Khorlo Dompa, but he appears only in the narrative about Drölma cave.
The relatively-near peak called Khorlo Dompa, surrounded by the khandromas, is said to be the palace
of the deity in the description of the Drölma Cave, but few make the strenuous trek up to this spot,
thus it is not central to most pilgrims’ performance of this nékor. The presence of Drölma herself is
attested to at the Tsari and Tisé pilgrimage routes.
Caves and lithic hierophanies of Dorjé Pakmo are found at the major pilgrimage sites, and this
should not be surprising as she is the consort of Khorlo Dompa in the Cakrasam
. vara Tantra. In the
description of the twenty-four pı̄t.has of the Khorlo Dompa man.d.ala, the deity consort of the goddess
of this site is Tamdrin/Hayagrı̄va (Gray 2007, p. 60), but that this is the reason for his presence at
Saurat.a is speculative. That he is a popular meditational deity (yidam) across the sects of Tibetan
Buddhism is enough to explain his presence here. The same can be said of Jakhyung (Sansrit: Garud.a),
and he is also an important pre-Buddhist and Bön meditational deity. Yeshé Gönpo, or Mahākāla,
appears in the pilgrimage guides of the major né. Yeshé Gönpo is a protector deity, but he is of the
transcendent protector class so he can also serve as a yidam. The Drukpa lineage observes the practice
of Four-Armed Mahākāla (Yeshé Gönpo) as one of its core practices. There are many depictions of
Yeshé Gönpo in the shrines in Nako Village, and the contemporary importance of this deity can be seen
at the monastery in Bhuntar, in Kullu district, Himachal Pradesh, where Somang Rinpoché currently
lives. Two subsidiary temples have recently been built flanking the main assembly hall: one of Khorlo
Dompa, and the other of Yeshé Gönpo.
My informants told me that Saurat.a offered rewards both worldly and mundane. In, fact, one
informant told me that just taking seven steps toward Saurat.a brought blessings. Throughout the
route there were features that were said to be perceived differently depending on whether one was
23
The pilgrimage guide to Bön Kongpo Mountain gives prominence to a man.d.ala-like arrangement of five caves
(Ramble 2007b, pp. 165–72). The Drigung Powa pilgrimage features a massive cave as its most important feature
(Kapstein 1998, pp. 109–10).
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a holy person or an ordinary one. Some of the particular features were said to have more specific
benefits. Jakhyung Cave was said to grant any request that was made without malice. The phallus of
Khorlo Dompa in Tārā Cave would grant progeny to the childless. The narrow passage between the
boulders at the back of the cave demonstrated one’s being without sin—assuming he or she makes
it through.
The pilgrimage guidebook similarly states that visiting the né granted blessings, primarily because
of the empowerment as one of the twenty-four pı̄thas of the Khorlo Dompa man.d.ala, because heroes
and khandromas gather there, and because of the attainments of Chöjé Shelgompa, who opened the
place for future pilgrims and who lived out the rest of his life there. The site grants the accumulation
of merit and the purification of pollution (grib). For the fortunate, meditative accomplishment and
understanding will increase and for ordinary sinful people, evil will be dispelled. The guidebook
claims that Saurat.a is unique in that it turns the mind of all who come there to the dharma.
8. The Impact of Modernity on Himālayan Pilgrimage
Unlike pilgrimage practices and sites in Tibet, pilgrim’s activities have endured unbroken on the
Indian side of the Indo-Tibetan border, but it too has been affected by modernity. Saurat.a is a relatively
minor and regional né, but it is important to the people of Hangrang, and it is part of a multi-site
pilgrimage route that takes in the late 11th century monastic complex, Tashigang, and a nearby
Padmasambhava site called Tirasang. Shortly after independence in 1947, India restricted travel to
Kinnaur and Spiti due to their proximity to the Tibetan, and then Chinese border. Restrictions were
lifted in 1992, though foreign tourists still have to get a permit for regions closest to the border, including
Hangrang. Since 1992, tourism has increased significantly, though for most Nako is a brief stop before
going on to the better-known ancient monastic complex at Tabo. Nonetheless, for better-informed
and more adventurous tourists, Saurat.a has become a destination. The influx of tourists is contained
to some degree by local efforts, most notably the Nako Youth Club, which offers accompanied tours.
Some, however, undoubtedly make the journey unaccompanied. Graffiti can be seen at some points,
including on the stone face just outside Drölma cave. My informants bemoaned this kind of behavior,
as well as other types of bad behavior that did not treat the site with respect and reverence. They told
me that some of the phenomena, such as the appearance of khandroma footprints in Drölma Cave and
spontaneous arising of nectar in rock indentations had decreased in recent years. Like many in Lahaul
and Spiti, they are also concerned about the impact of the increase in tourism that will inevitably
come when the tunnel through the first range of the outer Himalayas is completed in the next few
years. These factors, along with the perceived “Indianization” or “Hinduization” being propagated
in the government schools are seen as eroding local culture and identity. Local traditions such as the
pilgrimage to Saurat.a are considered by some to be under threat. These concerns, voiced to me over
a decade of visits to Nako village, were a primary motivation in undertaking this study.
Acknowledgments: The research for this project was supported by a one-semester sabbatical from Northern
Arizona University and a Fulbright-Nehru Academic and Professional Excellence Award (Research). No funds
from either source were used for covering the costs to publish in open access.
Conflicts of Interest: The author declares no conflict of interest.
Appendix A
NB: This is a translation of the hand-transcribed and then word-processed text prepared by
Lama Ngawang Negi (Anonymous n.d.). The original text is in the shrine room at Saurat.a, but I was
unable to consult it. The text translated here contains a number of regional word usages/spellings,
and perhaps scribal errors that make some of the translation speculative.
The Guidebook to the Great Place of Pilgrimage, Saurat.a.
To lay out in order the guidebook to Saurat.a, the great pilgrimage, first, the Conqueror Götsangpa
made a prophesy to his disciple Chöjé Shelgompa, “Son, in the West through Haho Peak, you will
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tame this great land of pilgrimage, which is one of the twenty-four places,” thus he prophesied. Then,
from Bellows Pass, he went to Ma. Having arrived at Mushroom Plain, he searched for one rock
for a stove in order to make food. He did not find one, but all the area was full of light. Then, he
saw Ma Pass, and he asked, “What is the name of this country?” Someone said, “The name of this
is Embankment Mountain. He said, “It isn’t Embankment Mountain, it is “the seat of the place of
pilgrimage (gnas gdan).” Then he went onward, and having arrived at Maling, he asked, “What is
the name of this place.” Someone answered, “Maling.” “It isn’t Maling, it’s the “fragment of the né”
(gnas gling) Then he went onward and arrive at Nako. He said to an old grandmother who was staying
in a residence there, “What is the name of this place?” The answer was “Nako.” “It isn’t Nako, it’s “the
doorway to né” (gnas sgo). At the top is the eastern mountain, the lower part is the western mountain,
in the front is the turquoise lake, at the rear is the constructed temple. This place has an extremely
auspicious set of circumstances.”
From there he strove upward, and having arrived at a white stupa, a roar sounded from a white
conch shell, which is said to be the spreading of the teachings of the white dharma, and the conch
fell and slipped away. Here, there is a footprint of Dorjé Chang. Then Chöjé Shelgompa went up,
and having arrive at mani wall, a black conch sounded, and this is said to be the disappearance
of the demonic teachings. Up from there, within a stack of rocks, there is a self-arisen image of
Guru Rinpoché, trampling a demoness under his foot. There is a rock that is a self-arisen image of
Dzambhala, and between these two is a dice that is said to be the karmic maturation of wrongs againsts
one’s father and mother. Behind that rock, on top of a hearth of three kinsmen is a bronze cauldron
used to make tea for an assembly of monks, is a lion’s mouth. By going further on from here, is the
Orgyen Body Imprint. Here, Guru Rinpoché, Khandro Yeshé Tsogyel and Divine Consort Mandarava
greeted Chöjé Shelgompa, gave him dharma teachings, and conferred tantric initiations. They said,
“Son, your path from here is ready,” and having shown him the path, the three, Guru Rinpoché and
his consorts, dissolved into the rock, creating a self-arisen image. Thus, this place is renowned as
the Orgyen Body Impression. Going on from here one arrives at the hand-staff image. The fine top
ornament of the khandromas was rolled down. Chöjé Shelgompa said “Mother Khandromas, don’t do
this with the top ornament.” He supported it with his hand and thumb and left an imprint of this and
his staff in the rock. So, the name given to this place is “hand-staff.” From this, there is a self-arisen
“āh.” up on the rock.
Going down from here, one arrives at the ridge of prostration. Chöjé Shelgompa was welcomed
by the thousand Buddhas of the fortunate eon, who dissolved into the rock. At this place is the
Thousand Buddha Bodies self-arisen image. At auspicious times, a holy person will see the shining
of many-colored offering lamps. Going on from there, moreover, there is a self-arisen image, from
the Conqueror Jampa Gönpo welcoming him. Going on further from there, one arrives at the place
of the Brahmins. A male and female hero, who had disguised themselves as brahmins, welcomed
him and said, “Son, we will make your thirst water” and having said this they made his attainment
water. This water was excellent in smell and taste. On the rock is a self-arisen image of the two, the
old man and woman brahmin. Across from this water on the rock is a self-arisen image of a gold
fish, a turquoise fish and a poisonous snake in a lake of milk. Going on from here, Guru Rinpoché
welcomed him and said, “Son, I will make your thirst water,” and creating a furrow in the rock with
his staff, he made manifest the attainment water of Chöjé Shelgompa, who accepted it. Saying that the
water was like the performance of the feast offering on the 10th of the lunar month (tshe bcu), this place
became know as “tséchu.” This water has a good scent.
Up from here, inside the shrine room, there is a handprint of the great siddha Paksam Yeshé
(dpag bsam ye shes) and a handprint of Shang Nabchipa (shang snab mchis pa) in the rock. There is
a self-arisen image of the body-imprint of the great siddha Upa Chökyong (dbu pa chos skyong) and
a self-arisen image of the five families of the mighty long life Khandromas. There are self-arisen images
of the footprints of the great elephant Kala Rapten (ka la rab brtan) and of the excellent horse Bhalaha
(bha la ha). And, one will encounter the footprint of Tsangnyon Heruka inside the shrine. Concealed from
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view on the flagstaff rock the eye of a lion can be seen. There is a footprint of the great siddha Kargyü Gön
(dkar rgyud mgon). Inside, opposite that is a footprint of Drenyak (‘dren yag), a footprint of Guru Rinpoch´
and a footprint of Sangdor (sangs rdor), and footprints of Khandroma Yeshé Tsogyel and divine consort
Mandāravā. There are the footprints of the five hundred previous births of the Bhagavan Buddha,
and below those is a handprint of Khedrup Dorjé Wangpo (mkhas sgrub rdo rje dbang po), a footprint of
the Nepalese woman Kala Siddhi. Above that is a footprint of the Nepalese woman Shākya dheva.
Beyond these are a footprint of Kargyü Chölak (dkar rgyud chos lag), and footprints of eight-year-old
khandromas. Onwards from those, there is a body imprint of the great siddha Tenzin Lhundrup
(bstan ‘dzin lhun grub) and his horse. Onward from these is a footprint of Grandmother Tsangpama
(gtsang pa ma) and above it, the footprint of the great siddha Tenzin Gyeltsen (bstan ‘dzin rgyal mtshan).
To the side of this is a footprint of the great siddha Tenzin Lhundrup and one of Tamdrin. Onward from
these is a footprint of the great Mongolian siddha. Above that is a footprint of the secret mantrin
Tenzin Gyeltsen (gsang sngags bstan ‘dzin rgyal mtshan), a footprint of Trulku Yeshé Ngödrup
(sprul sku ye shes dngos grub) and above that a footprint of Jé Namkha Ludrup (rje nam mkha’ klu grub)
and a footprint of Dorjé Naljorma. Above that is a footprint of Rangrik Répa (rang rig ras pa). Up from
here, there is a footprint of Khandro Kunzang Chödzom (kun bzang chos ‘dzoms). To the side from here
is a footprint of Damchö Gyeltsen (dam chos rgyal mtshan), a footprint of the Great Siddha Kagyü Zang
(bka’ brgyud bzang), and a footprint of the Great Siddha Tsaripa (rtsa ri pa). Below this is a footprint of
Namkha Pelzang (nam mkha’ dpal bzang). It is explained like this up to the mighty temple.
From there, below the temple, is a self-arisen image of Pakmo’s breast. In the area in front of
that, in a lake of milk that is arisen from nectar in a precious bliss swirl, is a mass of flowers. On the
rock on the other side from there, the Bhagavan Buddha cut through, up and down, tsen and dü
demons. There is the footprint of an eight-year-old maiden, and the footprint of Trinlé Gyeltsen
(‘phrin las rgyal mtshan). Across from that, is the Mother Khandromas’ washing basin, and a self-arisen
vulva (bha ga). Above that is Padampa Sangyé’s hat. Up from there, on the rock is a self-arisen image
of the bellows of Damchen Dorjé Lekpa. Above that, there is a self-arisen image of Guru Dorjé Drolö
in the rock face.
The Five Great Caves: in the east is Drölma Cave, in the south is Pakmo Cave, in the west, Tamdrin
Cave, where there is a face imprint of him, in the north is Garuda, and in the center, is a spacious, laid
out cave. These are the five great caves.
First, when one goes in the circumambulation, in Pakmo cave is a self-arisen image of Pakmo’s
breast. Across from this is Guru Rinpoche’s throne. Further on from here, are the footprints of the
khandroma’s dancing performances. Below this is a footprint of Khorlo Dompa. Here, in a cave
with a corner building, Chöjé Shelgompa, having pretended to be sick, stayed there. He transformed
into light, and this dissolved into the rock face. There is a self-arisen image of the Five Lineage
Buddhas, pulling up and pressing down. On top of that, is a footprint of Zhabdül Ngawang Yulgyel
(zhabs ‘dul ngag dbang g.yul rgyal) and a precious bliss-swirl-shaped elixir of imortality collection place.
Further beyond this, similar to the self-arisen image of the dice in the west, on the rock face there is
a self-arisen image of a long-life vase, and Jetsun Milarepa, the hunter Gönpo Dorjé, the deer and
the female dog Marchamma. In the east, is an image of Guru Rinpoché sitting in the midst of rays of
sunlight. Above this, a golden key is hidden in the rock face. If one is a holy person, a further doorway
to a né will be found from here.
In the south, there is the palace of the Lord of Death, in which there is a mirror of one’s karma,
and small black and white stones. On top of that, is a self-arisen image of Khandroma’s blood (rag ta).
Below this, one day, Chöjé Shelgompa, hearing a man’s voice in the Drölma Cave, went down to look.
There, he saw the Twenty-One Drölmas dancing with Khorlo Dompa as their leader. Immediately,
Khorlo Dompa went up and was hidden in the rock, the rock was blessed, and due to this, there
is a self-arisen image of the secret part of his body. The twenty-one Drölmas dissolved into the
rock, and so this place is well known as “Drölma Cave.” Up from here, is the palace of the Lord,
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the Glorious Khorlo Dompa, and to the right of the Mother Dorjé Pakmo, is the Glorious Wisdom
Protector with the raven face. To the left, in the middle of the open space are meditation caves.
The eastern snow mountain has the likeness of a proud lion. The southern mountain appears
like a heaped-up mandala offering. The western mountain is like a fluttering black flag. The northern
mountain is like an exalted person that touches the sky. To the right, the deity banner of the Buddhas
of the Five Families descends. There is the deity Maheśvara, a Gönpo deity couple in sexual embrace,
and a column of stone that is a pillar of heaven. There is a pillar of earth that is a short stone that has
a self-arisen image of a prideful black serpent descending. There is the god of wealth in the appearance
of a heart-rock. There is Pakpa Dönyö and a written picture of the eight auspicious symbols. There is
a five-fold form of a pure banner and a secret Khandro cave, both a Denchok deity couple in sexual
embrace and a Tamdrin/Pakmo deity couple in sexual embrace.
In the extensive and spacious cave in the center, there is a self-arisen image of Yeshe Gönpo’s face
and a letter “Āh..”
On the rock face across the river, there is a self-arisen image of the palace of the nine-deity Hevajra
and of a corpse being carried away by a tiger. On the rock face, there is an eleven-headed Öpagmé and
a Chenrezik Khasarpani. Below these is a self-arisen image of a Tsen horse. Further on from that, is
a self-arisen image of the Lords of the Three Families and onward from that is a self-arisen image of
Chakna Dorjé. To the side of this is Sanyingpo (sa snying po) and on from there is Namkhai Nyingpo
(nam mkha’i snying po).
This then is the explanation of the places of the great né, Saurat.a. It is a place for the accumulation
of merit and the purification of defilements. Making worshipful prostrations to this place, it is said
that it is special in that retreat there will protect one from suffering. It is the né where Chojé Rinpoché
tread. It is the né where heroes and the sky-goers gather. It is the né where meditative experience
and reflection will increase for those fortunate ones. It is distinctive, in that it clears away the sins
of the sinful ones. It is distinctive in that it is the né that turns the minds of all sentient beings to the
dharma. May all sentient beings in the six states of transmigration attain the state of bliss and attain
the ultimate goal of liberation.
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