Saturday, June 25, 2011

Monument which symbolizes Beauty and Eternal Love -the Taj Majal

     No photos or words can adequately describe the Taj Mahal. I was sceptic at first but I almost cried when i saw the beauty and grandeur of this famous  landmark. I felt the love and longing of the Mughal king for his beloved wife Mumtaz when she died. Oblivious to what Akmad, our Muslim-Indian guide, was saying. I took time taking photos to capture her beauty. 
     The  postcard pictures of Taj Mahal does not adequately convey the legend, the poetry and the romance that shroud what Rabindranath Tagore calls "a teardrop on the cheek of time." 
     Nor the English poet, Edwin Arnold  when he quoted,  "Not a piece of architecture, as other buildings are, but the proud passions of an emperor’s love wrought in living stones" Its true, this building is a celebration of womanhood (according to an Indian 1994 Miss Universe,)

  










Friday, June 3, 2011

Ten Things I Love About Bhutan-Number Nine: Dzongs/Stupas/Chortens

 Chimi Lhakhang (the Divine Madman or Lama Drukpa Kinley Temple)

 Paro Taktsang (Tiger's Nest) Temple

 The National Memorial Chorten, Thimphu

Khamsum Yulley Namgyal Chorten, Punakha

Paro Dzong

Punakha Dzong between the twin rivers built around 1637

Dzongs or fortresses serve as the religious, military, administrative, and social centers of a specific district. They are often the site of an annual tsechu or religious festival in Bhutan.

Stupas or chortens is a mound-like structure containing Bhudhist relics particularly remains of Budha and used by Budhists as a place for worship.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Ten Things I Love About Bhutan: Number Eight- National Philiosophy



Gross National Happiness is better than gross national product is the nation's guiding philosophy. GNH was established in an attempt to develop an indicator of quality of life and social development in a more holistic and psychological terms than the gross national product.

It was initiated by the then forth king in 1972, King Jigme Singye Wangchuk who opened Bhutan to the world in the age of globalization. This concept was organised to build an economy to serve Bhutan's unique culture based on Buddhist spiritual values. There were four pillars of GNH. Promotion of sustainanle development, Preservation and promotion of cultural values, Conservation of natural environment, and establishment of good governance.

Ten Things I Love About Bhutan: Number Seven: Postage Stamps




I was introduced in the wonderful world of philately as a child when i discovered my sister's collections in her old cabinet. She was into the hobby as a teen ager and i remembered her excitement when she would write and receive  letters to or from her pen pals all over the world just to acquire worlwide stamps. I would sneak in her room and secretly get hold of her stamp albums. In my childhood innocence grew a love for those tiny work of art depicting the culture, traditions, landscapes, flora and fauna and famous peoples of a specific nation. It seems odd but when i study each stamp details, i would feel i have been in that specific place where the stamp came from. It was from those stamps where i learned the different odd-sounding names, and currencies of the different countries-from Magyar of Hungary, Sverige of Sweden, Hellas of Greece, to Russian name in Russian alphabets or the Spanish peseta, Macau patacas, and Bhutanese ngultrum. But those were years ago. After acquiring a great number of stamps, i stopped for a while when i started becoming serious with my studies. I am sure the love was still there. Until when i saw the Bhutanese postage stamps. My love for philately was rekindled. I have discovered there were stamps in shapes other than rectangular, square or trangular. There were already round shaped stamps, stamps in 3-D, and stamps in khadi cloth (Indian).

In 2008, Bhutan just released the first CD rom stamps which features their monarchy and their traditions.Quite unusual but it was a brilliant idea to introduce something which brings global appeal in the age of yahoo and facebook. It was not very expensive when i bought it at Thimphu Central Post Office. It costs 250 ngultrum/CD.

Now, i am again seduced into rekindling my old original hobby, that is, stamp collecting.

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Mother's Day in the time of Osama's Misfortune


A Tausug Mother & Child Painting

 Mother and Child, Long neck Karen hill tribe, Chiangmai
Mother and child at Paro festival, Bhutan


Mother and child is a timeless art theme.
"The image of mother and child in paintings is something that can be found all around the world, in every culture and religion. Christian paintings use the mother and child particularly frequently to portray the Virgin Mary, and had to communicate the motherly nature and virginal purity of her through their paintings. It was around the Renaissance era that depictions of the Virgin Mary began to be more flattering and concentrated on her beauty and femininity"

Happy Mother's Day to all mothers out there.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/3224929
 

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Ten Things I Love About Bhutan: Number Six- Arts and Crafts

The most exciting and vital aspects of the Bhutanese tradittion and heritage are found in its arts and crafts. Bhutan is well known for its Zorig Chosum, the thirteen traditional arts and crafts. Art is usually religious in thematic content and usually follow a strict iconographic rules

Lhazo (painting) Four Harmonious Friends is a very popular Bhutanese art theme.The symbol is widely used in homes and work places, as it attracts harmony to the environment and a reminder to respect to elders 
thangka painting

Shingzo or woodwork

Jingzo or Claywork

Tsemzho or tailoring

Dozo or stonework

 
thagzo or weaving



 

Ten Thing I Love About Bhutan: Number Five-Culture and Traditions

 traditional dress in men known as Gho

traditional dancers at a religious-themed festival in Paro

 traditional dress worn by school-aged children

 phallic symbol is a common spectacle in every Bhutanese households
 as a sign of fertility and to ward off evil spirits

Textiles is  Bhutan's premier art. Its the product of centuries of individual creativity in fiber preparation, dyeing, weaving, cutting, stitching and embroidery.The vibrant fabrics and intricate weaves and designs are an inseperable part of Bhutan's rich culture that has evolved over the centuries.


Culture is becoming a rarity in the West. In Asia where every nation boasts off their own rich culture and traditions is becoming endangered because of globalization.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Ten Things I Love ABout Bhutan: Number four-Architecture


Punakha Dzong

Chorten or stupah, Dochula pass

Punakha Dzong

Bhutan National Museum, Thimphu

Doorway of a house along main road, Thimphu

the Divine madman monastery


Architecture is a significant feature of Bhutan's national identitity. Traditional shapes, colors and patterns of Bhutanese architecture are unique. The wooden surfaces such as beams, windows and doors are normally painted with various floral animal and religious motiffs and colors, each with special significance.
Bhutanese law requires all new buildings, public and private to follow the designs and rules of traditional architecture on the exterior.

Ten Things I Love About Bhutan: Number three- its Rugged Landscapes







Ten Things I Love About Bhutan: Number Two- Its People


Father and son at Punakha Dzong


 spectators at Paro tzechu 

 Traditional dancers at a minor Paro tzechu

Bhutanese festivals are religious-themed 

 Mother and child, Paro valley

the master and his student, the National Institute of Arts and Crafts, Thimphu

The Bhutanese people is gifted with the following traits:

Hospitable

Friendly. Smiling faces. You see people always ready to smile and show some respect.

Conservative.

Traditional. You can see that with the way they dress. The traditional costume known as gho in men and kirah in women is part of their daily lives.

Nationalistic. They love their king.

Lives very simply, you can rarely see forms of public transport and most of the people travel by walking. School-aged children walk several kilometers to go to school. They have their own television program since 1998. They produced their first film in the early 2000.

Speaks the English language fluently. It is the second language, being taught to school as early as childhood.