Monday, November 23, 2009

The Darjeeling Hills and Sikkim

Right now I feel that finals week was more than just 10 days ago, but classes and tests ended very well and Chimi, Alex and I departed for Calcutta that friday evening. We arrived early and took a cap to the other train station, Sealdah, where we were going to be departing that night. We rented a lodge near the station to make the departure convenient but ran into the issue of many hotels not allowing foreigners to stay, kinda strange. The area of Kolcata was extremely dirty but we enjoyed walking through the markets and reading on the roof of our hotel. We left for NJP station in the most northern part of West Bengal at 10pm and arrived at 8 the next morning. I was surprised by how little the land had changed; flooded rice fields dotted with small villages and cattle roaming freely was still the norm.
The three of us arranged a car to take us about 2 and a half hours into the Darjeeling hills. Now we started to see some geographical changes, climate changes as well. The vegetation is lush, like a temperate rain forest and the only humans in sight are the ethically Nepali leaf pickers in the expansive tea field covering the steep hills. They wear thatched baskets on their by strapping the weight of the baskets on their foreheads, looks a little rough on the neck. Our destination is Mirik, founded as a hill station by the British. It is beautiful. Surrounded by forested hills it is the home to about 10 thousand (mostly 2nd generation immigrants from Nepal and Bhutia peoples). The Bhutia immigrated to the Sikkim region in the 13th (more or less) from Tibet. They are considered to be the 'Buddhists' of the region. At the base of the hill is an artificial lake, which one day we took a paddle boat ride in. From the lake the most stunning building is the massive monastery about half way up the hill. We stayed in its guest house for 5days. It is a Tibetan monastery of the Kagyu lineage and was built in the eighties to house Bokar Rinpoche as he fled Tibet. Two retreat centers a part of the monastery complex and I had lots of chances to interview the Rinpoche, the retreat manager, and many lamas. It was very productive. The office receptionist was named Karma Thupten, he is a very kind man, and we became good friends. He took us all over Mirik. The weather was a little cold, the fog would roll in thicker than I had ever seen every afternoon, which made doing laundry impossible but was a cool effect. Sometimes the visibility would be 25-50 ft. The mornings for the most part were clear though; one morning we were given an unbelievable view of Kanchenjunga, the world's third highest mountain, to the north. Our room was great, there was a community kitchen in the guest house which allowed us to meet the other guests. One night we cooked pasta alfredo with garlic bread for Karma which turned out really mushy. There was no internet cafe in town which is why I wasn't able to post earlier. Mirik was unbelievable, so far from Bihar, I cannot believe it is the same country. All the houses were surrounded by potted orchids and had little gardens out front. They were all painted vibrant colors like lime green and light blue. Anyways, it was beautiful, I found it hard to do the prescribed 6-8 hr/day on my project. But its coming along.
It was the 20th of November, I think, that we continued along to Sikkim. We were originally planing to go to Darjeeling but there was a strike and the roads were shut down. The Darjeeling hills are trying to form their own state, Gorkhaland, and they try to get the attention of the central government to notice by closing down the economy entirely for days at a time hoping that someone with power will complain. It is not dangerous but it is an inconvenience. So instead we went to Rumtek monastery near Gantok in Sikkim, it is the headquarters of the Kagyu lineage and the HH the 17th Karmapa's monastery but he is not allowed to Sikkim for some reason or another. Ask the Indian government. Rumtek is beautiful as well: massive rivers, dense forests and steep hills terraced with rice fields comprise most of the land. The himalayas make up the backdrop. The monastery guest house provides us with meals when we like, as did Mirik Monastery, and we also walk down the hill to eat at the local restaurants. The monasteries welcome us and are very hospitable, the high lama, Khenpos and Rinpoches are always very generous with their time and maybe even interested to meet us. The shrine rooms are stunning and the monastics are great to speak to, I was not expecting this level of hospitality.
Next stop is Ralong, another Kagyu monastery, to the west. I highly doubt that it will have an internet cafe it is suppose to be extremely remote. After we will briefly visit Tashiding and then come back to Gantok to write the papers. Hope everyone is well.

2 comments:

  1. Hi Thomas,

    We've all been anxiously awaiting word from you and we're so glad all your experiences have been so rewarding. I've just quickly read your accounts of your travels and find it so informative and fascinating. Now I want to get a map and locate all the places you've seen. So glad all is going well. We'll be thinking of you on Thanksging and wishing you were here with the family. Maryfrances, Christine, Chuck and Ben will be here. Everyone sends lots of love. Grandma and Grandpa.

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  2. Hello Thomas,
    Thank you for the Thanksgiving call.It made our day very special.Brittany is here with me helping me learn the computer, She has the patience of Buddha. Love your blog. Now that I am getting to be an expert on the computer you will be hearing a lot from me. My new email is Donnat2586@gmail.com Thank you Brittany

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