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Lhasa tour, capital of Tibet, is famous throughout the world. It is a medium
sized city with a population of under 200,000, located in the center of Tibet
autonomous region on the middle reaches of the Lhasa River. Here winter is mild,
and summer cool. It may snow in June, but the city is still bathed in sunshine
and the sky is sapphire blue.
One thousand five hundred years ago Lhasa was known as Otang, which
means, "plain flowing with milk," because of its rich pasture, good for grazing
sheep and cattle. One day, a young man clad in a tunic rode up. Delighted by the
clear water in the river, he stopped his followers and took a dip. He was
Songtsen Gampo. Although then only 15 years old, he had just quenched a revolt
by the nobles. He had come to this land, which once belonged to the Supi tribe
his father had conquered earlier, and was impressed by the magnificent Red Hill
rising straight up from the center of the plain. When one of his followers told
him that his forefather, Lhathotho Rinyatsen, had once retired to the hill to
cultivate himself, he climbed up to the top and looked out over a mountain-
ringed plain expansive enough for the stationing of tens of thousands of troops.
He decided it was a strategic point for both defense and attack and an ideal
place for building up the Turfan Empire.
Songtsen Gampo soon moved his capital, including his royal family,
ministers and officials, army and people, from Gyamarminjuling to Otang.In
641,Songtsen Gampo,then 25,married Princess Wen Cheng,a lineal descendant of the
Tang emperor, and built the Potala Palace for her on Red Hill. Later he
constructed the Jokhang Monastery at the request of the Nepalese Princess
Bhrikuti Devi, another of his royal consorts. The site of the monastery,
selected by Princess Wen Cheng, was lake Ogco. Around the lake, sheds and
shanties were erected to house the construction workers. Eventually the site
became Barkhor Street in Lhasa. Goats were used to carry earth to fill up the
lake. "Rasa" as the monastery was popularly known, means "goat" and "earth".
The Rasa Monastery soon became the Otang people's central place of
worship, for it enshrined the gilded image of Sakyamuni brought from Chang's an
by Princess Wen Cheng. It also served as the venue for important rites held by
the Tang court. In the course of time, the original name of the place was
forgotten, and it became known simply as Rasa, which was gradually changed into
Lhasa.
Lhasa is known to Tibetan as the " Land of Buddhism". It is sacred
because of the figures of Songtsen Gampo and his two royal consorts and the
figures of Sakyamuni brought from Chang' an and Nepal. In addition, there are
also the Potala Palace, the Norbulingka, the Jokhang and Ramcho monasteries and
Ganden, Sera and Drepung monasteries. Devout Buddhists come to Lhasa from every
corner of Tibet to pray. They prostrate themselves on the ground with each step,
even if it means they might die from exhaustion during the long pilgrimage.
But the land of Buddhism is by no means a pure land. The image of the
Europe of the Middle Ages lingered in Lhasa up to the late 1950s. There were
filthy slums west of the Jokhang Monastery, homeless dogs and their droppings on
Barkor Street, cries of "Please have mercy, officer" from beggar with gouged
eyes or severed limbs, inscrutable monks, haughty bureaucrats and oppressed
people. Only in the early 1960s did the citizens of Lhasa begin to feel happy
and relaxed, and only in the 1980s did new construction give the city a modern
air an overall appearance that leaves visitors with a snug feeling.
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