- Matho Monastery
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Matho Monastery, or Matho Gompa is a Buddhist monastery located 26 kilometres southeast of Leh in Ladakh, northern India.[1] The village of Matho is located at the mouth of a deep gorge running out of the Zanskar Range and across the Indus. It is directly opposite Thikse Monastery.
Contents
History
Founded in the 16th century by Lama Dugpa Dorje, it belongs to the Sakya Order. It is noted for its four hundred year old thangkas and its Matho Nagrang Festival.[1]
The gompa is the only one in Ladakh belonging to the Sakyapa and is said to be one of the few which is seeing an increase of monks in recent years.[2]
Description
Most of the buildings are, apparently, rather dilapidated but there is a new assembly hall or du-khang which was built about the early 1970s and which has rather sober and plain paintings of the Lords of the Quarters on the verandah. There is a small chapel on the top story containing images of Sakya Pandita and other Sakya lamas. There is a 'museum' adjoining it with a number of very beautiful old thangkas, some of which are thought to have been brought from Tibet in the first half of the 16th century when the monastery was founded. Unfortunately, many of them are very worn. The masks and robes worn by the lamas in the annual dance festival may also be seen in the museum.[3]
The festival of the oracles
The annual festival of the oracles takes place around the Buddhist new year, usually in the first half of March. Two lamas are chosen by lots every three years who purify themselves with months of fasting and meditation to make themselves suitable receptacles for a certain deity. When possessed they are said to be able to perform many astounding feats such as cutting themselves with knives and walking around the ramparts of the top storey blindfolded with no fear of falling down the precipice below. While in this trance state they answer questions about the prospects for Matho and Ladakh for the coming year as well as personal questions put to them by individuals. However, if skeptical questions are put to the oracle to test him, he is said to react "with a frenzied display of anger."[4]
Footnotes
- ^ a b "Matho Gompa". Buddhist-temples.com. http://www.buddhist-temples.com/buddhist-monastery/ladakh/matho.html. Retrieved October 8, 2009.
- ^ Rizvi (1996), p. 237.
- ^ Rizvi (1996), pp. 237-238.
- ^ Rizvi (1996), p. 238.
References
- Rizvi, Janet. 1996. Ladakh: Crossroads of High Asia. Second Edition. Oxford India Paperbacks. 3rd Impression 2001. ISBN 019 564546 4.
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