Bhutan: A trip to the happiest place on earth

By Michael Gebicki
Updated July 25 2015 - 1:18am, first published 12:15am
Mount Jumolhari at 7300 metres,  seen through prayer flags from Chele La Pass. Photo: Danita Delimont
Mount Jumolhari at 7300 metres, seen through prayer flags from Chele La Pass. Photo: Danita Delimont
Trekking through the Himalayas in Bhutan. Photo: Jordan Siemens
Trekking through the Himalayas in Bhutan. Photo: Jordan Siemens

I'm in the prayer hall of Tango Buddhist monastery high on a mountainside in Bhutan, watching as a woman performs chag, ritual prostrations before the Buddha. Three times she clasps her hands in the prayer position, brings them to the crown of her head, to her throat and then to her heart before folding to a kneeling posture and touching her forehead to the floor. Chag is one of seven ritual practices known as yoen lak duen pa; the woman is a Westerner. Over the next week it's a theme repeated with many small variations, foreign visitors spinning prayer wheels, lighting butter lamps, wearing the white khata, Buddhist symbol of purity.

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