Rediscovering the
Last Shangri-la
By Stanley Sobari,
#Above all the attention Bhutan has been given, this
happiest kingdom on Earth is most revered for its resilient spirit and
authenticity
ONE TRIP would be
enough to show me the allure of Bhutan. Or so I thought.
Bhutan is anything but predictable. It began with the flight
– instead of a building-dotted landscape, my pilot darted amongst mountains in
deftly executed twists and turns to land on one of the world’s shortest landing
strips. Rather than human traffic, cow and horses sauntered lazily across
narrow roads. Instead of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), Bhutan favours instead
the Gross National Happiness (GNH) index, which places heavy emphasis on
spiritual well-being. Smiles are incessant; helping hands never short in
supply. International hotelier names are nowhere in sight; neither is Starbucks
or McDonald’s. Yet, the Tourism Council of Bhutan recorded a jump in tourist
arrivals-from 42,990 in 2002, to 166,264 in 2011. It’s easy to see why. Trip
needs are rolled into one with Bhutan’s tariff – ‘package’ rates of US$230 and
up per night (dependent on season), which secures everything from
accommodation, transport, guide to meals all round.
But like the ongoing mystery behind Mona Lisa’s missing
eyebrows in Leonardo da Vinci’s famous portrait, my second trip to Bhutan
unearthed deeper layers of this landlocked, Himalayan kingdom, while also
amassing a surprisingly long list of ‘first’ in my travel list.
# A propeller plane landing at the bumthang domestic airport
Festival Flurry
After my maiden flight on Drukair, Bhutan’s national
carrier, from Singaore to Paro last year, I found myself looking forward to
another rollercoaster ride through the clouds. A fellow passenger recounted
once hearing the captain announce, “if you think we are flying too close to the
mountains, do not be alarmed. This is our normal procedure”. But that’s not
all. My domestic flight into bumthang would take just 35 minutes – on a
propeller aircraft. Watching the propellers push the plane into the air is
exhilarating, completely safe, and frankly, addictive. We landed with a light push
onto the tarmac, then filed into the solitarity one-leveled airport – another
first.
Bhutan celebrates a festival nearly every month, when the
country’s 20 dzongkhas (districts)
take turns celebrating Guru Rimpoche’s birthday, the saint who introduced Buddhism
to Bhutan, also regarded as Buddha incarnate. This year, the month of June was
allocated to Bumthang in central Bhutan, also considered the heartland of
Buddhism, our first festival was at Nimalung Monastery. Bhutanese’ faith is
stunning – I was amazed to find locals pouring out from thick forested areas
and onto the main road, whole families who had walked hours from home, mothers
carrying their lunches in huge baskets behind their backs, and kids propped on
their arms.
Arriving to deep, resounding drums and a flurry of
excitement, the festival is split intor htre parts – blessing the land,
subduing of evils, and the drum dance of victory. Every move precise and
rehearsed, dancers strut in dramatic costumes and masks, colorful swirls of
music, dance and camaraderie drawing the festival-goers into one. If you are
early, you might just chance upon young monks hard at practice prior to the
festival, dancing earnestly as their elder looks on, with some laughs along the
way.
The city’s biggest religious ceremony of the year however,
required me to rush out of the hotel by 6.30am, so I could get at good spot at
Kurjey Lhakhang – a temple built around a cave which Guru Rimpoche was believed
to have mediated and left an impression of his palm at. Temple grounds quiet
under the still rising sun, closer inspection saw monks of various saffron hued
robes dashing around, ladies in gorgeous kiras huddled in light chatter, drums
in alignment and microphones set up for Kurjey
Tshechu (festival). More people arrived, and in a minutes a commotion
ensued – the three-tiered birthday cake to celebrate Guru rimpoche’s birthday
had arrived. No time to lose, a symphony began and my attention shot upwards –
over 20 monks and men had climbed to the temple’s roof, and in one unified
movement unfurled the gigantic Thongdrel – the rare tapestry revealed only one
a year, depicting the seated Guru and his eight manifestations. Amids alternate
sessions of song and chants headed by central Bhutan’s head lama and entourage,
I found two ladies gazing at the scene in awe, Singaporeans who were here for
10 days. “We would stay a month if we could, this might be a bit commercialized
but it’s still on my bucket list because hey, this is the last Shangri-la!”