In2-MeC

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New Delhi, India
15 May 2004

Pilgrimage to Shalagram (Gandaki and Muktinath)
Part Three

Hare Krsna! All glories to Srila Prabhupada!

Again, if you wish to refer to a detailed map of the places shown in today's photoreport, double-click this web address:

www.footprint-adventures.co.uk/mapnep/fixjoms.html

 

Late sunset inside my room at the Hotel Hill Ton: I'm contemplating the salagrama silas we've found today. On my forehead is a trekker's lamp purchased in a Pokhara supply shop. With the aid of its light, I study the silas closely.

Here's evidence that the Lord desires I continue to worship Him in the forms of Sri-Sri Jagannatha-Sudarsana. I found a sila with the unmistakable facial features of Lord Jagannatha: two reddish eyes, a nose, and a smiling mouth. I've positioned this sila atop the Sudarsana sila that I found this morning to form Lord Patita-pavana (the name by which Lord Jagannatha is addressed when He is worshiped separately from Baladeva and Subhadra). Positioned next to Patita-pavana is a second, very beautiful, Sudarsana sila.

 

Yajna-purusa is the name of this combination of silas. A sila with an extraordinary mouth rests upon a Cakra sila of a wavy shape like a flame. Sudarsana Cakra is the very form of the yajna fire (savana tejas trayi), and the Lord personally appears within that fire to eat the offerings of His devotees.

This sila I found was very ugra, obviously a Nrsimha
with at least 2 cakras in His mouth. Elsewhere on His
body were other fearsome markings. I returned Him to
the Gandaki. Too heavy, in both senses of the word.



More remarkable salagrama silas. The first, found by Martanda, was too large to carry with us, so we returned Him to the Gandaki the next morning. He is liberally smeared with gold and displays five crystals in a semicircular pattern. The second, which I found, likewise has a lot of gold and crystal in Him, is multicolored, and shows very fine cakras. Then there is this nice Sesa sila supporting a Narayana sila. These were found by Rasaji. She also found a white-faced Laksmi sila that is not pictured. The Laksmi sila perfectly complements the Narayana sila on the lap of the Sesa sila!

 

The next morning we leave the Hotel Hill Ton on our way to Muktinath.

The trail to Muktinath carries us out of the Gandaki River Valley into the soaring mountain heights. This is not easy going. The air was thin to begin with, but now as we trudge ever-higher in the hot sun under the weight of our backpacks, the decreasing oxygen becomes more and more of a problem.

 

In less than half an hour, we look down upon Kagbeni as if from an airplane.

During this season one meets a good number of trekkers along the Jomsom-Kagbeni-Muktinath path. Americans, Australians, Britishers, Europeans, and surprisingly a lot of Russians!

 

The trail winds along the side of a steep valley formed by a white-water tributary that rushes down to meet the Gandaki at Kagbeni. In the cliffside opposite are many caves. The local Tibetan Buddhist monks and nuns sometimes retire to these caves for meditation and austerity.

We approach the village of Jarkot. If you look carefully you can see the dark red Buddhist monastery perched on a hilltop at the edge of this village. It is 500 years old. The Muktinath temple is about an hour's walk beyond Jarkot. On the top of the mountain is the white lip of a glacier that feeds the Gandaki with its icy waters.

 

This is what Jarkot looks like as you pass through.

Having left Jarkot behind, we are approaching the Dreamland Hotel, which is the first building visible as one enters the village clustered at the foot of the hill of Muktinath. That is Rasalila dd on the horse. She and I found it necessary to rent horses to reach Muktinath. Her excuse is that she has a woman's body. Mine is that my present body is different from the one I had when I hiked up here in 1987.

 

Early next morning I chant japa on Dreamland's rooftop.

Now we are approaching the Muktinath Temple complex. The dark red structure behind is the entrance gate.

 

Buddhist prayer wheels at the entrance to the Muktinath complex. These revolvable cylinders are a common sight in Nepal. They are inscribed with the Tibetan Buddhist mahamantra Om Mani Padme Hum--"Aum! The jewel in the lotus! Hail!" The jewel is the pure spirit soul and the lotus is the purified body of the true follower of Buddha's way. Tibetan Buddhists turn these prayer wheels to earn merit. Simply pushing on them to get them revolving is supposed to be as good as chanting the mantra as many times as the wheel then revolves.

 

Having passed through the entrance gate, we proceed to the complex's first shrine. Muktinath is sacred to both Vaisnavas and Buddhists. In this shrine we take darsana of Sri Krsna. To my knowledge this murti of Lord Krsna is situated at a higher altitude than any other Krsna Deity in the world.

 

Rocana found this trisul (symbol of Lord Siva) and poses as if he were a Shaivite sannyasi.

This is the Muktinath Temple proper. Lord Muktinath is, for Vaisnavas, Sri Padmapani (Lord Narayana who carries a lotus flower in His hand). Tibetan Buddhists worship Him as Adi-Buddha. Lord Muktinath's form is manifest in brass. His posture resembles that of the Yoga Narayana Deity seen in the April 2004 In2-MeC photoreport about Bhuvara Nrsimha temple in Halsi, Karnataka. Atop the hill behind the Muktinath Temple is a Buddhist shrine. Incredibly, some women of the Muktinath Buddhist nunnery daily climb this hill to offer worship up there!
Though we took a long darsana of and chanted japa in circumambulation around Lord Muktinath, we unfortunately could not take a photograph of the Muktinath Deity.
Jutting from the stone wall that encloses Muktinath Temple on three sides are 108 gomukhs or cows' mouths. From each mouth icy glacial water flows. The water is considered as pure as the Ganges, which flows from Gomukh in the Indian Himalayas.

 

The new salagram silas take Their morning bath!

 

After bathing, They are warmed by the morning sun. . .

. . . which streams from the Eastern mountaintops through the fluttering prayer flags.

 

Now that Their Lordships are bathed, it's my turn! Believe me when I tell you this water, sacred though it may be, is seriously cold!

 

Here we sit outside yet another shrine in the Muktinath complex.

Inside this shrine one can observe blue flames that spring from the mountain rock along with a stream of water. We have a photo of the fire but it is so dark there's no use publishing it here. It is said that at this spot at the time of creation Lord Brahma made an offering of the five elements (earth, water, fire, air and ether) to Lord Muktinath.

 

Rasaji stands before a Buddhist deity within the fire-water shrine. The flames are to be seen through openings in the base of the altar.
Extraordinary ladies! The intrepid Rasalila dd, who is one of the the few ISKCON women, if not the only one, to have visited Muktinath, stands alongside a hardy but humble Tibetan Buddhist nun.

 

As we left Muktinath Temple we observed this helicopter coming in for a landing. Must have delivered some VIP (Very Important Pilgrims) eager to take darsana!
Back down in the Gandaki River Valley again, we approach Jomsom.

 

The stupendous Nilgiri peak overlooking Jomsom. Mountain ranges like the Rockies in North America and the Alps in Europe do not prepare you for the tremendous size of these Himalayan mountains.

 

 
Back aboard the Cosmic Airways Dornier, we zip between the mountains to Pokhara.

 

During our return visit to Pokhara we saw the Sheti River Gorge. The water racing through the rocks is not only white with foam, it is naturally white even when taken up in a bucket from the river. Thus the name Sheti, which is derived from sveta, Sanskrit for "white. "

At the Sheti River Gorge is this little temple to Lord Vasudeva-Krsna.

And that's the end of the Pilgrimage to Shalagram photoreport!

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