Barkhor
Street
The Tibet Autonomous Region has
renovated Barkhor Street, a bustling religious, tourist and commercial
centre in Lhasa, to transform it into a historical
site. The renovation project cost 37.6 million yuan.
Barkhor Street, located at the foot of the incense-coiling Jokhang
Monastery in Lhasa, is renowned as Tibet’s largest market place. With a
history of more
than 1300 years, the street has been prospering upon the completion of
the monastery in central Lhasa in 647. in the Barkhor Street, an inch of
land is an
inch of gold. Vendors from various parts of China and bordering
countries have truned the street into an international market. The
street was built in the
7th century when the Tibetan King Songtsen Gampo decided to construct
the monastery. To supervise the project, he brought his servants and
family and settled
down on the spot. People then built houses on the four sides for
Songtsen Gampo and his servants.
Around Jokhang Temple, it is Barkhor which is a place where Tibetan
culture, economy, religion and arts assemble. Barkhor is the road which
pilgrims trampled
out through centuries. Buddhist pilgrims walk or progress by body
lengths along the street clockwise every day into deep night. To the
west of the north
street of Barkhor, in front of a juniper hearth, the annual ceremony to
hail Maitreya (Buddha of the Future) is held. Barkhor, the sacred
pilgrim path, is
also a marketplace where shaggy nomads, traders, robed monks and
chanting pilgrims join together. Clustered shops and stalls sell printed
scriptures, cloth
prayer flags and other religious vessels, jewelry, Tibetan knives,
ancient coins and other Tibetan relics. |
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