Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Mulbekh Monastery

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Type
  
Tibetan Buddhist

Architecture
  
2 gompas

Sect
  
Drukpa and Gelug

Mulbekh Monastery thetourplannerscomblogwpcontentuploads20120

Location
  
Kargil, Ladakh, Jammu and Kashmir, India

Mulbekh monastery or mulbekh gompa hd video


Mulbekh Monastery or Mulbekh Gompa is said to consist of two gompas, one Drukpa and one Gelugpa Buddhist monastery in Kargil, Ladakh of the state Jammu and Kashmir in northern India.

Contents

Mulbekh Monastery Chamba temple at base of statue of Maitreya at Mulbekh Picture of

Description

Mulbekh Monastery Majestic Ladakh Kargil to Fotu La Ghumakkar Inspiring travel

The double gompas are dramatically situated at the very top of a crag 200 metres (656 ft) above the road. They were connected with the nearby palace of Rajah kalon of Mulbekh below. They may be reached by a steep footpath winding up from behind.

Mulbekh Monastery Mulbekh Area Picture of Mulbekh Monastery Kargil TripAdvisor

The altitude of the town at the foot of the crag is given as 3,304 m. (10,839 ft), which makes the altitude of the gompas 3,504 m. (11,495 ft). Its population is given as 5,730.

Chamba Statue and Inscriptions

Mulbekh Monastery Mulbekh Monastery Wikipedia

Around 45 kilometre east of Kargil town heading toward Leh, is the famous Chamba Statue in Mulbekh village, a striking enormous figure carved into the rock face on the right hand side of the road. It pictures a standing Maitreya Buddha or Buddha-to-come overlooking the old trade route and modern highway. Some people believe it dates to the Kushan period in the early centuries CE. Modern scholars date it as being from around the eighth century. Unfortunately, the lower part of the statue is partly obscured by a small temple built in 1975.

Mulbekh Monastery Hills above the Mulbekh Monastery in the Zanskar region of Ladakh

Nearby are some ancient inscriptions written in Kharosthi script. There is also an edict issued to the local people to discontinue sacrificing goats by King Lde, who ruled western Ladakh c. 1400 CE, while his younger brother, Dragspa, ruled the rest.

Mulbekh Monastery Mulbekh Monastery Kargil Top Tips Before You Go TripAdvisor

Every year at least once or twice in each village the heart was torn out of a living goat in front of an altar. King Lde had the following inscription carved:

.Oh Lama (Tsongkapa [1378-1441 CE]), take notice of this! The king of faith, Bum lde, having seen the fruits of works in the future life, gives orders to the men of Mulbe to abolish, above all, the living sacrifices, and greets the Lama. The living sacrifices are abolished."

Sadly, the people of Mulbekh found this too onerous to follow, for beside King Lde's edict, on the same rock, is an inscription saying the order was too hard to be executed. "For what would the local deity say, if the goat were withheld from him?"

References

Mulbekh Monastery Wikipedia