Posts Tagged ‘distance’

Ancient ways of life

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

The Philippines is the lone Christian country in Southeast Asia. The majority of their 75 provinces swiftly caved into Jesus when Spain embarked on a short–lived Asian experiment in the 1650’s. In spite of that, six of those provinces — within a secluded mountain–range jungle in northern Luzon — fiercely resisted Spain’s take on God. The semi–tropical Cordillera is the country’s most rugged and least populated region and is still a thorny place to plot a route and get a haircut. Native Ifugao, Igorot and other pagan tribes remained warring headhunters until the 1950’s.
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Tibet

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

“You have to put up with a lot to get up onto the “rooftop of the world” – bureaucracy & permits, distance & flights, unpaved roads & long drives, poverty & filth, altitude sickness, headaches, nose bleeds, and dust… lots of dust. “But make it to Tibet and you will be rewarded with a surfeit of sensory experiences. A Tibet tour will delight and challenge your senses with smells, tastes and colors you have never experienced before. Good or bad, you’ll discover the fetid odor of yak butter and incense that smacks of hashish. You’ll taste rich, savory stews of spicy yak, crisp Asian pears, and sweet local melons …”

Mystical, magical, incomprehensible Tibet offers an overload on the senses: the gaspingly thin air; the overwhelming beauty of the world’s highest mountains; the haunting images of Buddhas, deities and demons; the intricate patterns of the colourful Tibetan art; the poignant devotion of the pilgrims circumambulating sacred images; the improbability of the ancient architectural wonders clinging to perilous hillsides; the tumultuous history of inaccessibility, mystery, struggles, determination and resilience. This is a country of extremes with one of the most adventurous, scenically stunning and physically demanding road trips in the world, as we followed the path from Tibet’s capital Lhasa, through gruelling conditions, past vast landscapes and glittering peaks, remote high altitude deserts, densely forested precipitous gorges and virtually unpopulated high altitude moor-land to the end of its borders and further towards the fabled city of Kathmandu. It was a journey of scenic and religious discovery!
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Sacred Srilangka

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

In Sinhala, the name Sri Lanka translates literally as “Sacred Land”. Known to Arab traders as Serendib, the island has been revered since ancient times as a place of unsurpassable beauty. European explorers likened the island to a pearl hanging in the sea, or a teardrop hanging from India. Whichever descriptors you prefer, Sri Lanka is a land of alluring contrasts. A day’s journey can bring you from gleaming towers of newly minted glass in Colombo to the crumbling remains of the ancient ruler’s red-brick stupas of Anuradhapura, or if you are more charmed by Mother Nature’s accomplishments, from the steaming, coconut palm beaches of the southern coast to the mist covered hills of tea country.

Adam’s Peak
The most fitting and quintessential landmark of this holy land is Adam’s Peak, a 2,243-meter mountain located in the southcentral region of the country. Known in Sinhala as Sri Pada, “Sacred Footprint”, the peak is a pilgrimage destination for followers of the world’s main religions who contend that the footprint belongs to their respective individual. For Buddhists, the mark is Buddha’s left footprint said to have been left as a relic for veneration after flying from India to give a sermon. For Hindus, it is Shiva’s who, they believe, ascended the mountain to shed light on mankind. Muslims think Adam stood here on one foot for 200 years after his expulsion from paradise as a penance to Allah. Christians have, since colonial times, claimed the impression to be left by St. Thomas the Doubter before his ascension to heaven, although this explanation has not been held in serious consideration.
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