During the latest festival for
driving off evil spirits in Tibet, lama Ngawang of the Samye
Temple tied slips of paper printed with Buddhist scripture
to hydrogen balloons to sell to the never-ending stream of
tourists from home and abroad.
Sales of
balloons and other trinkets to earn money is not rare in
today's Tibetan temples. In fact, most lamaseries are now
fully commercialized.
Not only lay
peddlers do business there, the temples themselves have
opened shops for extra income.
Mgchuling Temple, located in Lhoka
Prefecture, invested over 10, 000 yuan (about US$ 1,200) to
open a souvenir shop, which now brings in 1,600 yuan per day
-- a sizable sum for the landlocked temple.
Zhaxilhunbo Temple, the home of the
Panchen Lama, opened its own company as early as ten years
ago. Its total assets now stand at tens of millions of yuan.
Samye Temple has also set up its own
businesses offering land transport and ferrying.
Nowadays, it is fashionable in Tibet
for living Buddhas to become managers and lamas are keen to
be tour guides.
The disciples of
Tibetan Buddhism have already accepted electricity. They put
their TV in as important a position as the niche for Buddha.
The offerings to Buddha include not
only the traditional butter lamp and "holy water",
but also fruits and flowers which are a modern convention.
Since 1992, electronic Tibetan
scriptures and classics have appeared on the local market.
Compared with the traditional block printed scriptures, the
electronic ones are portable and easy to read. A Xinhua
reporter once heard the late 10th Panchen Lama's voice in a
remote temple, he was shocked and rushed in to find out what
was happening only to discover two young lamas attentively
listening to a cassette recorder. They told the reporter
that today the 10th Panchen's recitations on cassette costs
only three yuan and can be bought at any local market.
In Lhasa's commercial area, it is
common to see lamas who wear purple kasaya bargaining and
shopping in fashion stores.
Although
some disciples who live in Tibet's remote areas still retain
the custom of asking lamas to recite scriptures when they
get ill, most people now believe in modern medicine and
prefer to see the doctor if they feel bad.
Zhaxilhunbo temple opened a hospital in
1966. Lamas, wearing white gowns, use Tibetan and Western
medicine to treat disciples as well as local citizens.
Other modern sciences are also widely
applied in a disciple's life. Cannonballs are launched to
dispel hail in summer and insecticides are used to prevent
plant diseases and insect pests so that a good harvest is
always guaranteed.
More and more
disciples accept the fact that modern civilization makes
their lives more convenient and efficient, and enriches
their religious careers as well.
Today's lamas are used to wearing
watches. They go to the temple to recite scriptures at set
times every day. Some have even bought mobile phones so that
they can contact the outside world at any time.
(Xinhua News Agency December 17, 2001)