The
Tsangpo-Brahmaputra is a major international river shared between
Tibet/China, India and Bangladesh. On the Tibetan Plateau, the river
flows west to east, across Southern Tibet, from its sources near the
sacred Mt. Kailash (གངས་རིན་པོ་ཆེ༑)
all the way to the Great Bend, where the river turns north to take a
sharp U-turn to flow south into India and then to Bangladesh.
Hydrologically, this river is connected to the
larger Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna basin.
Until
recently, the Yarlung Tsangpo was considered as an undammed river.
China has officially announced plans to build five
dams on the middle section of the river, including
the Zangmu project currently under construction, which has
caused much concern in India. The absence in these debates of the
voices of Tibetans who live in the valley and are traditional users
of its waters in these debates is deplorable, especially given their
historical, religious and economic connections to the river.
The historic Yumbulagang Palace 雍布拉康宫 in the Yarlung Valley 雅鲁藏布江河谷
is a hilltop fort and ancient palace founded over 1,000 years ago.
The
Yarlung Tsangpo River is intimately linked to the history of Tibetan
civilization, indigenous religious beliefs and practices, and
ultimately to the Tibetan identity. As the River Nile is to Egypt,
Yarlung Tsangpo can be considered the cradle of Tibetan civilization.
The Yarlung Valley is the home of the earliest Tibetan kings known as
the Yarlung Dynasty. From its sources near the sacred Mt. Kailash,
the Yarlung Tsangpo valley is dotted with pilgrimage sites and
power-places such as meditation caves of past masters and beyul
(་"hidden
valleys") for spiritual practices. The river is also shown in
paintings of the famous imagery of Tibet as a supine demoness
(སྲིན་མོ་གན་རྐྱལ༑).
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To the Tibetans, the Great Bend region is known as Pema Koe, the most sacred beyul blessed by Guru Rinpoche, Padmasambhava, the Indian Buddhist yogin credited with firmly establishing Buddhism in Tibet. Generations of visionary Tibetan Buddhist masters have revealed "hidden treasures" (གཏེར་མ་) and made journeys through the different layers of spiritual doors of beyul Pema Koe. Tibetans also consider the region as the home of the Goddess Dorje Phakmo (Vajra Yogini).
Similar to the Tibet map depicted as a demoness lying on her back,
Similar to the Tibet map depicted as a demoness lying on her back,
THE TSANGPO GORGE: THE SACRED LAND OF PEMA KOE
The
Great Bend of the Yarlung Tsangpo, also known as the Tsangpo Gorge,
has attracted significant international attention as the "Last
Secret Place on Earth" and for having the greatest hydropower
potential of any site in the world. Through the 19th century,
cartographers were not certain whether the Yarlung Tsangpo emerged
from the other side of the Gorge as the Brahmaputra, the Irrawaddy,
or some other river. Just downstream of Lungpe (ལུང་དཔེ་),
the Yarlung Tsangpo enters one of the world's deepest and largest
gorges, starting from a 4,900-meter cleft between two of the highest
mountains in Eastern Himalaya: 7756 meters high Namchak
Barwa and 7294 meters tall Gyala Pelri. As the river drops
nearly 2500 meters in altitude through the length of the bend, the
gorge is considered ideal for hydropower generation. Speculation
about the construction of the world's most powerful dam and a major
water diversion project at this site (discussed below) has been a
major cause of concern in downstream countries.
The
Great Bend of the Yarlung Tsangpo River is also known as one of the
most bio-diverse regions in the world in terms of plant species.
Although it is hard to imagine how botanists studied and added up the
numbers of different plant species in this hard-to-travel
corner, this official
site boasts the existence of 3,700 plant species and emphasizes "the
primordial nature of the plants" in the region. The ecological
integrity of the Great Bend area is critical for the conservation of
the Himalayas as one the world's richest but at greatest-risk areas
for biodiversity
(hotspot).
Similar to the Tibet map depicted as a demoness lying on her back, this local trekking group describes the sacred geography of the Pema Koe region as mapped onto the body of the goddess Dorje Phakmo herself: "Her head is the Kangri Kangpo [White Snow Mountain], her two breasts [are] Namche Barwa and Gyala Peri [mountains] respectively. The lower part of her body lies in Yangsang or the innermost Pemako which is the upper Siang region of Arunachal Pradesh. In the confluence of Siang (Tsangpo) and Yangsang is the sacred tri[a]ngle Kila Yangzom the vulva of Goddess Dorje Phagmo." These beliefs and pilgrimage practices have religious and cultural significance for millions of Buddhists around the world.
Similar to the Tibet map depicted as a demoness lying on her back, this local trekking group describes the sacred geography of the Pema Koe region as mapped onto the body of the goddess Dorje Phakmo herself: "Her head is the Kangri Kangpo [White Snow Mountain], her two breasts [are] Namche Barwa and Gyala Peri [mountains] respectively. The lower part of her body lies in Yangsang or the innermost Pemako which is the upper Siang region of Arunachal Pradesh. In the confluence of Siang (Tsangpo) and Yangsang is the sacred tri[a]ngle Kila Yangzom the vulva of Goddess Dorje Phagmo." These beliefs and pilgrimage practices have religious and cultural significance for millions of Buddhists around the world.
The Great Bend of the Tsangpo-Brahmaputra. 雅鲁藏布江 - 布拉马普特拉河
Chinese Info about the region : “白玛归”寻找多吉帕姆的大地化身
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