Tibetans Mark The Great Prayer

TONGREN, CHINA - MARCH 01: Tibetan Buddhist Monks of the Gelug or Yellow Hat school carry a rolled up giant thangka before unfurling it on a mountain side at the Rongwo Monastery during Monlam or the Great Prayer, on March 1, 2018 in Tongren, also known as Rebkong, Huangnan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Qinghai, China. Monlam or the Great Prayer is the most important prayer event for many Tibetan Buddhists. Pilgrims and worshippers join prayers, teachings and rituals at the monasteries of the Gelug or Yellow Hat, school of Tibetan Buddhism to pray for long life, peace and harmony. An enormous scroll-painting or thangka is carried and unrolled as an offering to Buddha. Monlam begins after the Lunar New Year and lasts for up to two weeks across the ethnic Tibetan regions of western China. Despite accusations of religious repression, China's atheist government claims that Tibetans are free to practise their beliefs and says several faiths are protected by the country's constitution. However, followers of Tibetan Buddhism must adhere to restrictions and controls imposed by a central government wary of the religion's politicization. (Photo by Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
TONGREN, CHINA - MARCH 01: Tibetan Buddhist Monks of the Gelug or Yellow Hat school carry a rolled up giant thangka before unfurling it on a mountain side at the Rongwo Monastery during Monlam or the Great Prayer, on March 1, 2018 in Tongren, also known as Rebkong, Huangnan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Qinghai, China. Monlam or the Great Prayer is the most important prayer event for many Tibetan Buddhists. Pilgrims and worshippers join prayers, teachings and rituals at the monasteries of the Gelug or Yellow Hat, school of Tibetan Buddhism to pray for long life, peace and harmony. An enormous scroll-painting or thangka is carried and unrolled as an offering to Buddha. Monlam begins after the Lunar New Year and lasts for up to two weeks across the ethnic Tibetan regions of western China. Despite accusations of religious repression, China's atheist government claims that Tibetans are free to practise their beliefs and says several faiths are protected by the country's constitution. However, followers of Tibetan Buddhism must adhere to restrictions and controls imposed by a central government wary of the religion's politicization. (Photo by Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
Tibetans Mark The Great Prayer
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Credits:
Kevin Frayer / Freelancer
Redactioneel nr.:
929149134
Collectie:
Getty Images News
Gemaakt op:
08 maart 2018
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Bron:
Getty Images AsiaPac
Naam materiaal:
99510407
Max. bestandsgrootte:
7954 x 5504 px (67,34 x 46,60 cm) - 300 dpi - 14 MB