Ancient ritual rolled out as festival begins

BEIJING: Thousands of residents formed long lines in Lhasa on Wednesday to visit a giant thangka exhibition β€” religious images embroidered in silk β€” to mark the beginning of the annual Shoton, or Yogurt Festival.
The festival, held in the Drepung Monastery, is one of the most important traditional holidays in the capital of the Tibet autonomous region. It is also known as Yogurt Festival, as sho is yogurt in Tibetan, and ton means banquet.
The event usually lasts for seven days, and the activities include artistic performances, Tibetan operas, horse racing, Tibetan chess competitions and concerts, along with activities to promote investment in Lhasa.
At around 7 am, monks from the Drepung Monastery started the preparatory work for the exhibition by transporting a giant thangka to the site. Before the thangka was moved, a Tibetan Buddhist religious ceremony was held at the monastery.
Accompanied by a cacophony of dharma horns, hundreds of local residents followed the team carrying the thangka on its route to the exhibition platform.
At around 8 am, as the first rays of sunlight hit the summits of the distant mountains in the Lhasa valley, the giant thangka was gradually unfolded from top to bottom β€” its width reaching 37 meters and height 40 meters.
Nyagwang Choizin, deputy director of the Drepung Monastery Management Committee, said, with a history of at least 500 years the monastery holds a thangka exhibition every year on the 30th day of the sixth month of the Tibetan calendar. –The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item