THE STORY OF LOSAR
Happy
Losar (Tibetan New Year). Tibetans all over the world celebrated
Tibetan New Year on Sunday, February 6th. The word Losar is a
Tibetan word for New Year. LO means year and SAR means new.
The celebration of Losar can be traced back to the pre-Buddhist
period in Tibet. During the period when Tibetans practiced the
Bon religion, every winter a spiritual ceremony was held, in which
people offered large quantities of incense to appease the local
spirits, deities and protectors. This religious festival later
evolved into an annual Buddhist festival which is believed to
have originated during the reign of Pude Gungyal, the ninth King
of Tibet. The festival is said to have begun when an old woman
named Belma introduced the measurement of time based on the phases
of the moon. This festival took place during the flowering of
the apricot trees of the Lhokha Yarla Shampo region in autumn,
and it may have been the first celebration of what has become
the traditional farmers' festival. It was during this period that
the arts of cultivation, irrigation, refining iron from ore and
building bridges were first introduced in Tibet. The ceremonies
which were instituted to celebrate these new capabilities can
be recognized as precursors of the Losar festival. Later when
the rudiments of the science of astrology, based on the five elements,
were introduced in Tibet, this farmer's festival became what we
now call the Losar or New Year's festival.
The calendar is made up of twelve lunar months and Losar begins
on the first day of the first month. In the monasteries, the celebrations
for the Losar begin on the twenty-ninth day of the twelfth month.
That is the day before the Tibetan New Year's Eve. On that day
the monasteries do a protector deities' puja (a special kind of
ritual) and begin preparations for the Losar celebrations. The
custom that day is to make special noodle called guthuk. It is
made of nine different ingredients including dried cheese and
various grains. Also, dough balls are given out with various ingredients
hidden in them such as chilies, salt, wool, rice and coal. The
ingredients one finds hidden in one's dough ball are supposed
to be a lighthearted comment on one's character. If a person finds
chilies in their dough, it means they are talkative. If white-colored
ingredients like salt, wool or rice are inside the dough it is
considered a good sign. If a person finds coal in the dough it
has much the same meaning as finding coal in one's Christmas stocking;
it means you have a "black heart".
The last day of the year is a time to clean and prepare for
the approaching New Year. In the monasteries it is a day of preparations.
The finest decorations are put up and elaborate offerings are
made of called "Lama Losar". In the early dawn of this
day, the monks of Namgyal Monastery offer a sacrificial cake (Tse-
tor) on top of the main temple (Potala in Tibet) to the supreme
hierarchy of Dharma protectors, the glorious goddess Palden Lhamo.
The abbots of three great monasteries, lamas, reincarnated monks,
government officials and dignitaries join the ceremony and offer
their contemplative prayers, while the monks of Namgyal Monastery
recite the invocation of Palden Lhamo. After the completion of
this ceremony, all assemble in the hall called Excellence of Samsara
and Nirvana for a formal greeting ceremony. Seated on his or her
respective cushions, everyone exchanges the traditional greeting,
"Tashi delek".
Consecrated long-life pills (tse-ril) made out of roasted barley
dough are offered to him by the representatives of the three great
monasteries, the two Tantric Colleges, etc. Then entertainers
(garma) perform a dance of good wishes. And two senior monks stage
a debate on Buddhist philosophy, and conclude their debate with
an auspicious recitation composed especially for the event, in
which the whole spectrum of Buddhist teaching is first briefly
reviewed. A request is made to His Holiness and to all holders
of the doctrine to remain for a long time amongst beings in samsara
in order to serve them through their enlightened activities. The
official ceremony of the day then concludes with a ceremonial
farewell.
The second day of Losar is known as King's Losar (gyal-po lo-sar)
because officially the day is reserved for a secular gathering
in the hall of Excellence of Samsara and Nirvana. His Holiness
and his government exchange greetings with both monastic and lay
dignitaries, such as representatives of China, India, Bhutan,
Nepal, Mongolia and other foreign visitors.
Then from the third day onwards, the people and monks begin
to celebrate and enjoy the festive season. In Tibet before the
Chinese came, Losar had been celebrated for fifteen days or more.
In India today we celebrate for three days, and in America we
have minimized it to one day. In this way the three days of the
New Year celebration officially concludes.