 | | The Pashupati Nath Temple |
Religious practices are an important part of the lives of the
Nepalese people. Mythologies of various Hindu gods and goddesses abound in this
country and cultural values are based on the philosophies of holy books like
the Swasthani, Gita, Ramayana, etc.
Women and children visit neighborhood shrines at dawn to offer worship to the
gods. Holding plates of rice, flowers, and vermilion powder, they perform Puja
by lighting incense, ringing the temple bell, and applying tika, a red paste,
on their foreheads. Passersby stop at temples and show their reverence to the
gods by spending a few minutes praying. Occasionally, groups of men sit near
temples playing music and singing hyms until late night.
In Nepal, Hinduism and Buddhism are the two main religions.
The two have co-existed down the ages and many Hindu temples share the same
complex as Buddhist shrines. Hindu and Buddhist worshippers may regard the same
god with different names while performing religious rites.
Though Nepal is the only Hindu Kingdom in the world, many
other religions like Islam, Christianity. and Boo are practiced here. Some of
the earliest inhabitants like the Kirats practice their own kind of religion
based on ancestor worship and the Tharus practice animism. Over the years, Hinduism
and Buddhism have been influenced by these practices which have been modified
to form a synthesis of newer beliefs.
As a result, visitors to this country may often find the religious
practices in Nepal difficult to follow and understand. But this does not prevent
one from enjoying the different traditional ceremonies and rituals of Nepalese
culture. It is indeed a totally new experience of religious fervor.
Hinduism.Thousands of gods and goddesses
make up the Hindu pantheon. Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva are the three major Hindu
gods who have their own characteristics and incarnations. Each god has his own
steed which is often seen kneeling faithfully outside that god's temple. Symbolic
objects are carried by the multiple hands of each deity which empowers them
to perform great feats.
Buddhism. Sakyamuni Buddha is the founder
of Buddhism who lived and taught in this part of the world during the sixth
century BC. The great stupas of Swayambhunath and Bouddhanath are among the
oldest and most beautiful worship sites in the Kathmandu Valley.
The spinning of prayer wheels, prostrating pilgrims,
collective chants and burning butter lamps are some Buddhist practices often
encountered by tourists. A slip of paper bearing a mantra is kept inside the
wheels so that prayers are sent to the gods when the wheel is spun. Scenes from
the Buddha's life and Buddhist realms are depicted on than gka scroll paintings
which are used during meditation and prayer ceremonies. Many Buddhist followers
are seen performing these practices in Swayambhunath, Bouddhanath, and at other
Buddhist sites around the Valley. |