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In Tibet theories about religion, its spiritual power and tenacious
hold on the human imagination become reality. Tibet is a repository
of some of the most ancient beliefs and rituals. It houses temples
such as the magnificent Jokhang in Lhasa, the ethereal national
cathedral of Tibetan religion, where one can immerse oneself in
an atmosphere that evokes the great temples of antiquity.
The land of
Tibet is given its deepest imprint of spirituality by the Tibetan
people, whose pilgrimage fervor and devotion to Buddhism can never
be quenched. The followers of this Indian doctrine attributed to
Gautama Buddha, believe that suffering is inseparable from existence
but that inward extinction of the self and of the senses culminates
in a state of illumination beyond suffering and existence.
Tibet is also
a land of "power places," as a Tibetan phrase expresses:
mountains, valleys, rocks, caves, rivers and lakes are scattered
with sacred Buddhist structures such as temples, chapels within
monasteries and chortens, which are shrines also known as stupas.
These sanctuaries have become consecrated because of the miraculous
visitation or intervention by Buddha or one his holy followers,
the Bodhisattvas. The sacredness of these structures also could
have resulted from their having been touched, visited or sanctified
by one of the great Indian or Tibetan saints, or because they reflect
some aspect of Tibetan Buddhist cosmology.
The photographs
exhibited at The Kent State University Museum come from a number
of my visits to Tibet, beginning in 1994, through my most recent
visit in the summer of 2000. In them we can see a land of high mountain
desert, which is covered for much of the year by wind-blown sand.
Vast drifts of sand cascade down the mountain slopes and spill onto
the roads into the river bottoms like billowing brown glaciers.
This harsh terrain also nurtures verdant valleys, fabulous flowers,
fruits and grains which blossom and grow in the spring and give
the countryside color and vitality into the Fall. This striking
country and its people have suffered terribly under the oppression
carried out by the regime of the People's Republic of China, and
they still lack full expression of their beliefs. But much about
this mysterious high mountain land remains intact, or is being rebuilt.
There is a deeply moving and magnetic sense of spirituality in Tibet
that irresistibly draws me back.
Dr. John Milton Lundquist
Guest Curator
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