· National animal in Tibet is the Yak (mao2 niu2). However, yak is only the male version. The female one is called the ‘dju’. Hence, I wonder how the term ‘yak milk’ came about. Hmm..
Yak stir fried with capsicum
· National food in Tibet is Tsamba. It is made mainly from Barley, processed into barley flour, and mixed together with cheese, butter and sugar. Sounds really yummy eh? ^_^ It is usually eaten with yak soup.
· They have 4 types of burials after death. Water, air, land, fire. Fire is like cremation, used for Dalai Lamas. Land is just burying of the body. Water burial involves the stripping of the body, then wrapped with a white cloth called the ‘ma3 da2’, then attaching stones to the body before throwing into the river to be devoured by the fishes. Air burial involves the cutting of the body in pieces, mixed with Tsamba, priests pray and the ‘boss vulture’ will lead the rest of the vultures to consume the body. People who have sinned much are believed to be left uneaten during air burials. Sick people are usually given land/fire burials to prevent spread of disease. Otherwise, tibetians in general prefer air/water burials, as they believe in returning their bodies to nature after death. (I argued with the tour guide that land burial also can return to plants.. but.. oh well.. plants and animals are different, I guess. Haha)
· Some villages in Tibet still practice arranged marriage. Furthermore, if a family has more than 1 son, only 1 son has to marry a wife, and the remaining brothers share the same wife! (However, some the Tibetians are getting increasingly modernized, and do no see a need in marriage without feelings, thus arranged marriages are decreasingly popular)
Shops along bu4 xing2 jie1 (walking street) in Shigatse, the model town in Tibet
Pool tables are seen EVERYWHERE in tibet. along the streets, outside almost every shop and house. I suspect it is their national sport!
tibetian tent, with nice mountainous view behind