Glimpses of the Lost World of Alchi
Threatened Buddhist art at a 900-year-old monastery high in the Indian Himalayas sheds light on a fabled civilization
- By Jeremy Kahn
- Photographs by Aditya Arya
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2010, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 5)
Fifteen miles from Alchi is an example of a successful melding of tourism and conservation. In Basgo, a town on the Indus that was once the capital of Ladakh, three ancient Buddhist temples and a fort have been renovated through a village cooperative, the Basgo Welfare Committee. As in Alchi, the Basgo temples are considered living monasteries—in this case under the religious jurisdiction of Hemis, like Likir, a major Tibetan Buddhist “mother church.” But in Basgo, the Hemis monastery, the ASI and international conservation experts have cooperated to save the endangered heritage. The project has received support from the New York-based World Monuments Fund as well as global art foundations. International experts have trained Basgo’s villagers in conservation methods using local materials, such as mud brick and stone-based pigments.
Basgo’s villagers understand the link between preserving the buildings and the local economy. “The survival of the town depends on tourism,” says Tsering Angchok, the engineer who serves as secretary of the Basgo Welfare Committee. “Really, if tourism is lost, everything is lost.”
In 2007 Unesco presented the Basgo Welfare Committee its award of excellence for cultural-heritage conservation in Asia. But Alchi’s monks have shown little interest in adopting the Basgo model. “What purpose will that serve?” Chospel asks.
Jaroslav Poncar says that the Alchi monks’ ambivalence can be traced to the paintings’ strong Kashmiri influence and to their distance from contemporary Tibetan Buddhist iconography. “It is cultural heritage, but it is not their cultural heritage,” says Poncar. “It is totally alien to their culture. For a thousand years, their emphasis has been on the creation of new religious art and not to preserve the old.”
Arya stands on a ladder peering into the viewfinder of his large-format camera. It is here on the Sumtsek’s normally off-limits second floor that acolytes training to be monks would have advanced after having studied the massive bodhisattvas on the ground floor. No longer focused on depictions of the physical world, they would have spent hours sitting in front of these mandalas, reciting Buddhist sutras and learning the philosophical concepts each mandala embodied. They would study the images until they could see them in their minds without any visual aids.
Bathed in the warm glow of his studio lights, Arya, too, focuses intensely on the mandalas. He presses the shutter cable on his camera—there is a pop, a sudden flash and the room goes dark; the generator has blown again and all that remains of Alchi’s technicolored wonders is the impression left on my retina, quickly fading. I am not a trained monk, and I cannot summon the mandala in my mind’s eye. Then, glancing down, I see it again, a perfect image shining from the screen of Arya’s battery-operated laptop—an image that will remain even if Alchi does not.
Writer and foreign correspondent Jeremy Kahn and photographer Aditya Arya are both based in New Delhi.
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Related topics: Painting Photographers Renovation and Restoration India Places of Worship
Additional Sources
Alchi, Ladakh’s Hidden Buddhist Sanctuary by Roger Goepper and Jaroslav Poncar, Shambhala Limited Editions, 1996
Marvels of Buddhist Art: Alchi-Ladakh by Pratapaditya Pal, Ravi Kumar Publishers, 1988
Alchi: The Living Heritage of Ladakh by Central Institute of Buddhist Studies, Leh-Ladakh, 2009









Comments (2)
Dated:- September 21, 2010.
Dear Mr, Jeremy,
It was chance to get on the net and found your column which is quite interesting to read. It will be an eye opener to the people of Ladakh and also will induce a sense of enthuism and interest in the younger generation towards the value of thier history and culture if the magazine could have available in Ladakh. The people will know the ideas of the people residing out side Ladakh how they have much interest and sympathy with the dying heritages of Ladakh.
More and more such columns shall be appreciated regarding the conservation of Ladakh rich cultural heritages to let the people understand thier own responsibility of its protection otherwise the day is not far when everything will be lost and Ladakh will really be a forbidden land and all the developmental activities aims at boosting tourism will be useless.
The suffering will not be other people of the world , but the people of Ladakh themselves wgich must be think upon by all.
Thanks
Regards
Posted by Tsering Angchok Secretary, Basgo Welfare Committee on September 21,2010 | 06:26 AM
Unfortunately some of the fears of the ASI have been confirmed. Some of the restorations done in one of the minor temples in the complex looks positively cartoonish and is said to be the work of the Likkir monks themselves. Elsewhere is Ladakh, at the Hemis Monastery, old paintings are being restored using regular poster paint. It is shocking at the dis-regard the monks have for their own heritage.
Posted by Anant Raina on August 10,2010 | 12:06 AM