By contrast, the 15th century monastery, which tumbles down
the sides of a steep knoll to a tight cluster of farmhouses and
well-watered fields, is altogether more picturesque. Approached by road
from the north, or from the south along a footpath that winds through
Spitok village, its spacious rooftops command superb views.
There is the grave of a very high reincarnation at the Gompa and the
Spitok head Lama is also the head Lama of the Sankar Gompa in Leh. He also
represents Ladakh
as a member of the Indian Parliament. Gurphug in Stok and Pashi Gephel in
Sabu are also under monasteries of Spitok.
About Paldan Lumo Chapel/Temple
The Gompa has three chapels of which the highest, the Paldan Lumo temple
(Kali Mater), is the most impressive. The temple Gonkhang is approximately
a thousand years old.
The main complex, a typical mixture of dusty, dimly lit old prayer halls
and vivid modern shrine rooms, is of less interest than the Paldan Lumo
chapel, perched on a ridge above. Probably aimed at the mostly Hindu
members of the Indian army posted at Leh, a sign outside warns visitors
not to "deliberately mistake" the Gon-khang for a Kali temple.
Offerings made to the black faced and bloodthirsty Hindu Goddess of death
and destruction are, it insists, "not acceptable".
A Built In Du-Khang
From Paldan Lumo temple, on the peak of the mountain, a small path leads
past a red Latho to the monastery proper. The built in Dukhang is well
worth seeing.
The area around the wall paintings, with its Thankas, prayer flags,
bookshelves and books, is well illuminated. Near the Dukhang there are
several other chapels of which the new Chokhang is above some stairs. Here
funeral ceremonies can be witnessed. Many of the small, old prayer rooms,
the head Lama's room, and the rooms of the monk are, unfortunately, no
longer shown to foreigners. They contain some wonderful wall paintings,
Thankas, silver Chortens, Buddha figures, statues of other deities and
hundreds of books but some thoughtless tourist took objects as souvenirs.
The
Spitok Gostor Festival
From the level of the Dukhang 19 steps lead up to the inner courtyard
with a flagpole around which, on the 28th and 29th days of the 11th month
of the Tibetan calendar, the Spitok Gostor is celebrated with mask dances.
At this festival the 'Jelbagh' dance masks, like those hanging on the
walls of the monastery, are no longer used but rather true to life
representations. The monastery has a statue of Kali whose face is only
shown once a year.
Shrine Of Vajra Bhairava
The shrine to Vajra Bhairava, a Tantric guardian deity of the Gelug-pa
order, is distinctly spooky. Lit by flickering butter lamps, the cluttered
and cobwebbed chamber houses a row of veiled guardian deities whose
ferocious faces are only unveiled once a year. After waving incense smoke
before them and muttering a few mantras, the key keeper lama will pass
around handfuls of sweets newly infused with protective power. If one has
a flashlight, check out the 600 year old paintings on the rear wall of the
chapel, which is spitok's oldest building.
Road: Spitok Gompa, rising incongruously from the end of the airport runway, makes a good half-day foray from Leh, 10-km up the north side of the Indus valley. The easiest way to get there is to stroll down to the crossroads above the GPO and J&KTDC's tourist reception centre, and then flag down any of the buses heading west along the main Srinagar highway.