Between Sikkim and Bhutan- The Lepchas and Bhutias of Pedong

Between Sikkim and Bhutan- The Lepchas and Bhutias of Pedong

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Book Specification

Item Code: AZE549
Author: Indira Awasty
Publisher: B.R. Publishing Corporation
Language: ENGLISH
Edition: 2013
ISBN: 9789350501054
Pages: 136
Cover: HARDCOVER
Other Details 9.00x6.00
Weight 290 gm

Book Description

About the Book
This book is a firsthand geographical study of the Lepchas and Bhutias of Pedong on the border of West Bengal with Sikkim.

About the Author
Mrs. Indira Awasty is a historian turned social scientist. For some time she worked with Dr. Richard Pankhurst on the problem of Indian influence on Ethopian art and culture.

Preface
This book has been written during my stay in Pedong from January, 1977 to October of the same year. I, who had never walked a kilometer in my life before I came to Pedong, learnt to walk and climb the mountains around Pedong. I walked to each of the Bastis mentioned in my study and talked to as many people as possible in the bastis, in Pedong and Kalimpong. What I have set down in this book are my impressions gathered after talking to Father Rey, Mr. S.C. Dorji (Kazi of Sakyong), Mr. James Isaac Bhutia, Tsering Dorji, David Foning, the Village Level Worker and many others.

I was most impressed with the breath-taking loveliness of nature in this area, coupled with extremely difficult terrain. As first I felt that lamaistic Buddhism was a sort of degenerated form of a highly superstitious religion. practiced blindly by unknowing people. But as time clasped. I too was drawn imperceptibly to recognize the 'power' of this religion. I felt the vibrations and strange presences in the leech infested dark, dense, damp, gloomy forests. The silences were weird but strangely exhilarating. I never felt terror or fright but I felt drawn compulsively to the toneless droning of the drums and chants echoing from remote houses on hill sides. I said to myself, this area and these people have rightly and aptly chosen a form of religion to suit their proximity to whatever form the primeval essence takes.

In Pedong, nature can be at its harshest and most beautiful. I felt that if a human being could be close to God or to the source of creation or to some other world force, it was here. I felt that by piercing a veil that eluded me all the time, something would be seen or experienced. The look of patience and timelessness on the faces of the inhabitants, the 'living' yet more or less abandoned Gompas and the light emanating from behind the dull eyes of the locals, made me feel that, if it were at all possible to be at peace with the world, it was here. If I settled here, would I be buried alive? I do not think so. It is like the end of the earth, but it is puls ating. The communications are of another dimension.

I have tried to write about the legends, customs; religion, history and the present state of the people of Pedong and the surrounding areas. There are conflicting views on the strategy to be adopted in regard to the development of backward areas, hilly tracts and primitive agricultural communities.

**Contents and Sample Pages**









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