King Gesar - A Tibetan heroic epic
** Tale of Gesar
Axu town sits across the Zhaqu River on the upper reaches of the Yarlung
River, located 207 kilometers away from the county seat. Dotted with fluttering
sutra streamers, it is a world of natural phenomena, with many fish inhabiting
its abundant rivers and lakes.
By chance, the four researchers met the Living Buddha Bagyia at the Chacha
Monastery in Dege County at a bus stop some 20 kilometers from Axu town.
Saying that he loved King Gesar very much, Bagyia began to pour out
everything that he had learned about Gesar.
According to local legend, Gesar was Dongzhu Zarbao, the eldest of the
Heavenly King Baifan's 15 sons. He was considered the reincarnation of Master
Padmasambhava, an Indian monk who spread Buddhism in Tibet. Facing the many
demons, Gesar lifted the sufferers out of the abyss of misery.
In Jisuya, the researchers were told that Gesar was born on a Saturday in a
yak-hair tent in Jisuya.
But others say that Gesar was actually born into a poor herder's family, and
it is said the sky was covered in auspicious clouds and a rainbow when he was
born. Gesar's mother, Gorsa, was laboring in the fields when she felt a sharp,
sudden pain. She scrambled her way onto a large rock and gave birth to the great
Gesar. She later discovered two deep footprints she made while climbing the
rock.
There are other legends about the legendary Tibetan king's birthplace. One
says that he was born by the Mamaoke Qu River to the south of the Bayankala
Mountains on the border area of Yushu and Garze.
People there describe his birthplace in this way: "To the left of a cypress
tree in a place resembling the tail of a horse; to the left of a bowl-like
fountain that lies beneath a rock resembling an arrow."
Surprisingly, the area is located at the juncture of two rivers, where
Gesar's mother put up her tent amid the ruins of the Sutra Hall of King Gesar.
Behind the Sutra Hall is a rock that looks like an arrow, with the grasslands
covering the rock resembling a piece of unfolded felt.
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