Religion & Culture

The
traveller from India will look in vain for similarities between the land and
people he has left and those he encounters inLadakh. The faces and physique
of the Ladakhis, and the clothes they wear, are more akin to those of Tibet
and Central Asia than of India. The original population may have been Dards,
an Indo-Aryan race from down the Indus. But immigration fromTibet, perhaps a
millennium or so ago, largely overwhelmed the culture of the Dards and
obliterated their racial characteristics. In eastern and central Ladakh,
today's population seems to be mostly of Tibetan origin. Further west, in
and arond Kargil, there ismuch in the people's appearance that suggests a
mixed origin. The exception to this generalizationis the Arghons, a
community of Muslims in Leh, the descendants of marriages between local
women and Kashmiri or Central Asian merchants.
Buddhism
reached Tibet from India via Loadkah, and there are ancient Buddhist rock
engravings all over the ragion, even in areas like Dras and the lower Suru
Valley which today are inhabited by an exclusively Muslim population. The
divide between Muslim, and Buddhis Ladakh passes through Mulbekh (on the
Kargil-Leh road) and between the villages of Parkachick and Rangdum in the
Suru Valley, though there are pockets of Muslim population further east, in
Padum (Zanskar), in Nubra Valley and in and around Leh. The approach to
Buddhist village is invariable marked by mani walls which are long
chest-high structures faced with engraved stones bearing the mantrra im mane
padme hum and by chorten, commemorative cairns, like stone pepper-pots. Many
villagers are crowned with a gompa or monastery which may be anything from
an imposing complex of temples, prayer halls and monks dwellings, to a tiny
hermitage housing a single image and home to solitary lama.
Islam too came from the west. A peaceful penetrationof the Shia sect
spearheaded by missionaries, its success was guaranteed by the early
conversion of the sub-rulers of Dras, Kargil and the Suru Valley. In these
areas, mani walls and chorten are placed by mosques, oftern small
unpretentious buildings, or Imambaras imposing structures in the Islamic
style, surmounted by domes of sheet metal that gleam cheerfully in the sun.

The
demeanour of the people is affected by their religion, especially among the
women. Among the Buddhists, as also the Muslims of the Leh area, women not
noly work inthe house and field, but also do business and interact freely
with men other thatn their own relations. In Kargil and its adjoining
regions on the other hand, it is only in the last few years that women are
emerging from semi-seclusion and taking jobs other than traditional ones
like farming and house -keeping. The natureal joie-de-vivre of the Ladakhis
is given free rein by the ancient traditions of the region. Monastic and
other religious festivals, many of which fall in winter, provide the excuse
for convivial gatherings. Summer pastimes all over the region are archery
and polo. Among the Buddhists, these often develop into open-air parties
accompanied by dance and song, at which chang, the local brew made from
fermented barley, flows freely.
Of the secular culture, the most
important element is the rich oral leterature ofsongs and poems for every
occasion, as well as local versions of the Kesar Saga, the Tibetan national
epic. Buddhists and Muslims. In fact,the most highly developed versions of
the Kesar Saga,a nd some of the most exuberant and lyrical songs are said
tobe found in Shakar-Chigtan, an area of the western Kargil district
exclusively inhabited by Muslims, unfortunately not freely open to tourists
yet. Ceremonial and public events are accompanied by the characteristic
music of surna and daman (oboe and drum), originally introduced into Ladakh
from Muslim Baltistan, but now played only by Buddhist musicians known as
Mons