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The
River of the Lion Mouth to the
North, the River of the Horse Mouth
to the east, the River of the
Peacock Mouth to the south and the
River of the Elephant Mouth to the
West. Strangely enough, four major
rivers do indeed originate near
Kailash, the Indus, the Yarlung
Tsangpo (Brahmaputra), the Karnali
and the Sutlej. Tibetans believe
that it is the residence of Demchog,
a fierce looking tantric deity who
lives there with his consort, Dorje
Phagmo. For the Tibetans also, it is
a particularly special place in that
their poet saint Milarepa, spent
several years here meditating in a
cave.
For the Hindus Mount Kailash is the
earthly manifestation of Mt. Meru,
their spiritual centre of the
universe, described as a fantastic
world pillar 84,000 miles high,
around which all else revolves, its
roots in the lowest hell and its
summit kissing the heavens. On the
top lives their most revered God,
Shiva, and his consort Parvati.
For the Jains, an Indian religious
group, Kailash is the site where
their first prophet achieved
enlightenment. For the older, more
ancient religion of Bon, it is the
site where its founder Shanrab is
said to have descended from heaven.
It was formerly the spiritual centre
of Zhang Zung, the ancient Bon
Empire that once included all of
western Tibet. Bon people walk
around the mountain in a counter
clockwise manner, unlike the other
religions.
Over the centuries pilgrims have
constantly journeyed immense
distances to achieve enlightenment
or cleanse themselves of sin,
braving enormous distances,
particularly harsh weather and
bandit attacks.
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