The name Bhutan appears to derive from the ancient Indian
term BHOTANTA which means the end of the land of the Bhots.
Bhots was the Sanskrit term for Tibetans. Thus Bhutan could
mean the end of the land of Tibet.
The kingdom lies east of Nepal and west of the Indian state
of Arunachal Pradesh. It is south of the Tibetan hinterland
and north of the Indian territories of Assam and West Bengal.
Located in the heart of the high Himalayan mountain range,
Bhutan is a land-locked country surrounded by mountains in
the north and west. The rugged east, visited by few Western
travellers, borders the sparse and largely unknown Indian
state of Arunachal Pradesh. The high Himalaya in the northern
steppes separates the kingdom from Tibet.
The population of 6000,000 is made up primarily of indigenous
Bhutanese. Many naturalised citizens came originally from
Tibet and India. In the higher reaches of the kingdom and
in some isolated valleys, hill tribes assuming Bhutanese nationality
thrive on the land. Some, like those from Merak and Sakteng
in the east and Laya in the north, have no contact with Western
civilization and trade only in bartered goods.
The Buddhist faith has played and continues to play a fundamental
role in the cultural, ethical and sociological development
of Bhutan and its people. Annual festivals (tschus and dromchoes)
are spiritual occasions in each district.
Throughout Bhutan, stupas and chortens line the roadside
commemorating a place where Guru Rimpoche or another Shabdrung
may have stopped to meditate. Prayer flags are even more common.
Fluttering on long poles, they maintain constant communication
with the heavens.
Bhutan is the only country in the world to retain the tantric
form of Mahayana Buddhism as its official religion. |