




https://www.drukasia.com/bhutan/punakha/khamsum-yulley-namgyal-chorten/





The temple in Khamsum Yelley Namgyel Chorten was unlike any we’ve seen so far, overwhelming and almost frightening with what seemed innumerable manifestions of Vajrakilaya, the most wrathful of protective deities, all in consort, reflecting the union of the male and the female forces of the universe.
Here’s a description of a visit to the Chorten. Search as much as I can, I cannot find any interior photos. You’ll have to come and see for yourselves.
https://www.drukasia.com/bhutan/punakha/khamsum-yulley-namgyal-chorten/



The Temple of Fertility, dedicated to Lam Drukpa Kuenley, the Divine Madman
The Divine Madman was an enlightened master from the 15th century. Following the course of an arrow he shot from Paro, he arrived at the site where a temple was later built in his honor. He was apparently quite a carouser, known for his humor, singing and outrageous, unconventional sexual behavior, with the intent of shaking up Buddhist establishment and making Buddhism more accessible to common people. Couples make pilgrimages to the temple in hopes of conceiving a child, the wife sleeping for days under the eaves of the temple as the monks perform prayers and blessings. This may be why so many children in Bhutan are named Chimi.
A powerful demoness from Punaka,in the form of a dog, followed the Divine Madman to this location, changing colors for disguise as she pursued him. The Divine Madman subdued the demoness with a divine thunderbolt and interred her in a rock under the multicolored chorten in the foreground. Chimi, the name of the village, translates as “no dog.”

In the temple, we were blessed by a monk blessing us by tapping our heads with a wooden phallus and the bow and arrow symbolic of the Divine Madman



Caveat: As with all our posts, we are describing our Bhutanese experience as best we understand it, with the additional understanding that we are new here and may be inaccurate in our accounts of this ancient culture and profound religious heritage.
We hope you are enjoying our posts. We certainly are enjoying life in Bhutan. By the way, we are working too.
Great stories! Be careful Steve or we will all have to make a pilgrimage to bring bowls of rice to you in prison 🥺
LikeLike
Such rebells! Is there an age limit to all that fertility? 🙂
LikeLike
The “Empty Prize”in Buhtan – GREAT!
LikeLike
I hope you packed some of those phallus’ to bring home as Christmas gifts!
LikeLike