


(Click image to enlarge)

As in Ugen Choling, we will seek the services of a local lama to ensure that the sanctity of anything religious is protected by prayer and ritual. The Brokpas are yak herders from this remote region and have a language, culture and lifestyle that is unique even in Bhutan. An example of cultural uniqueness is the burial process--the body of the deceased is hacked to pieces and allowed to float down the river to be eaten by scavengers. Also, the dating process is something that young suitors call “night hunting”--we’ll try to get to the bottom of that when we meet them in Phongmey.
Of this unique and exclusive event, Sonam writes:
They will perform the Yak
Dance, the Achi Lhamo in honor of Goddess Penden Lhamo and Lady Jomo, folk
dances by Maidens, other dance with songs by Maidens, and other cultural items
to be discussed with the Brokpas. The dances and singing are not done as in
a stage but what they normally do in their village during festivals. It will
be a recreation of the festival on a smaller scale the events will not be timed
as such but can roll on the whole day with breaks for rest, festive drinking
and eating, and posing for photographs. Your tour group will not be seeing
the event merely as spectators but participating actively in the festivities – dancing, singing and drinking, etc. The idea is for guests not only to see the cultural performances as such but to experience a crash course in
a part of Brokpa culture.

We will have the distinct honor of being some of the first Westerners to witness Brokpa folk dances, including the famous Yak Dance which narrates the story of how the Brokpas first arrived from Tibet led by Lady Jomo, revered as one of the most powerful deities of the region. Included too is the Achi Lhamo, a lion dance performed in honor of Goddess Penden Lhamo and Lady Jomo. Brokpa maidens will also sing and dance as they do during festivals in their highland home.
The Sakten and Merak region remains mostly unexplored by tourists—only about 50 trekkers made the journey in 2010 when the region was first opened to foreigners. Sakten and Merak were previously closed to foreiners in an effort to stall modernization of one of the world's last remaining "living cultural museums." Sonam has tried for years to get the government to open her ancestral home as she feels her people should not be denied the modernization that has come to the rest of their countrymen in the form of electricity, roads, schools, and hospitals. Now that the constitutional government is in place she feels strongly that the political representatives of her region will soon convince the government to build the road that is so important to modernization. One can only imagine that Westernization that will take place once the road and electricity are in place.
Overnight Kelling Lodge.

On day 14 you will meet these yak herders, the Brokpa people from Sakten and Merak, when the tour sponsors a special festival in the far eastern side of Bhutan. You will be the only foreign visitors there and after the festival dances you will be asked to help serve lunch to over 100 local villagers.