Pilgrimage is a long-established religious practice in Bhutan, drawing on the Vajrayana Buddhist concept of gnas-skor (neykor) — sacred travel and circumambulation of holy places. It encompasses domestic visits to chortens, lhakhangs and beyul (hidden valleys), foreign Buddhist tourism regulated under Bhutan's high-value tourism framework, and a growing diaspora pilgrimage from resettled Bhutanese communities abroad.
Pilgrimage in Bhutan is a central religious practice rooted in Vajrayana Buddhism. Pilgrims travel to sites associated with Padmasambhava (Guru Rinpoche), the Drukpa Kagyu and Nyingma traditions, treasure-revealing tertöns such as Pema Lingpa, and the protector deities of particular valleys. The practice is known in Dzongkha and classical Tibetan as gnas-skor (གནས་སྐོར་), commonly anglicised as neykor, literally "going around a sacred place." Pilgrimage in Bhutan combines visits to specific power-places with the physical act of kora — clockwise circumambulation — and is undertaken to accumulate merit, purify obscurations and seek blessings for the living and the deceased.
Pilgrimage is practised across the social spectrum and across generations. Older Bhutanese commonly make extended pilgrimages on retirement; families travel to favoured sites on auspicious lunar dates; monastics undertake longer circuits as part of religious training. The country's sacred geography overlaps closely with its national identity: many of the same sites are simultaneously pilgrimage destinations, festival venues and tourist attractions.
The concept of gnas-skor
In Tibetan and Bhutanese Buddhist usage, a gnas (ne) is a sacred place — a location understood to be charged with the residual presence of an enlightened being, a treasure-text, or a protector deity. The compound gnas-skor ("going around the ne") describes pilgrimage as both journey and ritual: the pilgrim travels to the site, then circles it. The word for pilgrim, gnas-skor-ba, defines a person by the rite they perform on arrival rather than by the journey itself.
Bhutanese pilgrimage tradition is distinct in two respects. First, it places strong emphasis on beyul — hidden valleys believed to have been blessed and concealed by Padmasambhava during his visits to the southern Himalayas between the eighth and ninth centuries. Second, it is closely tied to the cult of specific treasure-revealing tertöns, most notably Pema Lingpa (1450–1521), whose discoveries at sites in Bumthang, Lhuntse and Kurtoe established a network of pilgrimage destinations that remain active today.
Kora — the practice of circumambulation
The physical core of Bhutanese pilgrimage is kora, the clockwise circumambulation of a sacred object — a chorten, a lhakhang, a sacred boulder, a mountain or a lake. The practice follows the apparent path of the sun and is held to align the pilgrim with the cosmic order. Pilgrims typically recite mantras (most commonly om mani padme hum), turn prayer wheels mounted around the perimeter of the site, and prostrate periodically.
The most heavily attended daily kora in Bhutan is at the National Memorial Chorten in Thimphu, built in 1974 in memory of the third king. From before dawn until late evening, elderly Bhutanese, office workers on their way home, and families perform circuits of the chorten — making it one of the most visible expressions of lay devotion in the capital. Annual kora festivals are held at major sites including Chorten Kora in Trashiyangtse, where two consecutive kora events — the Dakpa Kora on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month and the Drukpa Kora at the end of the first lunar month — draw pilgrims from across eastern Bhutan and from the Dakpa community of neighbouring Tawang district in Arunachal Pradesh, India.
Major pilgrimage sites
Bhutan's pilgrimage geography is layered across the country, with concentrations in Paro, Thimphu, Punakha, Bumthang and the eastern districts.
- Paro Taktsang (Tiger's Nest). The cliffside complex above the Paro valley, associated with Padmasambhava's meditation in the form of Dorje Drolo. The principal temple was built in 1692–1694 under the patronage of Gyalsey Tenzin Rabgye. It is the single most-visited pilgrimage destination in Bhutan and a near-mandatory stop for both domestic and foreign Buddhist pilgrims.
- The Bumthang sacred circuit. A cluster of sites in central Bhutan tied to the eighth-century visit of Padmasambhava and to Pema Lingpa's fifteenth-century discoveries: Jambay Lhakhang, attributed to the seventh-century Tibetan king Songtsen Gampo; Kurjey Lhakhang, built around the cave bearing the body-imprint of Guru Rinpoche; Tamzhing Lhakhang, founded by Pema Lingpa in 1501; and Mebar Tsho, the "burning lake" where Pema Lingpa is said to have retrieved hidden treasures.
- Punakha Dzong. The former winter capital, which houses the sacred remains of Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal. Pilgrimage to Punakha is most often timed to the Punakha Drubchen and Punakha Tshechu in the first lunar month.
- Dochula Pass. The 108 Druk Wangyal Chortens built at the pass in the early 2000s have become a modern pilgrimage destination, particularly for residents of Thimphu and the western districts.
- Eastern Bhutan. Beyond Chorten Kora, the cliff hermitage of Gom Kora near Trashigang draws pilgrims to the meditation site associated with Padmasambhava's subjugation of a local demon.
- Sacred mountains and lakes. Jomolhari on the Bhutan–Tibet border is venerated as the seat of the protector goddess Jomo. Several alpine lakes in the high Himalayan north are objects of seasonal kora, often by communities living closest to them.
Beyul and hidden valleys
The concept of beyul — "hidden land" — is central to Bhutanese sacred geography and to the Nyingma school. According to Nyingma tradition, Padmasambhava blessed a number of valleys across the southern Himalayas as refuges to be opened in times of strife. Bhutan contains several such valleys, of which Beyul Khenpajong in the Lhuntse–Kurtoe region is the most storied. Khenpajong is associated with Padmasambhava's concealment of terma (treasure-texts) and with the subjugation of harmful spirits; it remains remote and is reached by multi-day trek. Other valleys, including parts of Bumthang and the upper Tang valley, carry partial beyul status in local tradition.
For practitioners, the beyul is not merely a geographical area but a living mandala — the topography of the valley itself, with its rivers, ridges and rock formations, is held to correspond to the structure of an enlightened realm. Pilgrimage to a beyul is therefore understood as a passage into sacred space, not simply travel to a holy site.
Pilgrimage and the festival cycle
Pilgrimage in Bhutan is heavily seasonal and is often timed to the cycle of tshechus — the annual mask-dance festivals held at dzongs and major lhakhangs. The principal pilgrimage festivals include the Paro Tshechu in spring, the Thimphu Tshechu in autumn, the Punakha Drubchen and Tshechu in late winter, and the Jambay Lhakhang Drup in Bumthang in late autumn, which incorporates the well-known fire ceremony and the naked dance (tercham). Attendance at these festivals is itself considered merit-making: witnessing the unfurling of the great thongdrel applique at dawn is held to liberate the viewer from the lower realms.
Modern practice
Domestic pilgrimage today is largely family-organised. Bhutanese travel by private vehicle or hired bus, time visits to auspicious dates calculated from the Bhutanese lunar calendar, and often combine pilgrimage with social visits to relatives in the destination district. Public holidays around major Buddhist observances — Lhabab Düchen, Saga Dawa, the parinirvana of the Buddha — produce visible pilgrimage flows to Thimphu's Memorial Chorten and to Paro Taktsang.
Foreign pilgrimage operates within Bhutan's tourism framework. Visitors other than Indian, Bangladeshi and Maldivian nationals must obtain a visa, travel through a licensed Bhutanese tour operator and pay the Sustainable Development Fee. The framework was designed to limit volume rather than to restrict pilgrimage as a category, and Buddhist pilgrims from Japan, Singapore, Taiwan, Vietnam and the Tibetan exile diaspora form a significant share of foreign visitors to sites such as Taktsang, Kurjey and Punakha.
A more recent and contested category is pilgrimage by members of the Bhutanese refugee diaspora resettled in the United States, Canada, Australia and Europe since 2007. For many in the diaspora — particularly elderly Hindu and Buddhist Lhotshampa who left in the early 1990s — return to Bhutan to visit ancestral sites carries deep significance. Visa access for this group remains restricted, a question discussed in the BhutanWiki article on diaspora citizenship and legal challenges.
Pilgrimage and merit
The ritual acts that accompany pilgrimage are oriented toward the accumulation of sönam (merit) and the purification of negative karma. Common practices at pilgrimage sites include:
- Butter-lamp offerings. Pilgrims light rows of small butter lamps in temple chapels, dedicating the merit to deceased relatives or to the welfare of all sentient beings.
- Tsa-tsa. Small clay images of stupas, buddhas or deities pressed from moulds, often containing the cremated remains of a relative, and deposited at sacred sites.
- Prayer-flag hoisting. Lungta (wind-horse) flags strung along ridges and at passes, and tall vertical darshing flags raised after a death, are commonly erected at or near pilgrimage sites.
- Prostration and recitation. Full-body prostrations around the perimeter of a chorten, and recitation of mantras counted on prayer beads, often accompany the kora itself.
- Offerings of grain, fruit and money. Left at altars within the temples and at the base of important images and reliquary chortens.
Together these practices frame the pilgrim's journey as not merely a visit but a sustained ritual engagement with the site — one in which physical movement, offering and recitation are understood to generate concrete spiritual results.
See also
References
- Kora (pilgrimage) — Wikipedia overview drawing on Tibetan and Himalayan Buddhist sources
- Introduction to Pilgrimage — Lotsawa House, on gnas-skor and the practice of neykor in Tibetan and Bhutanese tradition
- Beyul — Wikipedia, summarising Nyingma tradition on hidden valleys including those in Bhutan
- Chorten Kora — Wikipedia, on the 1740 stupa and the Dakpa Kora and Drukpa Kora festivals
- Paro Taktsang — Wikipedia, on the cliff temple complex and the Padmasambhava tradition
- Pilgrimage: Tibetan Pilgrimage — Encyclopedia.com, on the wider Tibetan Buddhist pilgrimage framework that Bhutanese practice sits within
- Karma Phuntsho, The History of Bhutan (Random House India, 2013), chapters on religion, sacred geography and Pema Lingpa.
- Françoise Pommaret, Bhutan: Himalayan Mountain Kingdom (Odyssey Publications, multiple editions), site descriptions and pilgrimage tradition.
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