Part 1 (1/2)
To a Mountain in Tibet.
by Colin Thubron.
CHAPTER ONE.
The sun is rising to its zenith. Silver-grey boulders lie tumbled along the track among mattresses of thorns and smoke-blue flowers. The storm clouds that hang on the farther mountains do not move. There is no sound but the scrunch of our boots and the clink of the sherpa's trekking pole. Underfoot the stones glisten with quartz.
These first hours have a raw exhilaration. The track s.h.i.+mmers ahead with a hard brilliance. The earth is young again. Perhaps it is the alt.i.tude that brings this lightness and antic.i.p.ation. Within an hour we have flown from near sea level to over 8,000 feet, and I feel weightless, as if my steps will leave no trace.
Beneath us the little town of Simikot hangs above an abyss of empty valleys. Its corrugated-iron roofs flash among patches of green barley. It is slipping behind us. From its runway of parched earth the Twin Otter aircraft that carried us in has already turned and flown away between the mountains. There are no roads here. Humla is the remotest region in Nepal, little visited by trekkers even now. The nearest paved highwaythe lowland route from Kathmandu to Delhilies hundreds of mountain miles to the south, and to the east the climbers' lodestarsDhaulagiri, Annapurna, Everestare out of sight.
As we walk, a dark-forested gully opens to the west, carving a giant corridor through the mountains. Its walls rise in vertiginous foothills towards 15,000-foot summits gashed with snow and clouds. Noiselessly far below us, through this immense gulf so steep as often to lie out of sight, the Karnali river is raging coldly down from the highest source of the Ganges. It is nowhere navigable, but for the next ten days it will steer us northwards. It twists ahead with a chill magnetism, mounting by icy steps higher and deeper through the western Himalaya, for a hundred miles before us, into Tibet.
By trekkers' standards our party is small and swift: a guide, a cook, a horse man, myself. We move scattered above the river, while lone traders pa.s.s us the other way, leading their stocky horse and mule trains between lonely villages. They are dark, slight men in torn anoraks and brimless headgear, marching to the clank of their animals' tin bells and crying softly to the strays to keep in line. Their women walk alongside, sashed and scarved in magenta and blue, their sinewy wrists layered in bracelets, their nostrils and ears dangling golden discs. They look fierce and open, and laughingly meet your eyes. The delicacy of the plains has gone.
We reach a cairn stuck with weathered stakes, then descend through pines towards the river. Its noise rises to us in the hiss of far-down cataracts. Peacefully beneath us, and seaming the far banks in long yellow shelves, the terraces of an unseen village are ripening with corn. The slopes flame with the reds and purples of late spring, with shrubs I do not know. Giant walnut trees appear, and silvery aromatic shrubs, while overhead the mountain peaks gather in jagged crenellations and seem to enclose the place in a private peace.
We are through the village almost without knowing. Granite boulders overshadow dwellings frailer than they: cottages of dry-stone walls and bleached timbers sunk among the igneous rocks. They look half deserted, mellow and pastoral above their fields, so that as we go on high above the river, past rice paddies and a little shrine to s.h.i.+va, I imagine this a valley of Arcadian quiet.
Then a man joins us on the path. He is vivid with troubles. His jacket is patched, his trainers split. He fires a volley of questions at the sherpa. How can he get out of this place? There's nothing for anybody here. His family can't support itself on its patch of rice field...it isn't enough...
His eyes spear us out of a sun-blackened face. He follows us for miles. He cannot bear to let us go: we, who carry the aura of a wider world. He has never been to Kathmandu, never left this region. But rain has loosened the earth around his house, and it is sliding down towards the river.
'I am fifty-six now...my life is too poor...My son and daughter-in-law want to buy a new horse, but we cannot afford one...a horse is forty thousand rupees...'
Yet this dirge comes with a hardy sparkle, as if he were talking about other people. He grins with disordered teeth. 'Their horse is old...it will die...'
Of course. This is a cruel region in a poverty-stricken land: bitter winters and narrow, rock-strewn earth. Arcadia is falling to bits as he speaks. The farmed terraces are dropping behind, and above us the naked rock is bursting through the green hillsides in huge, serrated shoulders. Sometimes the track lifts precipitously on steps hewn sheer from the cliff face, or ascends on rubble stairways where a stumble will pitch us into the abyss.
At one of these bottlenecks we find the rock daubed red with the Maoist rebel emblema hammer-and-sickle circled beside a swastika (here an archaic symbol of good fortune)but the guerrillas themselves have gone. For ten years they paralysed this region, and would politely leach for money the few foreigners who ventured in. They took over 13,000 Nepalese lives. But now, three years later, with Kathmandu's royal dynasty swept away, they are jostling for power with the decrepit politicians in the capital, and their old slogan'Follow the Maoist path!'is flaking from cliffs and walls.
At last the farmer turns back, waving buoyantly, his voice fading among the rocks. 'We have no king now...we have nothing...' And then, as if, after all, he might follow us to the end: 'Where are you going?'
When the sherpa cries back, 'Mount Kailas!' the name echoes down the river like a broken secret. The farmer does not hear it. It is the noise of somewhere imagined or hopelessly far away.
And so, in the West, it still seems. The most sacred of the world's mountainsholy to one fifth of the earth's peopleremains withdrawn on its plateau like a pious illusion. For years I had heard of it only as a figment. Isolated beyond the parapet of the central Himalaya, it permeated early Hindu scriptures as the mystic Mount Meru, whose origins go back to the dawn of Aryan time. In this incarnation it rotates like a spindle at the axis of all creation, ascending immeasurable miles to the palace of Brahma, greatest and most remote of the G.o.ds, and plunging as deep beneath the earth. From its foot flow the four rivers that nourish the world, and everything createdtrees, rocks, humansfinds its blueprint here. In time the mystical Meru and the earthly Kailas merged in people's minds. Early wanderers to the source of the four great Indian riversthe Indus, the Ganges, the Sutlej and the Brahmaputrafound to their wonder that each one rose near a cardinal point of Kailas.
So people discovered the heart of the world. It was a site of astral beauty, separated from its companion Himalayas as if by divine intent. To the pious, the mountain radiates gold or refracts like crystal. It is the source of the universe, created from cosmic waters and the mind of Brahma, who is yet himself mortal and will pa.s.s away. The sun and the planets...o...b..t it. The Pole Star hangs immutable above. The continents of the world radiate from its centre like lotus petals on a precious sea (humans occupy the southern petal) and its slopes are heady with the gardens of paradise.
But the G.o.d of Death dwells on the mountain. Nothing is total, nothing permanentnot even he. All is flux. In the oceans around Kailas-Meru, beyond a ring of iron mountains, countless embodiments of Meru, each identical to the last, multiply and repeat themselves, dying and resurrecting into eternity.
Around me in the Karnali valley, nothing yet disturbs these dreams. The infant Ganges steepens and roars out of a cleft far on the skyline. The sherpa is trying to sing.
Kailas, I knowthe solid, terrestrial peak still invisible aheadstands in starker terrain than this, stripped of everything but wors.h.i.+p. It enters history quickened already by centuries of overlapping divinities. About a millennium ago the pagan G.o.ds in charge of the mountain were converted to Buddhism and became its protectors. A few slipped through the net, of course, with even a flying sky G.o.ddess, and linger still. But a mult.i.tude of Buddhas and bodhisattva.s.saints who have delayed their entry into nirvana in order to help othersflew in to occupy the high crags and summits, lighting up the mountain with their compa.s.sion. Then the Buddha himself arrived and nailed Kailas to earth with his footprints before it could be carted off by a demon.
The mountain is swathed in such a dense and changing mystique that it eludes simple portrayal. It was on to such a peak that the first Tibetan kings descended from the sky (eventually to be cut off and stranded). Hindus believe its summit to be the palace of s.h.i.+vathe lord of destruction and changewho sits there in eternal meditation. But it is unknown when the first pilgrims came. Buddhist herders and Hindu ascetics must have ritually circled the mountain for centuries, and the blessings accruing to them increased marvellously in sacred lore, until it was claimed that a single circuit expunged the sins of a lifetime. The mountain was dangerous to reach, but never quite inaccessible. Only in the nineteenth century did Tibet itself, swayed by a xenophobic China, become a forbidden land. And Kailas kept its own taboos. Its slopes are sacrosanct, and it has never been climbed.
But in recent years it has been protected less by sanct.i.ty than by political intolerance. In 1962, four years before the Cultural Revolution, the Chinese banned all pilgrimage here (although devotees still circled it secretly), and only in 1981 were the first Tibetans and Indians permitted to return. Twelve years later a few trekkers were tentatively allowed to cross the mountain borders between Nepal and Tibet.
My own small journey is one of these. The negotiation of permitsI am entering a military zonehas been fought by an agent in Kathmandu; but the Chinese suspicion of lone travellers compels me to join a group of seven British trekkers on the borderwe will separate at the foot of Kailasfor the charade of not entering western Tibet alone. My Nepalese horse man too, a Thakuri from Humla, will leave us at the frontier. But Iswor, my guide, and Ram, the cook, will cross to the mountain with me. They are Tamangs, st.u.r.dy people close to the Tibetans, and now they march tactfully behind or ahead of me, their backs piled with over fifty pounds of gear each.
Iswor speaks fractured English. He has the thick shoulders and strong, bandy legs of his people, but at twenty-seven he is young for this job, and shy. Sometimes I imagine a fragility in him, not physical, but lodged in sudden, cloudy preoccupations. But he follows me with almost tender concern. When the track widens he comes alongside and proffers his water bottle by way of breaking silence. His Tamang people left Tibet more than a thousand years ago to settle in the mountains west of Everest, then scattered all through Nepal, and as we talk, I realise that he is not a highlander at all. His village is in the hills near Kathmandu, where his father, a cook, moved when the boy was three.
'The tradition in our village is like with Sherpa people. We came as horse soldiers, I don't know when, long ago. Now we go into trekking. Guides and porters. That's what we are, Tamangs.'
'But now you live in Kathmandu!' I warm to him, but my voice sounds edgy. Kathmandu is sunk in a turmoil of ma.s.s rural immigration, broken infrastructure, political corruption.
'Yes. We had to go. We Tamangs look for jobs. For education. But my family have a cottage in the village still. It is very quiet, very beautiful. My mother goes there to rent our land to other farmers. It's corn land, but it's too small.'
This was the plight of all Asia: the flight from the land. He loved and despised his village. There was no future there. He says: 'Everyone leaves for somewhere else. Not just for Kathmandu but India, the Gulf, even farther.'
Yet he half belongs to the village still. Like the cook and the horseman, he can shoulder the load of a mule. But he is touched by an urban gloss. His hair starts far back on a high forehead, tied in a ponytail, and his face has the lemony blandness of a sumo wrestler's, faintly androgynous.
He says: 'The village is full of old people now.'
On a path below us a woman is striding fast above the river. On her back a sick baby is bundled like a sad, balding toy. Iswor calls out to her. She is walking to Simikot to find medicine, she cries. She is quickly gone.
He stops for a moment. 'This is not like England.'
Here fifty babies die to every thousand born. I ask: 'You have children?'
He seems to wince. 'I'm not married. I'll wait ten years before I marry. Yes, there are girls I like, but I'll wait. In the village, men marry at eighteen or twenty. But I've left that life behind.' Then, as if licensed at last to voice a pent-up question, he asks: 'And you? Why are you doing this, travelling alone?'
I cannot answer.
I am doing this on account of the dead.
Sometimes journeys begin long before their first step is taken. Mine, without my knowing, starts not long ago, in a hospital ward, as the last of my family dies. There is nothing strange in this, the state of being alone. The death of parents may bring resigned sadness, even a guilty freedom. Instead I need to leave a sign of their pa.s.sage. My mother died just now, it seems, not in the way she wished; my father before her; my sister before that, at the age of twenty-one.
Time is unsteady here. Sometimes I am a boy again, trying to grasp the words Never, never again. Never, never again. Humans, it is said, cannot comprehend eternity, in time or s.p.a.ce. We are better equipped to register the distance spanned by a village drumbeat. The sheerness of Humans, it is said, cannot comprehend eternity, in time or s.p.a.ce. We are better equipped to register the distance spanned by a village drumbeat. The sheerness of never never is beyond us. is beyond us.
The sherpa's eyes stay mute on me, puzzled. Solitude here is an unsought peril. I joke: 'n.o.body's fool enough to travel with me!'
It is already evening. Our feet grate over the stones. You cannot walk out your grief, I know, or absolve yourself of your survival, or bring anyone back. You are left with the desire only that things not be as they are. So you choose somewhere meaningful on the earth's surface, as if planning a secular pilgrimage. Yet the meaning is not your own. Then you go on a journey (it's my profession, after all), walking to a place beyond your own history, to the sound of the river flowing the other way. In the end you come to rest at a mountain that is holy to others.
The reason for this is beyond articulation. A journey is not a cure. It brings an illusion, only, of change, and becomes at best a spartan comfort.
Iswor looks robust, but he stops to complain quaintly of a mosquito bite on his hand, splaying his fingers for my inspection. They are chubby as a baby's, I tell him. We laugh and go on.
To ask of a journey Why? Why? is to hear only my own silence. It is the wrong question (although there seems no other). Am I harrowing myself because the world is mortal? Whose pain am I purging? Not theirs. An old Tibetan monk tells me the soul has no memory. The dead do not feel their past. is to hear only my own silence. It is the wrong question (although there seems no other). Am I harrowing myself because the world is mortal? Whose pain am I purging? Not theirs. An old Tibetan monk tells me the soul has no memory. The dead do not feel their past.