This rewarding journey takes you off the beaten track to Himalayan hill stations, heritage hotels, and the home of the Dalai Lama, revealing the history of Sikhism, Buddhism and Christianity
Touring to places of pilgrimage, ancient temples, and the enthralling enclave of Tibetan exiles, and witnessing sacred ceremonies and hypnotic religious chants, this tour takes you through the centuries and sanctuaries of northern India, amid the landscapes of the Himalayan foothills.
Sikhism is relatively young, founded in the 15th century, and focused on Amritsar and the fabled Golden Temple, where the Palki ritual takes the Guru Granth Sahib book ‘to bed’ each night, and back to the temple every morning, symbolically treating the holy book as a human teacher.
With the largest Tibetan temple outside Tibet, Dharamsala means “pilgrim’s rest”. Its high numbers of visiting ‘pilgrims’ may suggest that it’s no longer a ‘rest’, but in fact this beautiful home of Buddhism retains its ethereal spirituality, where the monastery and ‘Dalai Lama’s Temple’ are enveloped in peace and serenity.
The ‘Queen of the Hill Stations’, Shimla has evolved from its ‘white paradise’ colonial past, when only high-ranking Indians were allowed on its Mall, to a place where Hindus visit the Christian church, and children eat chapatis in old-style tea rooms; and in Delhi, a Sikh temple/palace has an embracing sense of calm and a soundtrack of mantra chanting.