Layap - The Nomadic Herders of Bhutan
Layap - The Nomadic Herders of Bhutan
The mule skids on the wet ice and slides forward on the steep track. The man springs forward and grabs it by the muzzle. They both strain against the slope, breaking skids on the edge of the sheer precipice. The mule is lying on its belly, its forelegs dangling over the cliff. Braced precariously, inches from the edge, the man strains to hold the animal on the narrow track. Within seconds, the man's teenage son runs back and deftly unloads the mule, handing over the heavy packs to the woman standing behind the animal, holding it by its tail. Together they haul the mule back on the path. Far below them, the mist swirls over the jagged rocks which line the bottom of the deep gorge.
A few meters behind, a 73-year-old woman is sitting on an icy path, inching forward on her buttocks, using both her hand and feet to maintain her balance. She sits still and watches calmly as her son, daughter-in-law, and grandson save the family mule and a year supply of food grain.
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| Layap - The Nomadic Herders of Bhutan |
An hour later, along with other families, they reach a swift stream. Without a thought the men, women, children hitch up their Ghost and Kiras (Bhutanese dress) to the waist and wade across, oblivious of the water which is at about freezing point. Young men pass lewd remarks at the women who are forced to expose their upper thighs to avoid getting their kiras wet. The women respond with quick witty remarks.
By evening, families are camped along the way in caves or under leafy trees. They care for the horses first and then sit down to a simple hot meal. By dark, after a few bottles of Ara and Sinchang (Local brewed alcohol and wine); they share their experience of the past months. This year, the highlight was the meeting in Gasa (District Head Quarters), where they met their King and Queens. They marvel that their king walked just as they did, all the way.
THE LAND
The four-day journey from Punakha, usually stretched over several weeks as they relay a year's food supply, brings the Layaps home to one of the most spectacular regions in the Kingdom of Bhutan, the raw natural beauty of the high alpine range.
Spreading upwards from 12000 feet above sea level, Laya sits on the Lap of the 7100 meters Masagang, One of Bhutan's 20 virgin peaks which are above 7000 meters. The mixed conifer forest above Gasa Dzong, dotted with maple and rhododendron in full bloom, merge into groves of birch, juniper, maple, and mountain cane. The entire slopes are richly colored by wildflowers.
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| Royal Highlander Festival Bhutan |
Across Bari-la and Kohi captcha, two rugged passes, the terrain leaves behind the tree- line and the vast alpine grassland undulate towards the great northern glaciers. High above the crystal waterfalls which often cut through the ice formations on the cliff side, and the clear rapid streams, are their sources, the turquoise freshwater lakes many of which the local population hold in sacred awe.
This is the world where the snow leopards roam, where the blue sheep, Sambar, and Musk deer graze in solitude. Lower down, this is the home of Takin, the Himalayan black bear, numerous deer, and the wild dog. The winged inhabitants of the region include the raven, wild pheasants, snow pigeons, the red-billed chough, the alpine swift, the snow partridge, and the black-necked crane.
HISTORY
The Layaps called their home Bayu, the hidden land, with good reasons. The cluster of villages is completely hidden by ridges and appears suddenly when the travelers reach the first houses. The people believe that they are protected by an ancient gate leading to the main village. It was here that their guardian deities kept a Tibetan invasion at bay. In an important annual ceremony, the Layaps pay homage to the protective forces which turned all the stones and trees around the gate into soldiers to repel the invaders.
But if such legend is history in Laya, history is also Legend. This was the place where Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal entered Bhutan. In a journey which resounds with the conquest of human and supernatural dimensions the Shabdrung crossed a chain of Mighty Himalayan ridges and entered Laya from Tibet. In a small meadow below the villages, called Taje-Kha a chorten shelters the footprints of the shabdrung and his horse.
History and legend are still the realities of today. The pristine mountain ranges have not succumbed to changes over the centuries. Neither have its people, like in many other parts of Bhutan, the land nor have the people existed in a harmony which the modern world does not adequately appreciate. And it is in this context that the Layaps must be viewed. It is against this rugged backdrop that they must be understood.
THE PEOPLE
"The Layap smell", is one well-known comment. "You cannot depend on the Layaps, is another, often from civil servants. "The Layaps are backward", say people living in the lower valleys. "The Layaps are alcoholics," say many who know them, most people stop to look when a layup woman passes by in her distinct, perhaps 'quaint' Kira. Some would point her out to friends.
The Layaps is all of these, if you do not look beyond the surface or if you do not understand him in the right context. A discerning observer would probably find, however, that the Layap has far more substantial qualities to be admired than those passing these derogatory comments.
If the Layaps are weather-beaten as the alpine rangelands they are as untamed and unpredictable as the forces of nature which are sometimes harsh That is why, perhaps, the frustration of civil servants who finds that the Layap cannot be bound to a deadline or even to a responsibility. When you call them they always say yes but never turn up, explains one District official.
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| Layaps at the Royal Highlander Festival in Bhutan |
The Layaps are also as open as
their environment, normally free of social inhibition. Men and women are open
and relaxed on issues like the boundaries of sexual behavior. This, in fact,
is, often exploited by occasional visitors like tourist guides, military
patrolmen, and civil servants.
Survival has also sharpened
the wiles of the Layap. Today, it is a nightmare for District officials to pin
a Layap herder down on a number of yaks in his herd because he wants to avoid
tax. Call a Layap family for official duty during the busy season and the best
bet is an old woman who is not needed at home.
But inside the rough Layap
exterior is a tenderness which is invisible to the casual observer. Every
Layap, for example, identifies with a 46-year-old horse owner who risked his
life to scale and icy cliff to his horse which had fallen. The man was
oblivious to the bitter cold as he sat with his dying horse for two days,
feeding the animal water from his cupped palm, the water mixed with his tears.
The Layaps are most tender in
their feelings for the Yaks which are the mainstay of their semi-nomadic
existence. They officially own about 2000 of Bhutan's 30000 yak population,
both believed to be reduced figures. The 300 to 400 KG beast of burden is a
source of food, shelter, draught power, transportation and part of the layap
Identity.
THE LIFE
The carefree lifestyle comes
with alcohol consumption by the layap men. Nearly every men drink heavily,
often losing time, effort and hard earned money in drunken stupors and
converting all the hard toiled food grain into alcohol. 63 years old Ap
Tshering claims to be a typical example of the Layap man. "I have carried
on with a hard life," he says with a pleased grin. "Now I have two
important goals in life. I brew sinchang (local wine) during the day and I
drink it at night."
In this patriarchal society
where girls are married early and move to the husband's home, polyandry is on
the decline. With clear cut gender roles, the woman bears a serious domestic
responsibility, looking after the Yak herds, digging the fields, weaving the
traditional clothing, and generally keeping the home and family together. The
men are responsible for trade and the transportation of goods, their own and
for the Government.
THE COMMUNITY
With about 60,000 semi-nomadic
pastoralists spread across the kingdom's northern region, the 800 or so layaps
share a strong community spirit. They are fiercely protective about the image
of their community. Internal squabbles are normally settled within the
community and even a child will not divulge the name of a Layap who is guilty
of some wrongdoing.
As a community, the Layaps are
also proud of their self-sufficiency in the basic necessities of life despite
the day to day physical difficulties. Wealth is measured by the number of Yaks
in a herd or the volume of rice. The Layaps are also quick to inform the
visitors that they constitute an important proportion of the Workforce in Gasa
District.
THE SPIRITUAL
There is a strong spiritual
element in the cohesion of the Layap community. The men pay obeisance to their
Pho-la, the local guardian deity. Every archery match, every business trip,
every journey, every development project starts with a prayer at Paola's sacred
shrine, a small chorten above the village.
Like the broader Bhutanese
society the advice of the village astrologer is sought on most activities and
the local medium is usually consulted during illness. It is the legacy of the
Shabdrung that the Layaps celebrate the Bumkar festival to plant barley and the
Aulay festival during harvest.
A superstition is strong and
is, in fact, one of the protective forces of the Layap identity. E.g., the
distinctive Kira (women's cloth) of Layap women has been kept partly because of
the belief in its necessity. A superstition also controls etiquette and other
aspects of the local traditions.
TRADE
The layaps are traders,
bartering their animal products for food grain and other edibles every winter.
Starting in late October, when nature offers a respite between the rains and
the snow, they move to Punakha, their horses, and every person laden with Yak
meat, butter cheese, incense plants from the wilderness and sometimes
trans-border goods like dried fish, shoes and brick tea. By March, when the
trail becomes accessible, they move back with rice, oil, salt, sugar, chilies,
clothing, and shoes.
The only relief in this annual
venture is a visit to the popular Gasa Tshachhu (hot spring) where they join
people from all parts of the country in the baths which are believed to be of
curative value and a boost to general health.
Yak products account for 49%
of Layaps earning, 18% comes from trade, 15% from animal transport and 4% from
tourism, the last benefiting only 5 or 6 horse owners who are in contract with
tour operators in Thimphu.
CHANGE
It is largely the exposure
from these annual trips that have given Layaps a view of a rapidly changing
world outside. A handful has ventured as far as Thimphu. And, in recent years,
they have watched the widening gap in economic progress with some dismay.
The urge to reach out and
pluck the fruits of progress which their fellow citizens are enjoying is
beginning to gnaw at the roots of Layap culture. The goal of one man was to
build a house like the one he saw in Punakha, a woman preferred a car so she
would be spared a heavy loads, a young girl envied the Punakha Schoolgirls, and
an eight-year-old boy rolled his father's hat around the campfire, his mind on
the plastic toy cars he had seen in the shops.
Two women who had been
selected to visit Thimphu in a cultural entertainment team returned embarrassed
about their Kiras because they were clumsy compared with the nylon kiras of the
Thimphu women. When told by a Thimphu official that the beautiful and unique
Laya Kira should be preserved she retorted. "So you can send tourists to
take photographs of us?"
PROGRESS
It is an enlightened policy
that the Royal Government of Bhutan has sensitively pursued in the mountains of
Laya. The goal is to improve the life of the people without upsetting the
delicate balance in the distinct cultural identity of the people, the pristine
natural ranges, and the rich wildlife.
Finely tuned to the migratory
pattern of the people, the priorities reflect an emphasis on improving the Yak
herds and fodder, on the crops, on the road, and on the transportation of
goods.
But the main benefits of
development in Laya have come from the establishment of Health unit, a
veterinary service, and the School. The Layaps however, place their long term
hopes on 100 or so children who represent the education of the community.
The Layaps have not been aware
of the image of backwardness they suffer among a section of Bhutan's
population. "Once educated, our children can face other people with
pride," said one weary mother. A 56-year-old father summed up the general
sentiments, "Last month when I went to Thimphu, my son read the bus ticket
and showed me where to sit," he said glowing with pride, his right hand
gripping the boy's shoulder. "I did not have to face the shame of sitting
in the wrong seat."
BEING A LAYAP
Laya today confronts an issue
which Bhutan, as a nation, has been grappling with for the past four decades.
If change is inevitable, will the experience be harsher than the bitter winds
which blow over the mountains?
It is a question with a
familiar ring to it. It is a question facing Bhutan. The Layaps represents the
Bhutanese population on a smaller scale, the harmony with their natural
environment, the deep pride in their unique cultural identity, and the fierce will
to protect their home.
"We Layaps have our good
points and bad points." Explains one village elder. "But in the end,
our biggest pride is our land and our self. Yes, we go out to trade, buy
supplies, to drink, to flirt. We complain about our hardships, the heavy
workload, and the tough road. We are embarrassed about our backwardness. But we
would never want to be anything but a Layap."



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