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Learn about South
Asian Culture.....Bhutan
About Bhutan
Culture of Bhutan
Cradled in the folds of the
Himalayas,
Bhutan has
relied on its geographic isolation to protect itself from
outside cultural influences. A sparsely populated country
bordered by
India to
the south, and
China to
the north, Bhutan has long maintained a policy of strict
isolationism, both culturally and economically, with the goal of
preserving its cultural heritage and independence. Only in the
last decades of the 20th century were foreigners allowed to
visit the country, and only then in limited numbers. In this
way, Bhutan has successfully preserved many aspects of its
culture, which dates directly back to the mid-17th century.
Modern
Bhutanese culture derives from
ancient culture. This culture affected the early growth of this
country.
Dzongkha
and
Sharchop,
the principal Bhutanese languages, are closely related to
Tibetan,
and Bhutanese monks read and write the ancient variant of the
Tibetan language,
known as chhokey.
The Bhutanese are physically similar to the Tibetans, but
history does not record when they crossed over the Himalayas and
settled in the south-draining valleys of Bhutan. Both Tibetans
and Bhutanese revere the tantric
guru,
Padmasambhava,
the founder of
Himalayan Buddhism
in the 8th century.
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