. Bhutanese society is centered around the practice of
Buddhism, which is the main religion. Religious beliefs are evidenced in all aspects of life.
Prayer flags flutter on hillsides, offering up prayers to benefit all nearby
sentient beings. Houses each fly a small white flag on the roof indicating the owner has made his offering payments to appease the local god. Each valley or district is dominated by a huge
dzong, or high-walled fortress which serves the religious and administrative center of the district. Approximately 23% of the population is
Hindu. There is a small
Muslim population in Bhutan, covering 0.2% of the whole country's population. Overall, 75% of the population is
Buddhist, and 0.4% other religions.
Religious festivals Once every year, a
dzong or most important village may hold a religious festival, or
Tsechu. Villagers from the surrounding district come for several days of religious observances and socializing while contributing auspicious offerings to the lama or monastery of the festival. The central activity is a fixed set of religious mask dances, or
cham, held in a large courtyard. Each individual dance takes up to several hours to complete and the entire set may last two to four days. Observation of the dances directly blesses the audience and also serves to transmit principles of
Tantric Buddhism to the villagers. A number of the dances can be traced directly back to
Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal himself, the founder of Bhutan, and have been passed down essentially unchanged since the mid-17th century. Prior to dawn on the final day of the tsechu a huge tapestry, or
thongdrel, is unfurled in the courtyard of the dzong for several hours. The mere sight of it is believed to bring spiritual liberation. The thongdrel is rolled up before the rays of the morning sun can strike it.
The monastery (
Trongsa). Monks join the monastery at six to nine years of age and are immediately placed under the discipleship of a headmaster. They learn to read
chhokey, the language of the ancient sacred texts, as well as
Dzongkha and English. Eventually they will choose between two possible paths: to study theology and Buddhist theory, or take the more common path of becoming proficient in the rituals and personal practices of the faith. The daily life of the monk is austere, particularly if they are stationed at one of the monasteries located high in the mountains. At these monasteries food is often scarce and must be carried up by the monks or their visitors. The monks are poorly clothed for winter conditions and the monasteries are unheated. The hardship of such a posting is well-recognized; to have a son or brother serving in such a monastery is recognized as very good
karma for the family. A monk's spiritual training continues throughout his life. In addition to serving the community in sacramental roles, he may undertake several extended silent retreats. A common length for such a retreat is three years, three months, three weeks and three days. During the retreat time he will periodically meet with his spiritual master who will test him on his development to ensure that the retreat time is not being wasted. Each monastery is headed by an abbot who is typically a
Lama, although the titles are distinct. The highest monk in the land is the chief abbot of Bhutan, whose title is
Je Khenpo. He is theoretically equivalent in stature to the king. The Central Monk Body is an assembly of 600 or so monks who attend to the most critical religious duties of the country. In the summer they are housed in
Thimphu, the nation's capital, and in the winter they descend to
Punakha dzong, the most sacred dzong in Bhutan, where
Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal's mortal body has been kept under vigil since the late 17th century. ==Music==