Day One - keynotes + webcast, blogs, vlogs, podcasts
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Today was the anniversary celebration for the Tibetan Children’s Villages - founded 46 years ago, at the request of His Holiness the XIV Dalai Lama, to take care of Tibetan refugee children coming over the mountains to India, following China’s assertion of control over the Tibetan plateau. As I arrived on foot, His Holiness the Dalai Lama was speaking to the assembled crowd of many hundreds on the playing field at Upper TCV. In Tibetan, of course. I listened for a short while, and looked at the children arrayed across the playing field in colorful costumes, and then pressed on to the AirJaldi auditorium. Nawang Dorjee, education director of TCV was the first official speaker at AirJaldi and introduced us to the background of TCV (photo). (more…)
Of course I’m exaggerating! We did not trek the entire Himalayas - only the foothills near McLeod Ganj to see a few antennas. In fact it was quite civilized except for the appearance of rain showers and a few lightning strikes during the afternoon. We began from TCV, the site of all AirJaldi activites, and hiked up above the TCV and across an upper trail where we had great views of McLeod Ganj below and the entire valley way below us at times. Most of trekking was on narrow trails that follow water pipes. Water is extracted high on the hills and piped down to where it is used thus creating a natural pressure. It’s enough pressure to be perfectly usable.
Many of my readers will be familiar with this - but I wanted to mention it for those to whom it’s new. McLeod Ganj (in upper Dharamsala) is an area where the old and the new meet. Tibetan refugees make up the bulk of the population in this small section of the larger city, and it’s way up on the hillside just below 6,000 feet elevation. Above it rise the foothills of the western Himalayas (more precisely the Dhaula Dahr - a spur of the Himalayan range) and those we can see, which still have significant snow on them, peak at maybe 12,000 feet, and are quite steep.








