In the street, you can find satisfactory souvenirs, and experience the mysterious "one step one kowtow" faith to religion. All the houses along the street are stores. All kinds of fantastic commodities show us all

Bakhor Street is a miniature of Lhasa, even in the whole Tibet. The old circumambulation circuit is always crowded with pilgrims from everywhere. Some come along the road by performing the body-long kowtows, some come by truck. Some are monks, and some are businessmen from Kham. In a word, here you will find people from all over Tibet. You can enjoy different dresses, and languages. Even the similar-looking dresses of the monks vary depending on the different religions.
Bakhor Street is the window to view the Tibetan area, which is silently telling the history of Lhasa. History Bakhor Street was first a circumambulation circuit around the Jokhang Temple. According to Lamaism_(Tibetan Buddhism), circumambulation means walking around the Jokhang Temple in the clockwise direction, which shows worship to the Bronze statue of Sakyamuni enshrined in the temple.
It is one of the three famous circumambulation circuits in Lhasa. An endless flow of worshippers every day proved it the famous one in Lhasa. In addition, there are two more circumambulation circuits chiming with it. One is the Linkhor (outer circumambulation circuit) around the old city zone containing the Potala Palace; the other is the mysterious "Rangkor", which is the circumambulation corridor inside the Jokhang Temple.
The three circumambulations circuits give witness and maintain the vital position of the Jokhang Temple. The temple is not only a palace where the Buddha Bronze statue and holly articles are offered, but also the reflection of the Esoteric Buddhism about the ideal of universe, namely the Mandala.
Now Bakhor Street refers to a larger area including the entire district around the Jokhang Temple, which is the well-preserved old city zone. Legend In the Bakhor

There he wrote the famous poem From the top of high mountains in the east, "Whenever the bright moon rose, From the top of high mountains in the east, the pretty young girl's face, rises in my mind." "Pretty young girl" means Magyia Ngami in Tibetan. Now the Magyia Ngami Restaurant is a bar with a good taste of art. On its wall hang works of painting, photograph, and handicraft and on the shelf there are original edition of works by Kafka and Eliot.
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