While China pushes for more industrialised farms, Buddhist monks urge now-sedentary nomads to embrace vegetarianism

Former free-roaming nomads now mostly resettled in rows of sun-baked block houses in Tibet are facing a struggle for their identity, their spiritual and cultural practices – and even their stomachs.

These yak-tending herders have always eaten meat. In addition to the milk, butter and cheese they derived from yaks, meat was a necessity in their harsh lives.

But a movement spurred by Tibetan Buddhist monks in the region over the past two decades has increasingly urged now sedentary nomads to practise vegetarianism, to pay a “life ransom” for the release of animals destined for the slaughterhouse, and to abandon the slaughter of their own animals because they have settled down.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Boris Johnson’s Brexit shenanigans have met their reckoning in Northern Ireland | Simon Jenkins

The PM’s greatest ‘untruth’ was about the Northern Irish border – the…

Matteo Salvini to face trial over standoff with migrant rescue ship

Italy’s former interior minister says he was doing his job by refusing…

‘Like a dream’: successful return of Nasa capsule with asteroid sample hailed

Return of the largest asteroid sample ever to be recovered marks the…

Family of tenant who killed himself over noise accuse landlord of ‘gross failings’

Exclusive: Relatives reveal landlord Clarion continued to demand rent four months after…