Nature, faith prop up tourism in sylvan Sikkim
By Madhusree Chatterjee | IANS - GANGTOK
28th February 2013 09:34 AM
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The Buddha Park in Sikkim is the latest tourist destination for international visitors. (IANS)
Sikkim is pushing its tourism envelope with
a combination of nature and spirituality to preserve the essence of its
Himalayan heritage and make a statement of sustainable growth in this age of
manic concretisation of the fragile hill environment.
Sample this: Laid out across 23 acres of lush slopes against a startling
backdrop of the icy Kanchenjunga and the Maenam hills range in southern
Sikkim's Rabongla district shines the state's newest tourism address - the
Tathagata Tsal or the Buddha Park, nearly 65 km from Gangtok.
At the center of the park perches a shrine with a towering 140 ft statue of
Lord Buddha with its face coated in 3.5 kg of pure gold in the Dharma Chakra
Mantra tradition. The icon and the park built at a cost of almost Rs.400
million ($7 million) over the last seven years is expected to boost the state's
economic fortunes on the strength of the Buddha relics from nine countries.
These were installed at the sanctum by Sikkim Chief Minister Pawan Kumar
Chamling in a grand ceremony in Rabongla on Tuesday to commemorate Lord
Buddha's 2,550th birth anniversary.
Hope for tourism, one of Sikkim's economic lifelines, piggy-backs on Buddhist
trails, nature tourism and village tourism.
Major Buddhist centers like the old Rumtek Monastery, Rumtek Dharma Chakra
Centre, Pal Zurmang Kagyud monastery, the Namgyal Institute of Tibetology, a
giant statue of guru Padmasambhava and one of Tathagata, together with a
handful of holy lakes, including Changu at 12,400 ft above sea level, keep the
state's Buddhist circuit busy.
The countryside is dotted with smaller monasteries like the Phadong monastery,
Phensang monastery, Tholung monastery and the Doling monastery that one
stumbles along the way.
However, Sikkim's approach to spiritual tourism is secular, Chamling said.
"Buddha may be of primary importance, but the government has built a
replica of the Hindu Char Dham - four temples dedicated to Lord Shiva and Lord
Vishnu - at Shri Siddhesvara Dhama at Namchi in southern Sikkim", Chamling
said.
A gurudwara in Gangtok and churches across the state add to the holistic
colour.
"We have been pushing tourism as a new profession and major economic
activity. We want our children to work in the tourism service sector. We are
training youngsters and building capacities," Chamling said, adding that
the "state is exploring new frontiers in eco-tourism to add variety".
The focus on eco-tourism has become more creative and infrastructure-oriented
since Sikkim was declared "an eco tourism destination in 2009",
Tourism Minister Bhim Dhungel said. He said Sikkim was one of the pioneering
states to promote nature tourism with "forest and flower trails"
involving individual stakeholders and non-profit groups.
Citing examples, Dhungel said nature getaways like the Singlila trek, the
Dzongri trek, the Rhododrendon Valley trek and the Jongu camp trail were
popular for their diversity of natural splendour both among foreigners and
domestic tourists.
"Sikkim became a tourist state after 1975. Before that, under the rule of
the Chogyal (kings), Sikkim was not exposed to the world. Now tourism is
virtually our bread and butter and contributes nearly 6 percent to the state's
GDP," Tourism and IPR Secretary K.S. Topgay told IANS.
"One may wonder why six per cent... It is a small figure," the
official added.
Tourism revenue in Sikkim is split - that from the hotels goes to the power
department and that from the tourist taxi trade goes to the transport
department. As a result, the base tourism revenue is almost a pittance.
"The economic determinants for tourism are skewed under the current
government policy. Even as a couple of travel components do not benefit tourism
directly, the nature of tourism is still centred around urban destinations like
Lachen, Rabongla, Pelling and Namchi. The state government has realized that
the economic benefits from tourism were not reaching the common man because of
its urban drift," the tourism secretary said.
As a pro-people alternative, the government is encouraging home stay in
villages, Topgay said. At least 720 new village homestays are going to open
their doors to tourists this year. The homestay owners have been trained in
hospitality and quality control at the Institute of Hotel Management and State
Institute of Capacity building in Gangtok.
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