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- Beyul abstract "Beyul (Tibetan: སྦས་ཡུལ, Wylie: sbas-yul) are hidden valleys encompassing hundreds of square kilometers which Padmasambhava blessed as refuges according to the beliefs of the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism. Tertöns may reveal them from terma at specific and appropriate times. Their locations were kept on scrolls (lamyig or neyig) hidden under rocks and inside caves, monasteries and stupas.Padmasambhava assigned deities to protect the beyul. Protective forces manifest as snowstorms, mists and snow leopards. Buddhist texts indicate beyul are discovered when the planet is approaching destruction and the world becomes too corrupt for spiritual practice. They describe valleys reminiscent of paradise, which can only be reached with enormous hardship. Pilgrims who travel to these wild and distant places often recount extraordinary experiences similar to those encountered by Buddhist spiritual practitioners on the path to Liberation. People who try to force their way in, may encounter failure and death. Beyul retreat time has concentrated benefits. The places originate from a faith which has traditional natural site respect. Life in beyul is sacred and protected. Earthly beyuls share significant characteristics with Shambhala, which is the greatest hidden valley.In Buddhism, sacred environments are places to deeply enter the world, and to avoid escaping it. The qualities inherent in such places reveal the interconnectedness of all life and deepen awareness of the spirit and mind's hidden regions. Visiting beyul with good motivation and appropriate merit, the pilgrim can learn to see the world differently from the way it commonly appears, developing and enhancing the Buddhist virtues of wisdom and compassion. Inside beyul, people should abandon their negative actions. The lands embody dharmapala and lords of the land, which are associated with the geographic features such as mountain, trees, rocks and water sources. In custom, ritual offerings are made to these spirits to appease their wrathful nature and with the symbolic unity that people share with them. The attitude affords a sustainable approach toward land stewardship.In Nepal and Tibet around Mount Everest are the Khenbalung, Solukhumbu, Rolwaling, Rongshar, Kyirong and Nubri sacred valleys. The Sherpa people discovered Solukhumbu when they left Tibet to escape religious persecution in the 15th and 16th centuries. They entered the valley to seek refuge and made a new homeland there. Buddhist monasteries and sacred mountains have brought many spiritual travelers to Solukhumbu. Traditional beyul are found in the Himalayan regions of Nepal, Tibet, Sikkim, Bhutan, India, China and Pakistan.".
- Beyul thumbnail Barun_Valley_-_Nghe.jpg?width=300.
- Beyul wikiPageID "29003900".
- Beyul wikiPageLength "4710".
- Beyul wikiPageOutDegree "30".
- Beyul wikiPageRevisionID "669977500".
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Barun_Valley.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Bhutan.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Buddhist_texts.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tibetan_Buddhism.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink China.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Dharmapala.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Gyirong_County.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink India.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Mist.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Mount_Everest.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Nepal.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Nyingma.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Padmasambhava.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Pakistan.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Sagarmatha_National_Park.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Shambhala.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Shangri-La.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Sherpa_people.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Sikkim.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Snow_leopard.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Solukhumbu_District.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Stupa.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Sustainability.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Tagzig_Olmo_Lung_Ring.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Terma_(religion).
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Tertön.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Tibet.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Tibetan_Buddhism.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink Winter_storm.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLink File:Barun_Valley_-_Nghe.jpg.
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLinkText "Beyul".
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLinkText "beyul".
- Beyul wikiPageWikiLinkText "valleys".
- Beyul hasPhotoCollection Beyul.
- Beyul id "bfS9nGuOQ3o".
- Beyul t "སྦས་ཡུལ".
- Beyul title ""Beyul: Sacred Hidden Valleys of the Himalaya by The Mountain Institute"".
- Beyul w "sbas-yul".
- Beyul wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Bo.
- Beyul wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Beyul wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Tibetan_Buddhism.
- Beyul wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:YouTube.
- Beyul subject Category:Tibetan_Buddhism.
- Beyul hypernym Valleys.
- Beyul type Place.
- Beyul comment "Beyul (Tibetan: སྦས་ཡུལ, Wylie: sbas-yul) are hidden valleys encompassing hundreds of square kilometers which Padmasambhava blessed as refuges according to the beliefs of the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism. Tertöns may reveal them from terma at specific and appropriate times. Their locations were kept on scrolls (lamyig or neyig) hidden under rocks and inside caves, monasteries and stupas.Padmasambhava assigned deities to protect the beyul.".
- Beyul label "Beyul".
- Beyul sameAs m.0dgrjg8.
- Beyul sameAs Q4900264.
- Beyul sameAs Q4900264.
- Beyul wasDerivedFrom Beyul?oldid=669977500.
- Beyul depiction Barun_Valley_-_Nghe.jpg.
- Beyul isPrimaryTopicOf Beyul.