One benefit of living on a Tibetan plateau, I'm really close to an old monastery where you can find hundreds of monks even today. Now, I'm not here to talk about the monastery. (It looks nice though, some interesting relics and monks to see) What I'm here about is to lead you into a question. When you think of a Tibetan monk, you generally think of a pacifist, a patient and kind person, no? Well... what I saw today was brutality at its finest. Some of the tourists touched a flower made of butter (I'm not joking, there are tons of statues made of edible butter), and that's a no no. Telling the person not to do it again and giving a warning would usually be the proper way, yes? Well, the monk in that area didn't think so. He just went full master of martial arts (without the martial arts) and attacked the guy, punching him everywhere he could hit, including the face. Chasing the guy away, and even threatening people that were with him. Boy was that an experience to see. Anyways, I rate the place 6/10. I've seen better
The chinese goverment likes your review, did you have your phone with you during the incident? We noticed that you didn't take photos or video of the incident
If that happened on the day you see it, what about all the other days you weren't there. Are you sure the monk isn't deliberately looking for excuses to beatdown no-name, small time rulebreakers.
because inside certain areas you are not allowed to touch take pictures any sensible thing related to old and sacred things. you retard
some old indonesian temples. volcano, one of the great walls in china. the turkey's founder's mausoleum (stuff stuffed there are cool)
Maybe it was the ninth time that this tourist tried to butter his toast with concecrated sculptures and offerings ?
Hmm...I’ve been to the Tibetan monasteries in my country, and never found a monk who knew martial arts Me wanna fite