Showing posts with label Rangdum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rangdum. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Shakar, Rangdum.

Tse Dolma le, now in her eighties, recalls her youth, a time when men from her village would travel to Zanskar to procure salt and barley. These journeys, mostly undertaken on horseback, were made three times a year. Back then, every household in the village kept three to four horses, which were essential for transport across the rugged terrain. Today, it has been over a decade since the last horse disappeared from the village.

Butter and livestock were taken to Zanskar and sold to the locals there. In return, the villagers would obtain barley from the Zanskaris. This barley was then exchanged for salt, typically sourced from the Changpa traders. However, Tse Dolma notes that salt was not only obtained from the Changpas but also purchased from the Zanskaris.

Transporting these goods was laborious. Barley and salt were carried back on horse and even on their backs, and the barley was taken further to be milled at a remote place known as Lungpey Phu.

While the men journeyed to Zanskar, Tse Dolma and other women remained behind, devoting their days to gathering grass for the long winters and tending to the livestock.

In addition to the Zanskar trade, many villagers also travelled to Kargil and Leh to sell butter. The women, meanwhile, stayed in the village, sustaining the pastoral life that formed the backbone of their community.

Monday, May 26, 2025

Rangdum Village.


Tsering Tundup, 75 Yrs, from Rangdum remembers being just eight years old when he first accompanied his father on a trading journey to Zanskar. Their main objective was to acquire salt and Barley. At Rangdum where the harsh climate and barren soils made agriculture nearly impossible barley was sourced from Zanskar.

Rangdum’s true wealth, however, lay in its vast grazing lands. These high-altitude pastures sustained large herds of livestock, making dairy products, especially butter and chhurpi (hardened cheese) the backbone of the local economy. Like most families in the village, Tsering’s father would carry butter, chhurpi, and a small amount of cash to trade in Zanskar, exchanging them for grain and salt.

While barley was sourced from Zanskari households, the salt was acquired directly from the Changpa traders.

Tsering recalls being around 30 years old when the Changpa caravans abruptly stopped coming, a sudden end to a centuries-old trade route.

Unlike the people of Parkachik, the villagers of Rangdum were largely self-sufficient in wool, owing to their sizeable herds. Many households not only fulfilled their own needs but were also able to sell surplus wool and butter in Leh. Tsering made his first journey to Leh around the age of 25 and continued the practice for many years, traveling either via Kargil or the Kanji route. After reaching Henasku or the main highway near Kanji, he would often find transport with passing trucks or vehicles.

Each journey to Leh involved carrying approximately 15–20 kilograms of wool and 40 kilograms of butter. The butter fetched a respectable Rs 30–40 while the wool earned only Rs 5–6 per kilogram, a modest return for the effort and distance involved. To supplement their income, Tsering’s family also sold livestock to Balti traders, who would periodically visit Rangdum.


Rangdum Monastery.



According to Skarma Tsering (Pic-1) from Abran in Zanskar, he has no family members and has spent most of his life living with the monks at Rangdum Monastery. He recalls that as a young boy, around 8 to 10 years old, he saw Changpa traders visiting Abran to sell salt. Later, he witnessed monks from Rangdum Monastery crossing the Penzila Pass on horseback to reach Zanskar, where they bartered barley for salt from the Changpa traders.

In earlier times, the monastery kept nearly 100 horses, with each monk owning about two. Today, only a single horse remains, a ceremonial animal known as the Gomsta, which is considered sacred to the monastery.

According to Ven. Lobzang Tsetan, aged 85 (Pic-2) a monk from Randum monastery who is the eldest male resident of Rangdum village, most of the monks in the monastery originally came from Zanskar, Lingshed, and Dibling.

The monastery owns agricultural land in Akshow village, Zanskar. In the past, monks would travel annually from Rangdum to Zanskar, collect the barley from Akshow and trade it for salt with the Changpa traders in Abran.

He also recalls the annual visits of traders from Takmachik village in Sham, who would take the now-abandoned route from Kanji passing through with Chuli and Phating to trade it for barley in Zanskar.

Although little agriculture is possible in the vast expanse of Rangdum due to its extreme cold, the region is rich in grasslands and well-suited for livestock grazing.

In the past each year, villagers from Rangdum would take the Kanji La route to Leh to sell surplus butter.