Chorten and flagpole below Kailash
Mount Kailash, western Tibet, seen from a pilgrim chorten (stupa) at one of the prostration points on the circuit around this sacred mountain. Chortens like this are embellished with hundreds of prayer flags, fluttering from lines attached to a central flagpole. The 22,028-foot Mount Kailas is Asia's most sacred mountain, the axis mundi representing the mythical Mount Meru, throne of the gods (and in particular Shiva) and the center of the universe. Pilgrims have journeyed here for more than a thousand years, to make a ritual circumambulation (parikrama) of the snow-capped rock pyramid, but it was first seen by westerners only in the 18th century. It is sacred to four religions — Hinduism, Buddhism, Jain and Bönpo (the pre-Buddhist Tibetan faith) — and from May to September pilgrims make the difficult journey through western Tibet to the mountain.