Lhasa welcomes Shoton Festival

Publish Time: 2025-08-26 Author: Ji Yuqiao From: Global Times

Traditional events celebrate region's birthday

An enormous thangka painting of Buddha is unrolled on a hillside platform at the Drepung Monastery in Lhasa, southwest China's Xizang Autonomous Region, Aug. 23, 2025. Celebrations marking the traditional Shoton Festival began in Lhasa on Saturday. (Xinhua/Tenzing Nima Qadhup)

An enormous thangka painting of Buddha is unrolled on a hillside platform at the Drepung Monastery in Lhasa, southwest China's Xizang Autonomous Region, Aug. 23, 2025. Celebrations marking the traditional Shoton Festival began in Lhasa on Saturday. (Xinhua/Tenzing Nima Qadhup)

The celebratory atmosphere of the 60th anniversary of the establishment of the Xizang Autonomous Region continues across the plateau as the annual Shoton Festival - one of China's first national intangible cultural heritage events - opened in Lhasa, the regional capital. 

On Saturday, the Drepung and Sera monasteries held the traditional thangka unveiling, displaying giant thangka paintings.

Other festival events, such as ­Tibetan Opera and horse racing, will take place throughout the coming week, showcasing the unique intangible cultural heritage of Xizang to both locals and visitors.

Colorful flags and lanterns have transformed Lhasa, giving the city a renewed festive look. Tenzin Dolkar, a Lhasa resident, told the Global Times on Sunday that the city has an especially strong festival atmosphere. Many Tibetan families have been dressing in traditional attire, taking to the streets together to welcome the arrival of the Shoton Festival.

A tourist surnamed Wu from Shanghai, set out for the Drepung Monastery at 5 am on Saturday. Wu told the Global Times that once inside the temple, the crowds became dense, with people moving shoulder to shoulder. When he reached the highest point, the giant thangka, a kind of scroll painting on cotton or silk with mineral and organic pigments, was already on display. Despite the heavy crowds and persistent rain, order was maintained, and local residents and monks distributed free bread, milk tea, and water along the way. "Looking up at the thangka from the foot of the mountain still felt ­solemn and awe-inspiring," Wu said.

"Shoton" means "yogurt banquet" in Tibetan, and as the name suggests, every household enjoys yogurt on this day. The festival dates back to the 17th century and was included in the first batch of Chinese national intangible cultural heritage in 2006. Ciren Yangzong, a researcher at the social economy institute of the China Tibetology Research Center, told the Global Times on Sunday that the Shoton Festival, in both its content and form, embodies local people's hopes and their persistent pursuit of happiness and peaceful life.

Ciren noted that with social progress and economic development, the festival's content and form have gradually diversified, retaining tradition while meeting contemporary spiritual needs. Witnessing the thangka unveiling at the Drepung Temple is both an act of faith and an experience; eating yogurt is not only a tradition, but also an experience unique to this day.

Subsequent recreational activities and regional product exhibitions inject a modern vibe into Lhasa's ancient city, while Tibetan Opera performances at Norbulingka bring the festive atmosphere to its peak. Tibetan Opera was also inscribed onto the national list of intangible cultural heritage in 2006.

From the second day of the festival, Lhasa's Norbulingka park was transformed into an open-air theater. Performers donned hand-painted masks and vibrant costumes, singing from morning until dusk. Tibetan Opera's soaring vocals brought to mind the wind over snowy mountains, and the dancers' vigorous movements resembled eagles spreading their wings.

Classic Tibetan Opera pieces were performed in turn. In the audience, families spread mats, poured hulless barley wine and butter tea, and cheered loudly at exciting moments, sometimes swaying to the rhythm and turning the theater into a sea of joy - this is the custom known as "guolinka" (lit: picnicking in the parks).

For Danzen Zhuoga, the Shoton Festival has a special presence in the heart. Unlike Losar, also known as ­Tibetan New Year, which involves visiting relatives, Shoton is about wearing traditional attire with close family and enjoying leisurely moments in tents on the grass. "It is a very meaningful festival," the local resident said.

When Wu visited Norbulingka on Sunday to watch Tibetan Opera, he saw numerous Tibetan families sitting together on the ground, sharing food while enjoying the performance. The tourist once again felt the joyful atmosphere of the Shoton Festival.

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