翻訳と辞書
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・ Journey Back to Oz
・ Journey Back to Youth
・ Journey Begins
・ Journey Behind the Falls
・ Journey Beyond Three Seas
・ Journey Beyond Tomorrow
・ Journey by Moonlight
・ Journey discography
・ Journey Escape
・ Journey for Margaret
・ Journey for Survival
・ Journey Forward
・ Journey from Bohemia to the Holy Land, by way of Venice and the Sea
・ Journey from St. Petersburg to Moscow
・ Journey from the Fall
Journey from Zanskar
・ Journey Girls
・ Journey Home
・ Journey Home (album)
・ Journey in North America
・ Journey in Satchidananda
・ Journey in the Dark
・ Journey into Fear
・ Journey into Fear (1943 film)
・ Journey into Fear (1975 film)
・ Journey into Fear (novel)
・ Journey into Imagination with Figment
・ Journey Into Life
・ Journey into Light
・ Journey into Medicine


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Journey from Zanskar : ウィキペディア英語版
Journey from Zanskar
Journey From Zanskar is a 2010 documentary film written, produced, and directed by Frederick Marx, for Warrior Films. It tells the emotional story of 17 small children who leave home and family, possibly forever, in order to save their dying Tibetan culture. Parting from one of the most remote and desolate places on Earth – Zanskar, in northwest India – the expedition must travel on foot over 17,000 foot Himalayan passes. The two monks serving as guides walked this same path 30 years ago when they were children. The 17 children with them may not return home for 10–15 years or more. Narrated by Richard Gere, featuring the Dalai Lama, the film tells the story of their incredible journey.
==Plot==
Zanskar is the last remaining original Tibetan Buddhist society with a continuous untainted lineage dating back thousands of years. In nearby Tibet and Ladakh, in Sikkim, Bhutan, and Nepal, traditional Tibetan Buddhist culture is either dead already or dying. The horror of Chinese government design in Tibet is being matched by the destruction of global economics elsewhere. Zanskar, ringed by high Himalayan mountains in northwest India, one of the most remote places on the planet, has been safe until now. But that’s changing.
In 3–5 years a road connecting Padum, the heart of Zanskar, with Leh, the heart of neighboring Ladakh, will be finished. The route which previously took up to two days by car will take only 4–5 hours. As economic growth descends on Zanskar it will bring with it an end to this unbroken Buddhist social tradition. Will the native language, culture, and religious practice be able to survive?
The Dalai Lama has instructed two monks from Zanskar’s Stongde Monastery to do everything in their power to insure that it does. The monks are building a school to educate the children from surrounding villages in their own language, culture, history, and religion. Presently, the government school teaches none of those subjects, and is closed most of the year. The nearby private school also doesn’t teach those subjects and is additionally unaffordable for the area’s poor families. At Stongde, along with indigenous traditions, the children will be educated in the best Western curricula.
The monks are racing against the clock. While they complete the school they are also placing local children in other schools and monasteries in the city of Manali and beyond. This requires walking over a 17,500 foot pass. On foot. On horseback. Led by yaks... Whatever it takes.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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