Beji Griya holy place
Pedanda priest at Beji Griya temple
Rita in the flower field
Village temple in Marga district
Sacrificial altar at Pura Taman Beji Giriya
Umbrella above the statues
Margarana National Monument
Aunt Mayang and her niece Rita
Cemetery of Margarana
Inside the Pura Pucak Paruman
Balinese home stay in Sembung
Pemangku woman enters the temple
Villager women in Tempekan Sentaka
Katu in Pura Tempekan Sentaka
Pura Malingkiuh temple in Tempekan Sentaka
Beji Griya waterfall
Audience at the Taman Budaya performance
Painting showing Lord Krishna
Penjor decoration in Tabanan
Pemangku priest takes holy rituals for the Gods
Scene in the wedding house
Rita and her mother Wayan Sumiyanti
Sacrifice to Pura Tirta Lan Segara
Portrait of Gek Adii
Sangtu Arlan and Gung Wira
Preparing Banten Canang Merake
Demon in the fire ring
After Nyepi
Ni Kadek Mayang Sari with the wedding present
Balinese women join the wedding party
Ketut Galih and his father Wayan Sutapa
Pemangku priest blessing the couple
Pura Segara a temple in Sanur
Women guests in the wedding house
Siria Ketut a young wedding participator
The bride in her wedding dress
Along the Huangpu river
Bird's eye view of Lindau island
Cockpit view out the Zeppelin
Take off and landing the Zeppelin
The cabin of the zeppelin
Along the Bund in Shanghai
Shanghai tower
Scenery at the Bund in Shanghai
Pedestrian street in the Yuyuang garden
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Parade passing on the alley
On the way to the holy park Beiji Griya we had the encounter of traditionell dressed women carrying their offerings for a nearby temple.
Balinese devote most of their waking hours to an endless series of offerings, purifications, processions, dances, and dozens of other religious rites. Ceremonies and festivals guide a Balinese from birth to death and into the world thereafter. There can be few places of comparable size where ceremonial obligations hold such a sway over people's lives.
Balinese devote most of their waking hours to an endless series of offerings, purifications, processions, dances, and dozens of other religious rites. Ceremonies and festivals guide a Balinese from birth to death and into the world thereafter. There can be few places of comparable size where ceremonial obligations hold such a sway over people's lives.
Jean-luc Drouin has particularly liked this photo
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