The New York Times Agency May 2010

EN_00913897_2737
The New York Times Agency May 2010
(NYT22) SAINSHAND, Mongolia -- Aug. 11, 2002 -- MONGOLIA-MUSEUM -- Altangerel and his son, Altan-Ochir, are hereditary curators of the wealth of a 19th-century Mongolian incarnation of a Buddhist deity Danzan Ravjaa, also known as the Great and Horrible Saint of the Gobi, a Buddhist monk who was believed to be the 35th incarnation of Yansi Yadaam, a Mongolian deity. Despite the shortage of money and the clear need to improve conditions at the museum, Altangerel has refused to sell any part of the collection. "My ancestors and the people of the Gobi have been protecting these artifacts for five generations," he says. Altangerel and his son at the Hamryn Hiid monastery in Mongolia. (Michael Kohn/The New York Times)
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2002-08-11
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
Michael Kohn/The New York Times/Redux
17339416
0,28MB
14cm x 9cm by 300dpi
11, 2002, A, ALSO, ALTAN-OCHIR, ALTANGEREL, ANCESTORS, AND, ANY, ARE, ARTIFACTS, AS, AT, AUG, BE, BEEN, BELIEVED, BUDDHIST, CLEAR, COLLECTION, CONDITIONS, CURATORS, DANZAN, DEITY, DESPITE, FIVE, FOR, GENERATIONS, GOBI, GREAT, HAMRYN, HAS, HAVE, HE, HEREDITARY, HIID, HIS, HORRIBLE, IMPROVE, IN, INCARNATION, KNOWN, KOHN, MICHAEL, MONASTERY, MONEY, MONGOLIA, MONGOLIA-MUSEUM, MONGOLIAN, MONK, MUSEUM, MY, NEED, NEW, NYT22, OF, PART, PEOPLE, PROTECTING, RAVJAA, REDUX, REFUSED, SAINSHAND, SAINT, SAYS, SELL, SHORTAGE, SON, THE, THESE, TIMES, TO, WAS, WEALTH, WHO, YADAAM, YANSI, YORK,