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Punakha Monastery

The home ministry was given the overall responsibility with the Tenso Lapon, Dasho Wangchuk, as site supervisor. Tenso Lapon Dasho Wangchuk is the recipient of the Druk Thuksey for his outstanding contributions in the renovation of the Punakha Dzong and restoration of lhakhangs and monasteries.

The five lhakhangs above the Kuenrey were all re-built and new sacred images installed: Neten Chudrung, Goengkhang, Lhamo, Rigsum Gompo, and Phurpai Lhakhang. In accordance to prophesy a 10-foot Guru Dorji Droley image was installed in the Droley Lhakhang facing the confluence of the Phochu and Mochu rivers.

The Tsen Chhorten was reconstructed as a two-storey building and the Je Khenpo's residence expanded into a four-room apartment with a choekhang. All the woodwork of massive beams, joists, pillars, floors, doors and windows - in the five floors of the Utse was changed, with timber brought in from different dzongkhags. So were the wooden structures on the roof of the dukhang. New kitchen and restrooms for the monks were constructed outside the dzong to reduce the risk of fire.

In 1994 a catastrophic flood damaged the Dzongchung although the Jhou (Buddha image) was miraculously saved. Originally built in 1374 by the great sage Dupthop Ngagi Rinchhen, the dzongchung was restored in 1996 and consecrated by His Holiness, Geshe Gueden Rinchhen, the 69th Je Khenpo. Besides enlarging the plinth area to 1,500 square feet from the previous 590 square feet a large retaining wall, 25 to 35 feet in height, was constructed around the Dzongchhung, using stone masonry and cement mortar.

More than 200 new images crafted for the dzong represent some of the finest masterpieces available in the country. The Shakyamuni Buddha, Guru Rinpoche, and Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal in the Kuenrey, the life-size gilded images of Mahakala and Pelden Lhamo in the goenkhang, and dozens of larger-than-life images are unique works of art achieved through meditative focus and concentration.

The Yeshey Semba (essence of primordial wisdom deity) for the numerous lhakhangs, chhortens, altars, and images in the dzong are invaluable treasures offered by His Majesty the King and the royal family, lams and trulkus, and devotees from all parts of the country.

Punakha Dzong was the seat of Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal's rule during which he unified the country, protected it from external invasion, strengthened the teachings of the Dharma, and established the tenets of the Bhutanese identity. On December 17, 1907, it was in this dzong that the Dratshang, Ponlops and Dzongpons, on behalf of the Bhutanese population, put their seals on the historic genja and unanimously elected Gongsar Ugyen Wangchuck as the first hereditary monarch of Bhutan.

With the completion of the project it has been enriched in religious treasures, in structural endurance, and in the beauty of traditional Bhutanese architecture and artwork by the fourth Druk Gyalpo. The Dewachenpoi Phodrang is, today, the sacred impregnable monument that Guru Rinpoche prophesied and Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal established.

The Dratshang performs the consecration ceremony
in the Kuenrey
The Pungthang Dewachenpoi Phodrang
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