The Sacred Sites Of The Dalai Lamas A Pilgrimage To The Oracle Lake Streaming Avec Sous Titres En Français , Streaming avec sous-titres en Français, the sacred sites || Regardez tout le film sans limitation, diffusez en streaming en qualité.
On this fascinating journey you will explore the caves where the early Buddhist masters achieved enlightenment, enter the monasteries where the early Dalai Lamas and the founders of Buddhism meditated and taught, and - at an altitude of over 16,000 feet - look into the remarkable Oracle Lake where every Dalai Lama has had prophetic visions. Written by Anonymous
This is the third installment in the "Shikoku Pilgrimage" series of horror documentaries in which horror storyteller Junji Inagawa goes directly to haunted places to verify the truth behind them.
Stonehenge. For years it's been the subject of debate. How did it get there and what was its purpose? New scientific evidence suggests that this great archaeological wonder and other megaliths like it have a connection to the lost city of Atlantis. Based on the studies of John Michell, this program travels prehistoric tracks across England that defy the science of the day -- proof that an advanced society skilled in engineering must have existed.
This is the second installment in the "Shikoku Pilgrimage" series of horror documentaries in which horror storyteller Junji Inagawa goes directly to haunted places to verify the truth behind them.
This is the first installment in the "Shikoku Pilgrimage" series of horror documentaries in which horror storyteller Junji Inagawa visits haunted places and verifies the truth behind them. In Tokushima Prefecture, he visits an abandoned drive-in that is rumored to have been closed down after its half-crazed owner was admitted to a mental hospital, and conducts an on-the-spot investigation.
Qingpu is a famous sacred mountain in Tibet, where countless monks have practiced for thousands of years. In 1989, Wen Pulin and Duan Jinchuan followed several monks up the mountain and took video of them. After three years, they revisited the same people and got a little closer to understanding their lives. As an in-depth dialogue with down-to-earth, rural people in Tibet, the film strives to understand Buddhism both as a philosophy, but also as a personal choice of lifestyle, as a transcendence of the chaos of life.