
After that and during lunch we learned that there is a new short cut through Sahrahanpur that cuts the trip down to three hours. We asked the directions but were told you had to know the road. That was a lot of help. Jamyang Lekdrub will look for the short cut on his way back to Dehradun later this week. I had lunch with the younger Dungsay Rinpoche yesterday and he is now staying in the same guest house as us. In fact the guest house in owned by the Drolma Palace of Sakya and it is where the Lamas usually stay when passing through Delhi. It is called the Tara Guest House. The Ngorpas also have a guest house as does the Chu Shi Gang Drug and many other Tibetan religious and cultural organizations. The area is in the extreme north of Delhi and called Majnukatilla. The Indians tend to stay away because it was once a cemetery of sorts, rather a charnel ground. It also figures very much into a Muslim love story akin to Romeo and Julliet. Needless to say it didn't end well. The Hindus especially never populated this area. It borders on a tributary of some river which I don't know the name of. Mosquitoes are the largest cash crop. Dirt and bad smells are the runners up.
I will be meeting again with Dungsay Rinpoche later in the day and then plan a quite dinner with Tsedor and Jamyang Lekdrub. The meetings for tomorrow and Tuesday I will also set up by phone later in the day after a nice long nap.