advertisement
There is one Buddhist nun everyone in Nepal knows by name — not because she's a religious icon and a UNICEF goodwill ambassador, nor for her work running a girl's school and a hospital for kidney patients.
Ani Choying Drolma is famous as one of the country's biggest pop stars.
With more than 12 albums of melodious Nepali tunes and Tibetan hymns that highlight themes of peace and harmony, the songstress in saffron robes has won hearts across the Himalayan nation and abroad.
Ani Choying has also performed in one of the Coke Studio songs composed by AR Rahman.
Neither do her fans, who greet her with a roar of applause whenever she walks out on stage, and fall silent as she closes her eyes to sing.
But with a career deviating sharply from what conservatives in Nepal believe to be the proper path of a Buddhist, she's caught criticism as well. One Buddhist monk at the famed Swayambhu shrine questioned how she can reconcile the simple life of a religious ascetic with the fame and wealth she's amassed over her two-decade musical career.
Despite her fame, Drolma looks every bit the typical Nepalese Buddhist nun, with her hair trimmed short and sporting an ever-present smile. She travels the world giving concerts in countries including the United States, Brazil, China, and India.
Popular composer Nhyoo Bajracharya, who has worked with Drolma, describes her music as a fusion of traditional Tibetan and Nepali styles.
But Drolma believes her singing goes beyond delivering a catchy tune. Her 2004 hit Phoolko Aankhama which means "Eyes of the Flower" in the Nepali language, features lyrics that touch on religious teachings:
Her singing offers listeners a way to practice meditation and "is about invoking a spiritual quality," she said in a recent interview with the Associated Press. "That is what I rejoice in."
She refused to say how much money she has earned from album sales and concerts, but said she donates much of it to education charities through her Nun's Welfare Foundation and runs a kidney hospital.
Still, compared with most Nepalese living in this impoverished mountain nation, Drolma lives like a rock star — with a luxury car and a new home in an upscale neighbourhood of the capital of Kathmandu.
Drolma said she was 13 when her mother allowed her to join the Nagi Gompa nunnery to escape from an abusive father. She also dreaded getting married, as she would likely have been forced to do as it was the custom in Nepal at the time.
At the nunnery, just north of Kathmandu, she learned to chant the Buddhist scriptures. But while most recited the lines quickly, she stood out — chanting melodiously and drawing the other nuns' admiration.
In 1994, American musician Steve Tibbetts visited the nunnery and, being impressed with her voice, recorded her singing. He returned after receiving interest from US record companies, and recorded Drolma's first album, "Cho", released in 1997.
The album royalties and performance fees that came after left Drolma a bit stunned. Most Nepalese lead humble lives, with a quarter of the country's 28 million people living in poverty and heavily reliant on subsistence farming and remittances from family members working abroad.
She set up an educational foundation and opened the Arya Tara school, on a mountainside just south of Kathmandu. The boarding school houses about 80 girls, aged about 5 to 18, and offers free lessons in Buddhist scripture as well as math, science and computer skills. The foundation also covers the cost of sending the girls to college.
The students, similarly clad in saffron robes, giggle and smile when talking about Drolma.
"Ani is more than my mother. My mother gave me birth, but Ani raised me, gave me education, took care of me and is the only reason that I have reached this far," said 17-year-old Dolma Lhamu, who is now enrolled in college.
Drolma is similarly adored at the kidney hospital she runs in Kathmandu, where hundreds of patients receive free dialysis twice a week.
She said it's her work at the hospital and school that keep her singing and accepting invitations to perform. For the critics who question her globe-trotting lifestyle or high income, she has little patience.
(Published in an arrangement with AP.)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)