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The Elephant at Amochu: A Living Symbol of Tendrel, Resilience and Bhutan’s Future

In recent years, many things have unfolded along the Amochu (Toorsa River, Phuentsholing), near Aum Dungtima Ney. These include the miraculous survival of two security guards who were swept away by the raging river. For the past few weeks, severe floods and landslides have brought immense suffering to communities living around Phuentsholing. Homes have been inundated, businesses disrupted, and the Samtse-Phuentsholing and Phuentsholing-Thimphu highways repeatedly blocked, affecting thousands of travellers and livelihoods. A lone Elephant has remained standing in the middle of the river. Many believed it would be swept away during the recent heavy rainfall.Yet, despite relentless rain and powerful currents, the Elephant is still there calm, unmoved, and resilient along with the sacred Ney, one of Bhutan’s sacred hidden places associated with King Dondrup, regarded in Buddhist tradition as a previous life of Lord Buddha. According to the sacred biography of the Buddha, King Dondrup endured tremendous hardship at this very place while practicing boundless generosity and compassion. The Ney is associated with a prophecy that its Tendrel would ripen in the future.To me the time is now, an auspicious convergence of circumstances carrying a deeper message.

In Buddhism, the elephant has long symbolized qualities that every practitioner aspires to cultivate: strength, patience, wisdom, stability, and an undisturbed mind. A trained elephant represents a disciplined consciousness that remains steady regardless of external circumstances. Just as an elephant walks with quiet confidence, we are reminded to face life’s storms with composure rather than fear.
History also gives profound meaning to the elephant. Before becoming the great Buddhist emperor, Emperor Ashoka is said to have adopted the elephant as one of the symbols of royal authority, courage, and righteous leadership. Throughout South Asian civilization, the elephant has represented kingship not merely power, but power guided by wisdom, compassion, and responsibility.Perhaps this is why the image before us feels so meaningful. The elephant is not running from the flood; it is standing firmly within it.
As I reflected further, another symbolism emerged. Bhutan itself lies between two of the world’s fastest growing giants India and China. Both possess enormous economic, technological, and geopolitical influence. Between these two great powers stands our small Himalayan kingdom. 

In many ways, the Elephant standing quietly in the middle of the river reminds me of Bhutan. We may be small. We may face immense external pressures. Like the Elephant surrounded by powerful Amochu river, Bhutan too is surrounded by forces much greater than itself.Yet our greatest strength has never been size. Our strength has always been our wisdom, unity, values, compassion, and resilience.
The sacred Ney that has endured, the Elephant that remains standing, the people who continue rebuilding, and the nation preparing itself for a transformative future through the vision of Gelephu Mindfulness City, together seem to speak of one timeless truth: true strength is not measured by the absence of adversity, but by the ability to remain grounded within it.Whether these connections are merely coincidence or manifestations of Tendrel is for each individual to contemplate.For me, they offer hope. They remind me that Bhutan’s future will not be shaped by fear, but by resilience; not by haste, but by wisdom; not by power alone, but by compassion and unity.As I watch the lone elephant standing amidst the waters of the Amochu, I cannot help but feel that it is quietly pointing toward something much greater than itself.Perhaps the prophecy of Aum Dungtima Ney is gradually unfolding before our very eyes. Perhaps the signs have always been there. Perhaps, indeed, the time is now.

His Majesty The King has repeatedly reminded us that our loyalty to the country, our integrity, and our shared responsibility for Bhutan’s future must remain unwavering. During the 118th National Day celebrations, His Majesty emphasized that our values are sacrosanct and non-negotiable, and that Bhutan’s future depends upon honesty, dependability, service, and our ability to use the unique advantages of being a small nation.These words resonate deeply today. The floods have tested our infrastructure and highways. They have tested our communities. They have tested our patience. But they have also revealed our resilience.
Just as the two men survived the powerful currents of the Amochu through determination and courage, the Elephant now silently teaches another lesson not merely survival, but steadfastness.Sometimes resilience does not roar. Sometimes resilience simply stands: calm, patient, unmoved.Perhaps this is the teaching that Aum Dungtima Ney is quietly revealing. Perhaps the unfolding Tendrel is not found in dramatic miracles alone, but in the symbols placed before our eyes waiting for us to recognize them.



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