Sithar Dorje, the youngest known storyteller of The Epic of King Gesar, recites the saga in Beijing in September. (Photo provided to China Daily)
As the youngest known storyteller of The Epic of King Gesar, 25-year-old Sithar Dorje revels in his role as a nascent messenger for the ancient Tibetan masterpiece.
"I feel proud to transmit the heroic stories of the warriors to the audience," he said.
Sithar's interest in the King Gesar tales started early, at the age of 9, in a remote village in Tibet's eastern Qamdo prefecture. It started with a dream during a rest break at school.
In the dream, he was standing on a vast grassland covered with flowers, sheep, horses and yaks. He met two tall red-faced warriors wearing armor on horseback. They said they were ministers of King Gesar, and asked him to join them on a trip.
He was taken to a giant tent in the middle of a camp filled with soldiers and horses. In the tent, the two warriors commanded him to swallow a stack of scriptures, and authorized him to tell the King Gear stories to the human world. When he left the camp, he found he had one foot on the earth and another on a rainbow in the sky.
"I was awakened by my class teacher," he recalled. "I thought the experience was not a dream, but real."
He awoke feeling his stomach was so full that he wanted to vomit, even though he had missed breakfast that morning. Then, during a Tibetan lesson, he suddenly began to talk to himself about something his classmates did not understand.
"The self-talking lasted for two hours, and all my classmates were scared and peeping at me from outside of the window. My Tibetan teacher enjoyed my chanting," he said.
The teacher was pleased, because what came out of Sithar's mouth was the great Tibetan epic of King Gesar.
Since then, Sithar's name has spread on the grassland. He has been invited to countless weddings and parties to tell the stories, gaining ever more praise for the way he delivers the tales of heroism, magic and adventure.
"In my hometown, Tibetan people treated me like a Living Buddha (in Tibetan Buddhism)," he said.
When accounts of his storytelling prowess reached Lhasa, the capital of the Tibet autonomous region, he was recruited by Tibet University in 2010. He studied Tibetan history and language. Upon graduation in 2014, he was offered a job at the university's China Tibetology Institute.