WHY DO HINDU PILGRIMS GATHER AT VARANASI?
The city of Varanasi is sacred to Hindus, who form 90
per cent of India’s population. Every year, millions of
pilgrims gather on the stone steps called ghats along
the high banks of the Ganges River. Here they pray,
meditate, and purify themselves in the river’s holy
waters. The dead are cremated on funeral pyres and
their ashes are sprinkled onto the surface of the water.
1 FLOODING IN BANGLADESH
Water levels in Bangladesh rise 6 m (20 ft) above
normal during the annual monsoon rains. Flood
waters can destroy animals, crops, and homes,
and spread disease. More than 50 per cent of
Bangladeshis live in extreme poverty and the
country is too poor to invest in large-scale
flood defences, such as dams.
4 HIMALAYAN MOUNTAIN CLIMB
The Sherpa people of Nepal are skilled climbers, who act as guides and
porters for the tourists and mountaineers visiting the Himalayas.
Trekking provides a welcome boost to Nepal’s economy.
Bangladeshi
houses are raised
on stilts above
the flood plain
Stilts are handed
down from
father to son
1 GANGES RIVER, INDIA
Hindus bathe in the sacred Ganges River from one or more of the
40 ghats (stone steps) along the river in Varanasi. Hindus believe that
Varanasi is the earthly home of the god Shiva, creator of the world.
HOW ARE TREKKERS DAMAGING THE HIMALAYAS?
The large number of trekkers visiting the Himalayas
each year are damaging the fragile mountain
environment and threatening its ecology. Every year,
300,000 tourists visit Nepal to walk on the slopes of
Mount Everest and other major peaks. These visitors
erode mountain trails and often leave behind
vast quantities of rubbish.
WHY IS BANGLADESH PRONE TO FLOODING?
Large parts of central and southern Bangladesh are
flat, low-lying river plains, which flood during the
summer monsoon rains. In good years, the floods
water the crops and fertilize the fields. In bad years,
they cause devastation by surging over flood defences
and sweeping away villages, livestock, and crops.
WHICH ISOLATED COUNTRY IS RULED BY
THE DRAGON KING?
Bhutan is a small Buddhist kingdom in the Himalayas,
ruled by a monarch called the Dragon King. The
country has little contact with the outside world,
although television was introduced in 1999. Most of
the population makes a living from farming.
Southern Asia, home to over one-fifth
of the world’s population, is bordered by
the sea to the south and the Himalayan
mountains to the north. Dominated by
the Indian subcontinent, a great variety
of landscapes and climates are found
throughout southern Asia, from dry, sandy deserts in the
northwest, to tropical rainforests in the south. In the east,
three major rivers – the Brahmaputra, the Meghna, and
the Ganges – flow together towards the Bay of Bengal
where they form the world’s largest delta.
Southern Asia
southern
Asia