Hadar is a silk fabric used by Mongolian and Tibetan people as a ritual, and is a necessity in social activities.
If you go to a Tibetan area to play, many Tibetans will offer you a hatha, which is used by Tibetans to express their respect and congratulations to guests. Hada is often a long silk scarf or scarf, mostly white, blue, but also yellow and so on. In addition, there are colorful hatha, the color is blue, white, yellow, green, red. Blue indicates the blue sky, white is white clouds, green is river water, red is the space guardian god, and yellow symbolizes the earth.
Sometimes we will see colorful hada on the grassland, which looks beautiful against the white clouds of the blue sky. In the eyes of the Tibetans, the colorful hada is the most precious gift for making colorful arrows when it is offered to the Bodhisattva and close relatives. Hada does not distinguish between race, status and class among the Tibetan people. All people can use hatha.
For the Tibetan people, Hadar is a ceremonial item. Offering Hadar is a traditional ritual of the Mongolian people, and it is necessary to use Hadar for worshipping Buddha, offering sacrifices, marriage and funeral, paying New Year's greetings, and showing respect to elders and honored guests. Hada is a special silk or linen fabric, length is usually about 5 feet, the width varies, Hada is divided into three kinds: ordinary products for the cotton textiles, known as "Su Xi", less than 1 meter long; mid-range products for the general silk fabric, known as "A Xi", about 2 meters long; for political, religious, and other religious activities, the Hada is a traditional ritual of the Mongolian people. Meters long; for political and religious figures to use high-grade silk fabrics, is the highest grade of a kind, called "Lang Cui", more than 3 meters long.
So, Hada has become a unique ritual of Tibetan, Mongolian and other ethnic groups must have items. So the next time you go to the Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture to play, there are Tibetan people for you to send a pure Hadar, accept it on the yo.