It is understood that the production process of human Pitangka is like this. First draw Thangka on the human body, then fix the human body on a stake, drill a small hole in the human crown, and separate the skin from the meat with a knife around the small hole. Next, inject mercury from a small mouth. Heavy metal mercury will flow to the whole body along the gap between skin and meat. At this time, the skin and meat are separated.
Since then, some people have used this method to separate human skin from meat. The man who was skinned was actually alive and tortured to death. In fact, most of the prisoners mentioned here are selected from slaves, and they have no ability to resist. Tibet is the closest place to heaven. In many people's minds, it is a pure land on earth. But why did such a cruel thing as Pitangka appear in Tibet?
At present, there are very few known Tibetan Pitangka. The reason for the small number is that although Pitangka is popular in Tibet, few monks in Tibetan history will paint on the skin according to the above method, and later generations will preserve Pitangka after the monks die. Pitanka has another source. The earliest Pitangka appeared in Bognis Temple. Later, this Pitangka was collected and exhibited as evidence of slave persecution.
In fact, even the local people in Tibet are not quite sure how Pitangka came from. Today, there will be no more peeling, no more peeling like this.
The truth about Pitanka is hard to explain. Pitangka is evidence that slaves were tortured in the past, but today it has become physical evidence that some people slander Tibetan Buddhism. No matter what kind of misinterpretation of the historical truth, we need to restore the truth, even if we don't care about the truth, we need to remain rational.