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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Travel -> 
Wenshu Temple, Chengdu
    2012-05-21  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    James Baquet

    IN May of 2010, I had a chance to visit Chengdu to meet up with an old friend. This gave me a chance to see the three temples there that were on my list, plus the one at nearby Leshan.

    The first temple I visited was Wenshu Temple, where my wife and friends would meet me for lunch. The temple is located in the heart of the city, now just two subway stops from Tianfu Square (though the subway wasn’t open when we were there).

    It’s named for Manjushri Bodhisattva (in Chinese, “Wenshu Pusa”), who represents great wisdom. Built as Xinxiang Temple during the Sui Dynasty (581-618), it was restored by a great monk, named Cidu Haiyue, in 1681. When he died and was cremated, an image of Manjushri appeared in the flames, leading people to believe Cidu was a manifestation of that bodhisattva, so the temple was renamed.

    Not only is this said to be the largest and best-preserved temple in Chengdu, but it is replete with hundreds of cultural relics. Reportedly, a skull bone of the great monk Xuan Zang, who went to India in the Tang Dynasty (618-907), is housed here, though I didn’t see it. I did, however, see a long scripture written in blood from a monk’s tongue, and an image of Guanyin, the Bodhisattva of Compassion, embroidered in human hair.

    Another interesting feature of the temple is the tallest iron pagoda in China, the so-called “Peace Pagoda of a Thousand Buddhas.”

    When my wife and friends arrived, we settled down in the dining room for a fine vegetarian feast before moving on to our next destination.

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