James Baquet 
THE next temple on my itinerary was a little closer to home. In fact, Liurong (Six Banyan Tree) Temple is the closest of the 142 to my home in Shenzhen. (Hongfa Temple had not been built when the list was made in 1983.) Founded in 537, the temple has undergone numerous name changes. The current name was bestowed by the great poet and statesman Su Dongpo who was struck by the temple’s trees on a visit during the Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127). While only a few of the eponymous trees survive, the temple itself is a leafy oasis in the middle of the province’s busy capital of Guangzhou. And holding center place is something downright “flowery”: the Hua Ta or Flower Pagoda, so-called because the ornate shape of its roof resembles the petals of a flower. Unusually for most Chinese temples, the pagoda stands in the main courtyard, directly in front of the main hall. Many Buddhist temples were originally simple compounds around a pagoda. Although the pagoda, like the temple, has been rebuilt several times, it retains this ancient position. In contrast to most Chinese Buddhist temples, which face south, Liurong Temple faces east. To the south of the main compound is a secondary compound with a hall dedicated to Huineng, the Sixth Patriarch of Chan (Zen), as well as several memorial halls and a dining hall. A much smaller courtyard north of the main hall holds a bronze Buddha from Thailand given to the temple in 1985. The same quiet courtyard holds a statue of Su Dongpo, who gave the temple its name. |