James Baquet jamesbaquet@gmail.com GETTING from Shijiazhuang to Qingdao proved to be more difficult than I had imagined. I was forced to lay over one night in Beijing, forfeiting the room I had booked in Qingdao. Instead of a leisurely night in that beautiful seaside town, I arrived by train around 12:30 p.m., and had a four o’clock flight back to Shenzhen! This allowed only a one-hour visit to the temple, followed by a frantic ride to the airport. Zhanshan Temple was built by the 20th-century monk Tanxu (who, coincidentally, had also built the first temple I visited on this trip, in Harbin). It now stands in Zhongshan Park overlooking the Yellow Sea sailing venue of the 2008 Olympics. I was a little bit startled when, walking up to the temple’s gate, I passed a pond with a statue of Guanyin, the Bodhisattva of Compassion, and a most unusual attraction — a shooting gallery! This seemed to be an attempt to capitalize on the foot traffic coming to the temple. Inside, however, was another world. Beautiful, wide courtyards with tall pines and other trees surrounded the Chinese-style halls of the temple, which bear silent testimony to an interesting story. Like Harbin, Qingdao was once a foreign enclave with few notable signs of Chinese culture. By building this temple (with encouragement from local authorities), Tanxu was in a way reclaiming this Chinese city for China — just as he had done with Jile Temple in Harbin. |