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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Travel -> 
Nanputuo Temple, Xiamen
    2013-12-23  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    James Baquet

    jamesbaquet@gmail.com

    MY next trip started in Xiamen and took me down to eastern Guangdong. On the day of my arrival, I dropped my bags in a hotel in central Xiamen and took a local bus to Nanputuo Temple, near the modern Xiamen University.

    Though it was founded in the Tang Dynasty (618-907), the temple’s name was given by a donor in the Qing (1644-1911), in 1684. Putuo Mountain is a famous island near Ningbo in Zhejiang, to the north of Xiamen. This temple was named “South Putuo” because its island location resembles that of Putuo Mountain. There is an emphasis on the bodhisattva Guanyin, who was said to inhabit the more northerly island.

    The temple hosts many exemplary Buddhist institutions. It is the site of the Minnan Buddhist Institute, which trains both monks and nuns. (“Minnan” designates the southern portion of Fujian Province; Xiamen is the most important city in this area.) I walked through the pleasant grounds of the school as I exited the temple.

    It also hosts the Taixu Library, a research and educational institution named for Master Taixu, one of the great monks of the 20th century, who was abbot at Nanputuo and dean of the Minnan Buddhist Institute in the 1920s.

    The temple has an active charity organization which sponsors a clinic, a summer camp for youth, and distribution of books and materials, as well as support for the disabled, orphans, and the aged.

    The impressive buildings are in fine condition, but my favorite area was the Wulaofeng — Five Old Men Peaks — behind the temple, with verdant pathways leading to caves, stupas, and statues.

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