James Baquet jamesbaquet@gmail.com REACHING my next temple was quite a challenge. I had only the vaguest idea where Changsha’s Lushan Temple was located. I had found Yuelu Mountain, where it was said to be. But where on the mountain was the temple? A taxi driver did his best to help me find it, but we failed (and he tried to refuse payment after driving me around for half an hour!) Finally, after I stopped lots of people and asked them questions, someone told me it was right behind Hunan University. So I wandered through the campus, asking even more people, and ended up climbing up the mountainside. Remember that Changsha in August is hot and wet. I was not prepared for this. The climb, though, was quite beautiful. It was lined with ancient tombs, pagodas and pavilions. The very names — Huang Xing Tomb and Double Nan Stele, Sui Dynasty Dagoba and Autumn Admiring Pavilion — evoked a time gone by. So when I reached the temple gate, I felt like an intrepid explorer. Later I discovered that there was in fact a road up to the temple, with a tram shuttling past the temple’s side gate. Had I only known! The modest temple compound that we see today belies the temple’s great historical importance. Founded by monk Zhu Fachong in the year 268, it was the first temple built in Hunan, and one of the oldest in China. Built and destroyed many times, most of the current buildings date only to 1985 and construction continues. Today, it hosts a large library and is home to the Hunan Buddhist Academy. Overall, it was well worth the trouble! |