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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Travel -> 
Buddhist hells
    2016-03-07  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    TEMPLE TALES

    James Baquet

    jamesbaquet@gmail.com

    IT’S hard to visit a temple of any kind without some awareness of the phenomenon translated as hell. Many temples have incinerators in which one burns “hell money” (sometimes inscribed with Bank of Hell), as well as other goods for one’s deceased loved ones. At some temples the smoke from these offerings is thicker than that of incense.

    This phenomenon is a combination of the concept called in Sanskrit naraka and the folk Chinese diyu. The name hell is a result of cross-cultural confusion.

    As one makes decisions in life, the consequences of these actions (karma in Sanskrit) accumulate. Thus karma is not based on any judgment, but is simple cause-and-effect (though folk tradition has added the idea of judges in hell, a topic for another day).

    When someone with a negative accumulation dies, he or she is reborn in a place where the results of these actions can be worked off. This is more like the Catholic idea of purgatory than hell, because naraka is not forever: once consequences have run out and the karma is “purged,” the entity is ready to be incarnated in another realm again.

    Like the Christian hell, naraka is said to be located under the earth. Unlike it, however, the Buddhist hell is made up of thousands of separate levels, fine-tuned to ensure that the punishment fits the crime.

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