Kunming of Yunan Tour Package
Qiongzhu Temple
On the beautiful wooded Yu'an Mountain,
only twelve kilometers (seven miles) northwest of
Kunming, is the famous Buddhist
Qiongzhu Temple. The temple and the bamboo forest that surround it
have a wonderful and mysterious legend about their origins.
During the Tang Dynasty (618-907), Yunnan was a
separate country called Dali. One day, while two brothers of royal
lineage were hunting in the hills outside Kunming, they spotted a
bizarre rhinoceros. With hopes of capturing it, they followed the
rhinoceros deep into the woods of Yu'an Mountain where the magical
animal suddenly disappeared. Just as they lost sight of the
rhinoceros, the brothers saw a group of monks who were unlike any
monks they had seen before. When the monks saw the brothers, they
vanished in clouds leaving only their walking sticks planted in the
ground. By the following day, these walking sticks had become an
entire bamboo forest. The amazed brothers knew that they had met
enlightened, supernatural beings and, in order to honor them, they
built Qiongzhu Temple in the forest of bamboo.
Even though this is a marvelous story, it does not
follow the historic record. Account of the Qiongzhu Temple dates
back to the Song Dynasty, but it was during the Yuan Dynasty (around
1280) that a highly renowned monk, who was reputed to have learned
Buddhism from central China, gave his teachings that brought great
fame to the temple as a spiritual center. After a devastating fire,
the Emperor Guangxu of the Qing Dynasty rebuilt the temple by adding
five pavilions during the late 1880's. The temple's most outstanding
artistic (and perhaps spiritual) feature is the distinguished,
finely crafted statues of the 500 Luohans (Buddhist Arhats, or
'enlightened ones') sculpted by the brilliant artist, Li Guangxiu.
Regarded as 'a pearl in the treasure house of oriental
sculpture,' these life-size clay figures came from Li Guangxiu's and
his apprentices' deep study of people and their inner personalities.
After seven years of study and work, this immense undertaking was
completed. Each of these statues represents another aspect of human
life with such accuracy and skill, and look like real people who are
just frozen in a moment in time.
These Luohans, which are not ornately decorated, depict
seemingly common people in the midst of ordinary lives and feelings.
The appearances of the old and the young, the sick and the healthy,
the skilled and the unskilled, the strong and the emaciated, the
beautiful and the ugly, the wealthy and the poor, with expressions
of joy, anger, laughter, grief, amusement, satisfaction, hunger,
delight, sadness, compassion, serenity, curiosity, surprise,
boredom, and contemplation are extremely vivid. Each Luohan is
unique and expresses its own singular inner character. It is said
that if you pick a Louhan and count them to the right when you reach
your age, you will find the Louhan that depicts your inner
character. Each of the 500 Louhans is a beautiful work of art and
collectively they are awe-inspiring.
Throughout the temple are numerous inscriptions and
couplets on columns and tablets. These inscriptions date back to the
1200's and give us glimpses into the life and culture of those
times. Other notable features of the Qiongzhu Temple include: the
statues of Four Guardian Kings in the entrance hall; the three large
statues of Buddha in the main temple building and two majestic
450-year-old cypress trees that stand in the forecourt. Walking
around the grounds and through the bamboo forest, the world and its
problems fade away and the gentle beauty of life re-emerges.
Qiongzhu Temple is a restorative, peaceful and
beautiful attraction offering natural, artistic and cultural
insight. What a wonderful way to spend a few hours!
|