VietNamNet Bridge – Japanese Superior Buddhist monk Sagawa Fumon, head of the Todaiji temple, and 34 representatives presented a bronze statue of the 11-faced Avalositesvara Bodhisattva to Da Nang’s Quan The Am (Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva) Pagoda yesterday, Oct 30.


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Hundreds of Buddhists from Da Nang join prayer at the buddha statue donation ceremony.

 

 

The bronze sculpture, a copy of the original in Japan, was created by Japanese Mizushima Iwane – a sculptor from Todaiji temple. It is 88cm high and weighs 33kg.

A prayer was also organised by the Japanese and Vietnamese Monks at the Quan The Am Pagoda during the donation ceremony.

The visit marked the 1,300th anniversary of Buddhist exchanges between Viet Nam and Japan, as well as the close relationship between the two pagodas in Da Nang and Kansai, Japan.

Many pilgrimages have been exchanged by Buddhists from the Kansai region’s Todaiji temple and the Da Nang-based pagoda since 2010.

Todaiji temple, or Great Eastern Temple, is one of Japan’s most famous and historically significant temples and a landmark in the Kansai city of Nara.

The statue was brought to Japan’s Todaiji temple by Indian Buddhist scholar and monk Bodhisena (704-760 AD)

The presentation of the bronze Buddha statue is among a series of cultural exchanges between the two pagodas and the people of Da Nang and Japan.

The city’s People’s Committee has allocated an area of 1.2ha in Ngu Hanh Son District for construction of the Viet Nam-Japan Cultural Friendship Centre in Da Nang, where cultural performances, fashion shows and bonsai exhibitions will be held. A Japanese language training centre will also operate there.

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Japanese Buddhist monks present a bronze statue of the 11-faced Avalositesvara Bodhisattva to Da Nang’s Quan The Am Pagoda during a visit yesterday. — VNS Photos Cong Thanh

 

 

 

The city has completed a Japanese-English website called "Happy Da Nang" aimed at boosting Japanese tourism in central Viet Nam.

The number of Japanese tourists visiting Da Nang has rapidly increased: 66,000 Japanese visited the city in 2015, doubling the 2014 figure.

A direct flight route is planned to connect Da Nang and Osaka, in Kansai, from next year with four flights per week.

In 2014, the national flag carrier Vietnam Airlines officially launched the first direct flight connecting Tokyo and Da Nang with seven direct flights per week.

        
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