Sunday 20 June 2021

Theravada (3) Laos, Cambodia & Thailand: Buddhist Temples, Monasteries and Buddha Images Part 6

A Collection of Temples and Statues: the Classical, the Folksy and the Quirky

Theravada Buddhism

Dharmachakra

Theravada (lit. "School of the Elders") is the oldest existing branch of Buddhism. Theravadins have preserved their version of the Buddha’s teaching in the ‘Pali Canon’ for over two millennia.

The classical Indian language of Pali is Theravada's sacred language and the canon was probably written down in the 1st century BCE in Sri Lanka from where it spread throughout South East Asia.

Monasticism is an important component of Theravada, most boys spend some time in a monastery – usually during the school holidays – learning about the monastic life, though no commitment is made before adulthood.

This post covers Laos, Cambodia and Thailand. Sri Lanka and Myanmar were featured in Theravada (1) and (2).

Laos

Laos
Laos within the former Indo-China

Buddhism seeped into the area from the 7th century onwards, firmly establishing itself in the 11th and 12th centuries as the Lao and Thai people migrated south from southern China. With Laos often split into three kingdoms or partly ruled by invaders, Theravada Buddhism became an important unifying features of Lao culture. Indigenous non-Lao ethnic minorities (some large, some only a few hundred strong) make up 30% of the population and generally follow folk religions.

The North

Luang Prabang

Luang Prabang was the capital of its own kingdom from medieval times, and the royal capital of the Kingdom of Laos after independence from France in in 1953. After a long civil war the kingdom became the Peoples’ Democratic Republic of Laos in 1975.

At 6 o’clock every morning the monks of Luang Prabang process through the streets soliciting alms for their daily food.

Begging Monks, Luang Prabang

It is, of course, a tourist attraction, and the modern world has provided more efficient ways of supporting religious institutions, but the procession remains symbolically important, both to the monks and the kneeling citizens who place donations of sticky rice into the monk’s begging bowls.

Wat Xieng Thong

Wat Xieng Thong’s Sim was built in 1560 and is the original; unlike the city’s other older temples it has never been razed by Chinese marauders nor over-enthusiastically restored. Considered a masterpiece of Lao architecture, the eves sweep almost to the ground, like a mother hen protecting her chickens. Though of great importance, the sim is modest in size; understatement is the Lao way.

The Sim, Wat Xieng Thong, Luang Prabang

Inside is the usual collection of Buddha images....

Inside the Sim, Wat Xieng Thong, Luang Prabang

… but not the most important statue. The Sitting Buddha, locked in a pavilion behind the Sim, prefers to remain in darkness and is taken out only to be washed. There is, however, a keyhole through which the Buddha can be viewed, and even photographed.

The Sitting Buddha through the keyhole, Wat Xieng Thong, Luang Prabang

The Pra Bang Buddha

But even the sitting Buddha is not the most important statue in Luang Prabang. The Pra Bang Buddha, the Palladium of Laos (the image on which the nation’s safety depends) is housed in his own pavilion outside the former royal palace. We were allowed to approach the Buddha, shoeless, hatless and camera-less, so I have no a picture but can a report that it is a standing Buddha almost a metre high with his arms stretched forward. palms outward.

The hall of the Pra Bang Buddha, Luang Prabang

See Luang Prabang (1) The Old Town (Feb 2014)

Muang Khoun

Once the royal capital of Xieng Khaung, Muang Khoun is now little more than a village 30 km south of Phonsavan, the modern provincial capital (see map above).

As the stronghold of the communist Pathet Lao (now the government) and straddling the Ho Chi Minh trail Xieng Khoun was heavily bombed; eastern Laos receiving the equivalent of one planeload of American bombs every eight minutes for eight years (1964-73). Unexploded ordinance still blights the lives of local farmers.

Wat Phi Wat

After bombs destroyed Wat Phi Wat the main Buddha image was painstakingly reassembled, though his face now has an appropriately pained expression.

The Wat Phi Wat Buddha statue, Muang Khoun

 see Phonsavan, the Plain of Jars and Unexploded Ordinance (Feb 2014)

Vientiane

Vientiane, a small, low rise, low stress city has been the capital, off and on, of all or part of Laos since 1573. The Kingdom of Vientiane became a vassal of Siam in 1779 and after a rebellion in 1827 the city was looted and razed. It was rebuilt by the French in 1899.

That Luang

The gold painted stupa of That Luang marks the centre of the city and the focal point of Lao culture. It was built in 1930, based on French explorers’ sketches of the great stupa that stood here before 1827.

That Luang, Vientiane

Wat Pha Keo

Vientiane has many temples, as befits a major city, but Wat Pha Keo, the king’s personal temple rebuilt by the French, is now a museum whose major exhibit is elsewhere.

Wat Pha Keo, Vientiane

It once housed the Pha Keo, the ‘Emerald Buddha,’ but that it was carried off to Thailand in 1799 and now resides in Wat Phra Kaew in Bangkok. It is the Palladium of Thailand, touched only by the king when he changes its robes, so there is little chance of it returning any time soon. (for more, see below and the 2015 post The Story of the Emerald Buddha.).

Wat On Teu

I should include one working temple from the capital, so I have chosen Wat On Tue, the Temple of the Heavy Buddha. Rebuilt several times since its original construction in 1560 by King Setthathirath, it is a complex of small buildings…

Wat On Teu Temple complex, Vientiane

….with a larger sim containing the eponymous image. In 1560 the nobles were summoned here to swear allegiance to King Setthathirath in front Vientiane’s largest Buddha. Two centuries later they were summoned to swear allegiance to Siam and 150 years after that they gathered here to swear allegiance to the French.

Young monk and the heavy Buddha, Wat On Teu, Vientiane

See Vientiane (1) Wats, Stupas and a Heavy Buddha (Feb 2014)

The South

Wat Phabat Phonsan

An hour from Vientiane, Wat Phabat Phonsan in the village of Dan Sa Mouc was constructed on an ancient religious site.

Wat Phabat Phonsan

Although the Buddha never visited Laos, devout Buddhists have managed to find his footprints all over the country and the Sim stands over such a footprint.

The Sim, Wat Phabat Phonsan

Physically, the Buddha was a normal man, but his footprint was, apparently, the size of bathtub. Local guide Phim said that in his grandparent’s youth there really was a ‘footprint’ of sorts, maybe a fossilised dinosaur footprint. The Lonely Planet suggests it was a depression formed by millennia of Mekong flood water.

Buddha's footprint, Wat Phabat Phonsan

Whatever the ‘footprint’ really was, the temple is redeemed by the paintings of the life of the Buddha covering the walls.

Painted interior, Wat Phabat Phonsan

Near Paksan

North of Paksan, our eye was caught by a small country temple with an outsize Naga Buddha. This popular image commemorates a time when the Buddha was meditating beneath a tree. A storm blew up and Mucalinda, the seven-headed King of the Serpents came up from the roots of the tree to shield him from the rain.

Small temple, large statue beside Route 13

See Heading South from Vientiane (Nov 2015)

Champasak

With some 100,000 inhabitants, Pakse (see map) is Laos’ third biggest city. Once capital of the Kingdom of Champasak it is now the capital of Champasak Province. Bordered by Cambodia and Thailand, the area saw many battles in medieval times and four of Champasak’s ten districts lie on the western (otherwise Thai) side of the Mekong.

One of those districts, tucked into Laos’ south-western corner includes the old town of Champasak which gave the kingdom its name, though it is now little more than a village with a line of guest houses beside the Mekong. This a rural area, every village and hamlet has its temple…

Village Temple, Champasak

The main local attraction is the UNESCO world Heritage site of Wat Phou, a 5th century Khmer Hindu temple that converted to Buddhism with the rest of the Khmer Empire in the 11th century. A single shrine remains in use but the site is largely a ruin, and though well worth a visit (or a look here!) it is not included in this post.

Cambodia

Cambodia

I have rather dwelt on Laos; Cambodia will be briefer. Buddhism, Cambodia’s official religion, is followed by 97% of the population (Pew Research Center) but temples, other than the ruins at Angkor, hardly feature on the tourist agenda.

Phnom Penh

The Cambodian capital is the other regular tourist stop – largely for the Killing Fields and Tuol Sleng Prison.

Wat Preah Keo

The Royal Palace complex provides some light relief and includes Wat Preah Keo, the Silver Pagoda. I failed to bag a decent picture, so borrowed one from Wikipedia for the Emerald Buddha post. I should attribute it more precisely but cannot as it no longer graces the page linked to.

Wat Preah Keo, The Silver Pagoda, Phnom Penh, borrowed from Wikipedia

Inside, the no-photographing policy was vigorously enforced - so another borrowed picture.

The golden Buddha, Silver Pavilion, Phnom Penh, (picture from Wikipedia)

Built in 1962, the name alludes to the 5,329 silver tiles covering the floor. Now there is a polishing job! The main treasure is a golden Buddha crafted in the royal workshops in 1906/7. Its 90Kg of gold are encrusted with 9,584 diamonds (according to Wikipedia, the Rough Guide says 2,086). There is also a crystal version of the Emerald Buddha. Cambodia has a tenuous claim to the real one, but accepts that Bangkok has it for the foreseeable future.

See Phnom Penh (1) Palaces and Museums (Feb 2014)

Phnom Penh apart, we visited the magnificent temples of the Angkor period – Angkor Wat is just the centrepiece of an extensive complex of temples – and the pre-Angkorian temples at Sambor Prei Kuk. Interesting as they were, they are all ruins and have little or no use by today’s Buddhists, so they are not really part of this post.

Thailand

Thailand

Buddhism is thought to have arrived in Thailand around 250 BCE. The Indian Emperor Ashoka the Great (ruled 268-232) sent out monks to spread Buddhism and they may well have reached Thailand.

From the start of the (still-reigning) Chakri dynasty in 1782 the king has been the Supreme Patriarch of Thai Buddhism and the religion and monarchy are deeply entangled in what it is to be Thai.

Ban Na Ton Chan, Sukhothai, Ayuthaya and Bangkok are underlined. Phitsanulok is under the 'u' of Sukhothai and Wat Pha Sorn Kaew is under the 'h'.

Siam/Thailand was never part of France’s Indo-Chinese possessions, or part of any other European empire, but the Thai people, their culture and language are closely related to the Lao and there is a similarity in their temples.

Ban Na Ton Chan – A Village Temple

Ban Na Ton Chan is a craft village in northern Thailand. We visited on the day of celebration of the end of the rainy season and everybody was out partying in the grounds of the village temple.

The Village temple, Ban Na Ton Chan

The people were extraordinarily welcoming and plied us with food…

Mushrooms and Pork in a Christmas pot, Ban Na Ton Chan

…and I found some new drinking buddies round the back of the temple.

My new drinking buddies, Ban Na Ton Chan

Phitsanulok

Once an Ankgorian provincial centre, Phitsanulok became an important city in the first Thai kingdom which established itself at Sukhothai in 1238.

Wat Phra Sri Rattana

The temple dates from 1357 the time when Phitsanulok was briefly the capital of the Kingdom of Sukhothai.

Wat Phra Sri Rattana, Phitsanulok

Its most prized possession is the Phra Phuttha Chinnarat Buddha image. According to our guide, Ake, it is solid gold (this was a gold mining area) and is 'the most beautiful Buddha in Thailand and in the whole world.' Wikipedia describes it as gold-covered, which seems more likely.

Phra Phuttha Chinnarat Buddha, Phitsanulok

Sculpted sometime between the 10th and 15th centuries, it is, after the Emerald Buddha, the country’s most revered image. Women wearing skimpy tops and short skirts may not enter its presence – though men wearing shorts are no problem. We were also instructed not to photograph the image from a standing position, but as long as we were kneeling or sitting reverently - i.e. with our feet pointing away from the image - we could snap away to our heart's content.

Phetchabun Province

To the east of Phitsanulok is the more rural and hilly Phetchabun Province.

Wat Pha Sorn Kaew - The Temple on a Glass Cliff

Very new – indeed still under construction when we visited in November 2015 – this huge temple and monastery complex set on an 800m peak on the hills of Phetchabun seems a strange mixture of bad taste and brilliance.

Thai decoration is often fussy, but here it becomes fantastical,…

Wat Pha Sorn Kaew

…the monastery is a cross between the palace of mad King Ludwig at Neuschwanstein and Sleeping Beauty’s Castle…

Monastery, Wat Pha Sorn Kaew

…but the Life of Buddha – five statues in one over a gleaming white temple is impressive, and not just for its size.

The life of the Buddha in one statue, Wat Pha Sorn Kaew

Ayutthaya

Sukhothai was in decline by the 14th century and Ayutthaya, founded in 1351, became the next Thai capital.

A city of rivers and canals with many inhabitants living on boats, Ayutthaya’s population topped a million by 1700. Its wealth attracted traders from China, Persia and the European powers, each having their own ghetto and dock exporting rice, spices, timber and hides. This golden age ended abruptly in 1767 when, after centuries of incursion and counter-incursions, the Burmese finally sacked Ayutthaya, leaving it a ruin.

Bang Pa-In

The city has never recovered its pre-eminence, but it is left with many temples, most of the best in ruins and inappropriate for this post. Nearby Bang Pa-In is a royal retreat that was temporarily abandoned with the fall of Ayutthaya.

In 1782 a new Thai Kingdom emerged with its capital at Bangkok. Phra Phutthayotfa Chulalok founded the Chakri dynasty and styled himself Rama I (the current monarch is Rama X).

Bang Pa-In regained its status as royal retreat in the mid-19th century when steam-powered boats put it within easy reach of Bangkok. It was favoured by King Mongkut (Rama IV) and his son King Chulalongkorn (Rama V) who was responsible for most of the building. Kong Mongkut hired the recently widowed Anna Leonowens to be governess for his many children, an event mythologised and romanticised in the King and I. King Chulalongkorn was her protégé and thus an admirer of most things western.

He particularly liked western religious architecture…

Buddhist Temple (yes, really) Pa-In

….but his enthusiasm did not extend to western religion itself. The ‘church’ in the photo above is actually a Buddhist temple. Inside there is even a triptych altar-piece, though there is no altar and the triptych’s iconography is purely Buddhist.

Inside the Buddhist Temple, Pa-In

Bangkok

For the biggest and the best of Thai temples, the capital is the obvious place to go.

Wat Pho

Wat Pho, in the heart of the old royal centre, was constructed in the 1790s on the site of an earlier temple. Within the walls are a monastery, one of the oldest schools of Thai massage, and a huge temple.

There is a central shrine...

Central Shrine, Wat Pho, Bangkok

...and four other main halls….

Wat Pho, Bangkok

…numerous courtyards…

Courtyard full of Buddhas, Wat Pho, Bangkok

….more Buddha images than you can count….

Assorted Buddhas, Wat Pho, Bangkok

….and 92 stupas. The small ones containing the ashes of members of the royal family…

Small Stupas, Wat Pho, Bangkok

… while the large ones hold ashes of the Buddha himself (allegedly).

Large Stupa, Wat Pho, Bangkok

Wat Pho’s main attraction is its Reclining Buddha. At 46m long and 15m high it is not the largest we have seen, (that is the Chaukhtatgyi Buddha in Yangon) but it is undoubtedly the most beautiful…

Reclining Buddha, Wat Pho, Bangkok

….with the most serene face.

Head of the Reclining Buddha, Wat Pho, Bangkok

And on the feet, as always, the 108 attributes of the Buddha.

The 108 attributes on the sole of Buddha's foot, Reclining Buddha, Wat Pho, Bangkok

Wat Phra Kaew

Next to Wat Pho is the Grand Palace, no longer the residence of the royal family, but used for ceremonial purposes. King Rama I started building Wat Phra Kaew next to the palace in 1782 and in 1784 installed the Emerald Buddha which he had carried off after sacking Vientiane in 1779.

Wat Phra Kaew, Bangkok

Only 50 cm tall and carved from jade (‘emerald’ refers to its colour) The Emerald Buddha is the palladium of Thailand and probably the most important Buddha image in south east Asia. It is touched only by the King when he changes its robes three times a year. With a long and complicated history, the earlier parts shrouded in myth, the statue has its own post: The Story of the Emerald Buddha. Wat Preah Keo in Phnom Penh has a space should it ever return to Cambodia and it is the most important, though absent, exhibit in the temple/museum of Wat Pha Keo in Vientiane. There is, though, little chance of it leaving Bangkok in the foreseeable future.

The Emerald Buddha, Wat Phra Kaew. Bangkok

Buddhist Temples, Monasteries and Buddha Images

Part 1: Introduction
Part 2: Mahayana Buddhism
Part 3: Tibetan Buddhism
Part 4: Theravada (1) Sri Lanka
Part 5: Theravada (2) Myanmar
Part 6: Theravada (3) Laos, Cambodia & Thailand

Monday 14 June 2021

Theravada (2) Myanmar: Buddhist Temples, Monasteries and Buddha Images Part 5

The World's Most Devout Buddhist Country

Theravada Buddhism and the Pali Canon

Dharmachakra

Theravada (lit. "School of the Elders") is the oldest existing branch of Buddhism. For more than two millennia, Theravadins have preserved their version of the Buddha’s teaching in the classical Indian language of Pali.

The first Buddhist Council, held some 30 years after the death of Gautama Buddha (he died in either 483 or 400 BCE) adopted the oral testimony of two of his leading disciples to be the guiding scriptures of what would become the Theravada tradition. This testimony became known as the Pali Canon and is traditionally described as the ‘Word of the Buddha’. For centuries it was preserved orally by Bhāṇakas (Pali: reciters), monks who specialised in the memorisation and recitation of a specific collection of texts.

During the 4th Buddhist Council in Sri Lanka around 29 BCE, the decision was taken to make a written version of the canon. For centuries the bhānaka tradition existed alongside the written word and there are still monks who memorise vast chunks of the scripture.

The internet does not know, or will not tell me, how many words the canon runs to (in any language) but published versions generally fill around 50 volumes - so not holiday reading, then.

Pali and the Pali Canon in Myanmar

Pali historical chronicles record that the Indian Emperor Ashoka the Great (ruled 268-232 BCE) sent monks to the area of modern Myanmar to spread Buddhism. How successful they were is not recorded, but there are no known local inscriptions until 500 years later. However it came about, by the 5th century, Theravada Buddhism was undoubtedly the dominant religion in the Pyu kingdoms of central Myanmar and the Mon kingdoms of the south.

Mayazedi Stone

The importance of Pali is shown by the Mayazedi Stone outside one of Bagan’s many hundreds of temples.

The Mayazedi Stone, Myinkaba

Inscribed in 1113, the four sides of the stone tell the same story in four different languages: Burmese remains the local tongue, Mon is still spoken by a million people in Mon State to the south, Pyu, once the language of central Myanmar is extinct but was deciphered from this stone and Pali, by then a liturgical language and no longer spoken, was as well-known as Greek or Latin in medieval Europe.



Kuthodaw Pagoda and the World's Biggest Book

Just outside the royal palace complex in Mandalay is the Kuthodaw Paya. Built on the orders of King Mindon and completed in 1868, it consists of a gilded stupa…

Gilded Stupa, Kuthodaw Paya, Mandalay

… surrounded by 729 ‘stone-inscription caves.’

Among the 'inscription caves', Kuthodaw Paya, Mandalay

Each ‘cave’ contains a marble slab inscribed with a section of the Pali Canon.

Inscribed stone, Kuthodaw Paya, Mandalay

It claims, with some justification, to be the world’s largest book.



Monasticism

Monasticism is an important component of Theravada. Most boys in Myanmar spend some time in a monastery – usually during the school holidays – learning about the monastic life, though no commitment is made before adulthood.

Myanmar’s 500,000 monks make up almost 1% of the population, the highest proportion of any Buddhist country.

We spent half an hour with the abbot of Moe Goak Monastery near Yangon (See Across the Yangon River to Dala 2012). His monks had taken on the responsibility of housing and educating children orphaned by Cyclone Nargis which killed 140,000 people in the Irrawaddy Delta in 2008. An impressive man, he combined gentleness with a clear understanding of the situation and obvious determination.

Morning break in the schoolroom, Moe Goak Monastery, Dala Township, Yangon

Elsewhere we saw monks guiding youngsters through the elements of Buddhism, but we also visited monasteries where monks’ duties seemed to involve swinging in hammocks and fanning themselves. The quantity of monks is great, the quality appears variable.

Temples in Myanmar

Our 2012 tour of Myanmar had four main stops Yangon, Bagan, Mandalay and Lake Inle. We started and finished in Yangon, but for current purposes it is best to start at Bagan and work up to Yangon’s magnificent Shwedagon Pagoda.

The positions of Yangon, Bagan, Mandalay and Lake Inle within Myanmar
Borrowed from Nations Online Project

Bagan

500km north of Yangon, Bagan was the capital of the Empire of Pagan. Starting modestly in the 9th century the Empire grew to encompass most of modern Myanmar before its decline in the 13th century.

At the Empire’s zenith anybody who was anybody built a monastery, temple, or at least a stupa. Over 2,000 remain, but there may once have been as many as 10,000, suggesting that on average one was started every week for 200 years.

After an early morning flight from Yangon, most visitors are taken straight to the Dhammayaziki Pagoda for an overview. Yangon had been hot but Bagan, our Yangon guide warned us, would be hotter still and we should beware the strong sun. We arrived in a temperature of barely 20º, with drizzle hanging in the air and low-level mist. We put off visiting Dhammayaziki for 24 hours, by which time we knew what to expect. For a new arrival the view must be stunning, for us it was merely breath-taking.

Bagan Plain from the Dhammayaziki Pagoda

The temples are mostly small and no longer in use, so although we visited many the only one relevant to this post, is..

The Shwezigon Pagoda

Dating from 1102 in the reign of King Kyansittha, Shwezigon is an active temple complex with golden stupas....

Golden stupa, Shwezigon Pagoda, Bagan

...acres of tiled flooring - lethally slippery in the drizzle -

Shwezigon Pagoda, Bagan

...and all the usual statues and storytelling paintings of a Buddhist temple.

Scenes from the life of Buddha, Shwezigon Pagoda, Bagan

There are also statues of the Great Nats.

The Nats embody the spirits of places, or of people who died tragically long ago. Nat worship, the local pre-Buddhist religion, has been incorporated into Burmese Buddhism just as the Sri Lankans co-opted some Hindu Gods. When King Anawrahta introduced Buddhism in the 11th century there were 36 Nats, but destroying their temples and banning animal sacrifices created fierce opposition so he added a 37th. Thagyamin was a Hindu deity cognate with Indra, who had paid homage to the Buddha and by declaring Thagyamin ‘King of the Nats’ he effectively subordinated the Nats to Buddha. Some senior Buddhists would like to see Nat worship downgraded if not abandoned, and Tin (our local guide) was distinctly sniffy ('good luck mascots for the uneducated') but they remain important to many ordinary people.

Two of the Great Nats, Shwezigon Pagoda, Bagan


The Tharabar Gate and the Great Nats

Old Bagan’s city wall was built between the 10th and 12th centuries. Only a few hundred metres remain, the longest existing stretch being either side of the Tharabar Gate.

Tharabar Gate, Old Bagan

Wandering out from our nearby hotel, we saw an elderly lady bringing flowers for the gate’s guardian Nats.

Lord Handsome sits in a niche on one side, his sister Lady Golden Face on the other. A rival of Lord Handsome suggested reconciliation and offered marriage to Lady Golden Face, but his true motive was to lure Lord Handsome to the wedding party. There, he captured him and burnt him at the stake. Lady Golden Face jumped into the fire and only her face survived the all-consuming flames. A tragedy, certainly, but is this an appropriate qualification for being gate guardians?

Lord Handsome (modelled on Mr Bean?) in his niche by the Tharabar Gate, Old Bagan


Mandalay

Gold leaf production and temples constructed of teak are Mandalay’s specialities.

The Mahamuni Buddha

The Mahamuni Buddha is believed by some to be over 2000 years old and to be one of the five images made during the Buddha’s lifetime. He breathed on it and it instantly became a perfect likeness. It arrived in Mandalay in 1784, carted off from the Bay of Bengal as war booty (and that, at least, seems believable).

The Mahamuni Buddha, Mandalay

Those wishing to venerate the statue can enter railed off enclosures, monks at the front, men behind and women, including nuns, at the back.

Venerating the Mahamuni Buddha, Mandalay

Men may also place gold leaf on the image (though not, of course, the face as that is a perfect likeness). Non-Buddhist men may join the gilders, though all women are strictly forbidden.

With the devotees gilding the Mahamuni Buddha - and their fingers, Mandalay

Gold Leaf Production

Earlier we had visited a gold leaf producer. I am unsure what I expected to see, maybe rollers and steam hammers, but what I had not expected was two slight young men with seriously overdeveloped biceps flattening ingots with 15lb hammers. (Despite being independent since 1948, and cutting off all contact with the former colonial power, Myanmar still clings to imperial weights and measures.)

Pounding the gold leaf, King Galon workshop, Mandalay

Shwenandaw Kyaung

Shwenandaw Kyaung, near the old palace complex at the foot of Mandalay hill, is maybe the finest of the teak temples.

Originally part of the royal apartments inside the wall, it was dismantled and re-erected outside in 1878 by King Thibaw, the last King of Burma. His predecessor, King Mindon, had died in this building and his ghost was creating problems. It became a monastery in 1880.

Shwenandaw Kyaung, Mandalay

But for the move it would have been destroyed when the British ousted the Japanese in 1945.



Lake Inle and Around

Roads in Myanmar are usually in good repair, but there are not many of them, so we flew the 150km from Mandalay to Heho, gateway to Lake Inle. Before visiting the lake, we drove 30km north to the small town of Pindaya.

The Golden Cave of Pindaya

These posts are headed ‘Buddhist Temples, Monasteries and Buddha Images’. I have rather neglected the third of these – until now.

Many years ago, an evil Nat in the shape of a spider captured seven princesses and imprisoned them in a cave. Fortunately, a gallant prince heard their cries and came to their rescue, killing the spider with an arrow. ‘Pinguya,’ he shouted (‘I have taken the spider’) and the event is commemorated with this Disneyesque artwork.

Pinguya

Over the years ‘Pinguya’ became Pindaya and the cave became ‘The Golden Cave’ and a place of pilgrimage. Since 1773, maybe earlier, pilgrims have been leaving Buddha images in the cave. The count when we visited in 2012 was 8,054. Doubtless there are now more.

Inside the Golden Cave, Pindaya

We had been expecting a cave full of Buddhas, but that did not stop an involuntary gasp when we actually saw it. The cave extends over 150m into the hillside and along the paths, up the walls and in every recess and on every ledge there is a Buddha image.

The Golden Cave, Pindaya

Some are large, some small, some are old, some new. Many bear a plaque with the donor’s name and the date of donation. Most plaques are written in Burmese, but not all, we found one image donated by a family from Burnley.

The Golden Cave, Pindaya

My knowledge of Buddhism is not great and I am unconvinced this is what the Buddha himself would have wanted; but it makes an impressive sight and even this old sceptic found the devotion involved surprisingly moving.

The Golden Cave, Pindaya


Phaung Daw Oo Temple, Lake Inle

Sitting beside Lake Inle…

Phaung Daw Oo Temple, Lake Inle

… Phaung Daw Oo Temple is most easily approached by boat.

Outside Phaung Daw Oo Temple, Lake Inle

Although not an old building, it houses five Buddha statues brought to Lake Inle by King Alaungsithu of Bagan in the 12th century. Victims of the 'gold leafers', they are no longer identifiable as Buddhas.

Applying gold leaf to the Buddha images, Phaung Daw Oo Temple, Lake Inle

Phaung Daw Oo mean Principle Royal Barge and the barge in question sits, like a huge gilded bath duck, in an adjacent dock. As part of a major festival every September/October four of the Buddhas are loaded onto the barge and rowed round the lake.

Principle Royal Barge, Phaung Daw Oo Temple, Lake Inle

In the 1960s the barge capsized in bad weather. Fortunately, the lake is shallow and three were soon recovered, but the fourth was thought lost. Miraculously it returned itself to the temple and was found one morning with its companions, wet and covered with lake weed.

Memorial where the barge capsized, Lake Inle


Yangon

The Shwe Sayan Pagoda, Dala

As the nation’s biggest city and former capital Yangon has the best temples, but one of my favourites is in the semi-rural township of Dala just across the Yangon River.

The pagoda is a place of bright colours, greens, blues and, of course, gold (some gold leaf but more gold paint), a place of stupas, spires and shrines, where organic forms loom or writhe over geometric shapes.

The entrance to Shwe Sayan Pagoda, Dala Township, Yangon

Bathed in brilliant light, it feels like a fantasy land, but a fantasy founded in faith and sincerity, not some slick commercial Disneyland.

Shwe Sayan Pagoda, Dala Township, Yangon

The prize exhibit is a monk who died 150 years ago. He clearly attained Nirvana as his body has not decayed, though we must take that on trust as he is encased in gold leaf. In the early 2000s he opened an eye to warn of a coming cyclone. Call me a cynic if you must, but the photographic evidence displayed beside the gold-swathed corpse was not wholly convincing.

The gold covered corpse, Shwe Sayan Pagoda, Dala Township, Yangon


Kandawgyi Lake and Chaukhtatgyi Reclining Buddha

In Yangon itself I would not want to overlook the small temple on the walkway beside Kandawgyi Lake….

Small temple by Kandawgyi Lake, Yangon

….and the much more important Chaukhtatgyi Temple with its 100m long reclining Buddha – twice the length of the famous Wat Pho reclining Buddha in Bangkok (see Bangkok (1) The Old Royal Centre. 2012)

Chaukhtatgyi Reclining Buddha, Yangon

But size is not everything, even in giant reclining Buddhas. While Bangkok’s Buddha has grace and elegance, Yangon’s looks stiff and awkward. The face of the Wat Pho Buddha is serene, while Chaukhtatgyi’s looks petulant – even if you can forgive the Lilly Savage eyelashes.

Chaukhtatgyi Reclining Buddha, Yangon

Shwedagon Pagoda, Yangon

A fitting climax to this post, the great golden stupa of the Shwedagon Pagoda is visible from all over Yangon. Perched on a low hill, it is 100m high, and is believed to enshrine a hair of the Buddha and be 2500 years old. Archaeology suggests the first stupa on this site was actually built between the 6th and 10th century AD and that the earliest parts of the present structure date from 1769.

Covered walkways climb the hill in a series of gentle staircases from each quarter of the compass, but we drove to the base and used the lift.

Stepping out onto the marble flagged promenade surrounding the central stupa we both halted, blinked and looked again. The stupa is encircled by a ring of smaller gold spires interspersed with statues of the Buddha and of spirits and animals real and mythical. Lining the promenade’s outer edge are chapels, meeting rooms and halls housing huge bronze bells set among yet more golden spires. Gold can look garish and ostentatious but we found ourselves staring at a scene of great delicacy, sublime harmony and outstanding beauty.

The Shwedagon Pagoda, Yangon

Despite the crowd - tourists, monks and local citizens going about their devotions - there was an atmosphere of calm, even serenity. Lynne uses words like ‘spiritual’ which I find problematic so I will merely say it felt like an enchanted place. Whether people have come to pray, meditate......

Praying at the Shwedagon Pagoda, Yagon

... or merely to walk round, all seemed to feel the power of this special place.

Walking round the Shwedagon Pagoda, Yangon

Each day of the week is represented by an animal, and their statues can be found at 45º intervals around the stupa (eight statues because Buddha achieved enlightenment on a Wednesday so it has two animals, one for the morning, one for the afternoon). To make merit and concentrate the mind it is wise to honour the statue representing the day of your birth, so I poured water three times over the Buddha, three times over his supporter and three times over the dragon as I was born on a Saturday.

Tending to my dragon, Shwedagon Pagoda, Yangon

Lynne, being a Wednesday afternoon baby, attended to her tuskless elephant.

Lynne with her tuskless elephant, Shwedagon Pagoda, Yangon

Before we had completed our circuit, night began to fall. As the light faded the gold glowed almost crimson and then, as the floodlights were turned up, a rich orange as magic seemed to float in the warm night air. There is no twilight in tropical latitudes and in fifteen minutes the sky had turned from cerulean blue to inky blackness. A large diamond is set in the stupa’s crown, and if you stand in just the right place, the floodlighting makes it twinkle like a star. By small changes of position, you can see it sparkling red or green or any other colour of the rainbow.

The light starts to fade

A group of devotees in one of the assembly halls started chanting. We stayed to listen as the crowd started to drift away. When they had finished, we too went, slowly descending one of the walkways into the embrace of the secular world outside, still a little dazed and awestruck by the whole experience.

And 15 minutes later it is dark, Shwedagon Pagoda, Yangon

So, this look at Burmese Buddhism ends with the remarkable Shwedagon Pagoda. Lynne can use words like spiritual; I avoid it, but end up with ‘enchanted’ and ‘magic’. I do not believe in magic either, it’s just a metaphor for….well, something I lack the vocabulary to describe. And that’s a cop out.

At the start I called Myanmar the world’s most devout Buddhist country. They spend a higher proportion of their income on their religion than anyone else and have more monks per head of population. Myanmar’s Buddhism is not perfect, but it remains a consolation for many as the country slides back into military dictatorship.

Buddhist Temples, Monasteries and Buddha Images

Part 1: Introduction
Part 2: Mahayana Buddhism
Part 3: Tibetan Buddhism
Part 4: Theravada (1) Sri Lanka
Part 5: Theravada (2) Myanmar
Part 6: Theravada (3) Laos, Cambodia & Thailand