Showing posts with label temple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label temple. Show all posts

Saturday, February 27, 2010

An Informal Temple Stay, Naesosa Part 4


Love the way the ancient pine tree frames the main temple of Naesosa  ( Dae-Ungbojeon ).
What's distinctive about this building is that it was originally built without a single nail.

I love informal temple stays - first of all, most of the temples are usually situated away from the noise and pollution of cities and well-preserved in well-maintained national or provincial parks.  I can stay on the temple grounds, partake of healthy vegetarian meals, soak in the peaceful atmosphere of the temple as well as the wider surroundings which are usually pristine pieces of nature without having to follow a regimented schedule of marathon meditation sessions. Of course, I'm obliged to wake up before dawn to pay my respects to Buddha but I don't mind because it forces me to sleep earlier.

Fine  example of wooden carvings of lotus and chrysanthemum flowers on the flower Salmun ( doors).There are eight such doors on the front facade of the Dae-ung-bojeon.

Another plus of staying in the temple is that one can admire  the craftsmanship of temple architecture at a leisurely pace - something one can't do if one were to join a tour group or visit the temple as a rushed day trip. Moreover, you can admire the beauty of the temple surroundings in its different moods throughout the day - what's it like in the darkness before dawn? How does it look under the mid-day sun? Does it have the same atmosphere at twilight?


Die-hards of course may elect to stay longer to witness the changing of the seasons. In spring, Naesosa may not have that  many cherry trees but the ones that I saw were very pretty indeed. Perhaps they were even more attractive because there weren't too many of them on the temple grounds.


If you prefer to visit in autumn, the maple trees on this avenue leading to the temple are a charming sight as well. Winter is another evocative season when the snow-clad temple looks like the perfect setting for  inspiring Zen poems.



Another thing I like to check out in the temples in Korea is the water. There's something primeval whenever one sits around a bonfire and there's a similar feeling each time I quench my thirst with the spring waters of each temple. To drink, see and hear the cool waters trickling down the stone basins is a simple soothing pleasure one can never tire of during temple stays.


Was mentally rubbing my hands in glee when I first saw the sizeable pavilion housing the Dharma musical instruments as I thought I had the chance to listen to the monks doing their fabulous thing on the drums. But I was disappointed to find a watered-down version in Naesosa - not the same magical sounds that I'd heard in Baekdam-sa or Gap-sa or even Songgwang-sa. Maybe my timing was off for that night. I've found that different temples seem to have different approaches to the Dharma instruments.


The bronze bell, in Beomjonggakwas made during the Goryeo period. Three images of Buddha, called Samjonsang are engraved on it.

The original name of Naeso-sa was Sorae -sa , meaning "a place which one revisits to be reborn". It was enough for me to be rejuvenated during my brief temple sojourn. Check  into a temple without being in a group and even if ( or perhaps because ) you may not spend too much chatting with others, the peace and solitude may prove to be the perfect antidote to the stresses of city life. Try it and discover it for yourself.

sources:


Monday, January 11, 2010

Isn't She Lovely?



If one could ascribe gender to temples, I'd call Geumsan-sa, a 'she'. There's something particularly feminine about her graceful curves and she does look particularly fetching dressed in the snowy-white mantle of winter, doesn't she?

On a more serious note, this temple is one of Korea's most important Buddhist temples. Believed to have been founded in 599 A.D. It developed into an important monastery in the 8th century and sadly like many other temples during the Japanese invasion in the 16th century, was razed to the ground and subsequently reconstructed in 1635. The Mireukjeon Hall, National Treasure No. 62, is the "only remaining three-storey traditional structure in Korea".

It's also probably one of the few buildings which has special names for each level. Daejabojeon (Hall of Great Mercy and Treasure) is situated on the first floor while the second floor is Yonghwajihoe (Gathering of Dragon and Beauty), and the third floor is called Mireuk-jeon (Hall of Maitreya). Pay attention as well to the supporting columns which get more and more slender, the higher they are.

A short drive from Jeonju, Geumsan-sa is also easily accessible by bus. For more information, click here.

source:
http://english.visitkorea.or.kr/enu/SI/SI_EN_3_6.jsp?cid=262538
http://www.orientalarchitecture.com/koreasouth/ruralchungbuk/geumsansa_gallery.php?p=geumsansa02.jpg

Thursday, November 5, 2009

The Great Stone Lantern of Hwaeomsa



Hwaeomsa in Jirisan National Park supposedly has the highest stone lantern of its kind in the world. Standing at 6.4m, it was the largest stone lantern of its kind ( before the 1960s). It's National Treasure No. 12. Most stone lanterns have an octogonal-shaped  column but this one is fashioned after an hour-glass, a popular style during the Shilla Dynasty.


Stone lanterns have a symbolic function - representing the path to enlightenment but they may have also been used in earlier days to provide some light to monks making their way in the pre-dawn darkness to the main hall, Gakhwangjeon,  for early chanting sessions. I'd like to think they still place a candle within it on special days at least instead of simply using electricity. The temple grounds here apparently are a sight to behold when they celebrate Buddha's birthday with a lantern festival.



Ironically, I picked a bad time to be virtuous and to watch how I spent my won when I went to the gift shop at Hwaeomsa. Shouldn't have curbed the inclination to splurge on a pretty gold-plated book mark shaped after the famous stone lantern here.

Sources:

http://www.ocp.go.kr:9000/ne_dasencgi/full.cgi?v_kw_str=&v_db_query=A4%3A36&v_db=2&v_doc_no=00000012&v_dblist=2&v_start_num=1&v_disp_type=4
http://www.visitkorea.or.kr/enu/SI/SI_EN_3_1_1_1.jsp?cid=264128
http://www.san-shin.net/Jiri-Hwaeom-1.html
http://www.heritage.go.kr/eng/tou/tou_the_11_sce.jsp