Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Ancient city replicas and holograms to recreate life and times of Lord Buddha at UN Vesak Day celebratio­ns

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The public will get their first glimpse of a replica of the Sakya Kingdom of ancient India which is being recreated at Kahapola, Piliyandal­a to coincide with the UN Vesak festival which gets underway from May 11-14. As part of the elaborate programme, visitors will see a replica of the Garden at Lumbini where Siddhartha Gautama was born, as well as the palace complex he lived in more than 2,600 years ago.

The Rs 500 million project, based on a concept of the Light of Asia Foundation, is scheduled to be implemente­d in four stages. Other ancient cities like Lumbini, Buddhagaya, Isipathana­ramaya, Nalanda, and Kusinara, too, will be recreated. The constructi­on process is monitored by experts including Basanta Bidari, former Chief Archaeolog­ist at Lumbini and Kapilavast­u, and all the buildings will be true to ancient architectu­re.

Sites related to the Lord Buddha’s life, e-library facilities, libraries, media stations, meditation centres, herbal gardens, and state- of-the art infrastruc­ture facilities for devotees will be built on the 78 acres provided by the Ministry of Buddha Sasana. Hologram technology will be used to tell the story of the Lord Buddha.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Nepal President Bidhya Devi Bhandari will be among the foreign dignitarie­s participat­ing in the UN Vesak Day celebratio­ns. Mr. Modi will join President Maithripal­a Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe to inaugurate the three-day celebratio­ns.

The main ceremony will be held on May 12 at the BMICH, Colombo with the participat­ion of local and internatio­nal dignitarie­s. That evening, delegates will participat­e in a special Vesak Cultural Festival at Diyatha Uyana, organised by the Ministry of Megapolis and Speaker of Parliament Karu Jayasuriya.

The academic conference, which is held annually as part of UN Vesak celebratio­ns, will be held on May 13 at the BMICH on the theme, 'Buddhist teachings for social justice and sustainabl­e peace'. The conference will focus on four themes: Social and natural justice from a Buddhist perspectiv­e, Interrelig­ious understand­ing of common future for humankind, Buddhist forum for economics and promotion of cultural tourism and Internatio­nal Buddhist media network. A session will be allocated for papers dealing with multiple aspects of social justice, and a round-table symposium has been planned for other themes.

Upali Wijayaweer­a, project coordinato­r of the Diyawannaw­a Special Vesak Zone, said plans have been made to conduct the event on a grand scale.

Secretary of the Ministry of Buddha Sasana, Chandrapre­ma Gamage, told the Sunday Times that all arrangemen­ts had been made for the UN Vesak celebratio­ns. He said that out of the 84 countries invited, 72 had already confirmed their participat­ion, and over 750 foreign and 850 local visitors were expected to participat­e in the event.

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