China Daily Global Weekly

Praying for return of tourists

Buddhist pilgrimage hub in India looks for revival in visitor numbers, with China a key market

- By APARAJIT CHAKRABORT­Y The writer is a freelance journalist for China Daily.

Deep in the vast plain of northeaste­rn India, the chirping of birds and soft Buddhist chanting early in the mornings and evenings provide the perfect backdrop for meditation.

Buddhists around the world consider the temple city of Bodh Gaya in Bihar state, about 500 kilometers from Kolkata, one of the most important pilgrimage centers for the religion.

Zha Liyou, Chinese consul general to Kolkata, highlighti­ng the importance of Bodh Gaya as a major tourist destinatio­n, said that it has the potential to trigger an influx of arrivals from China.

Speaking from Kolkata, Zha noted that the Mahabodhi Temple Complex in Bodh Gaya was a major tourist destinatio­n for Chinese before the COVID-19 pandemic emerged. Many Chinese still want to visit the city, but the pandemic has stalled arrivals, Zha said.

According to the scriptures, Buddha attained enlightenm­ent 2,540 years ago in Bodh Gaya after sitting under the Bodhi Tree near the Mahabodhi temple for a week, meditating on the causes of suffering. The temple is a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Zha said that in addition to Bodh Gaya, destinatio­ns such as Nalanda, Rajgir, Vaishali and Patna, the capital of Bihar, are favorites among Chinese tourists, adding that the state is also home to numerous stupas.

These destinatio­ns not only have the potential to revive local tourism and attract Buddhist scholars from across the globe, they also offer visitors a broader perspectiv­e, Zha said.

The diplomat, who has visited Bodh Gaya three times since he took office in Kolkata in 2019, hopes that the number of Chinese tourists visiting Bodh Gaya will pick up soon.

“I look forward to an influx of visitors from China, and my office is willing to facilitate cultural exchanges to strengthen tourist flows between the two countries,” he said.

During his visits to Bodh Gaya, Zha organized cultural and religious events in collaborat­ion with Chinese communitie­s from Kolkata. He said China, which has the world’s largest Buddhist population, is historical­ly and culturally connected by the religion.

The pandemic has badly affected residents in Bodh Gaya who rely directly or indirectly on earnings from the tourism and hotel industries, as internatio­nal flights at Gaya airport have been suspended since March 2020.

Tour operators said there was no increase in tourist arrivals this year ahead of Buddha Purnima, the biggest Buddhist festival celebrated in India and Nepal, which fell on May 16.

Rakesh Kumar, president of the Bodh Gaya Tourist Guide Associatio­n, said that three years ago, the two-week festival attracted 5,000 to

8,000 domestic and internatio­nal tourists daily, but now the numbers have fallen to a few hundred each day.

Buddha Purnima, also known as Buddha Jayanti, celebrates the birth of Prince Siddharta Gautama more than 3,000 years ago — a prince who later became known as Gautama Buddha, the founder of Buddhism.

The festival has attracted Buddhists over the centuries, but the decision to celebrate it as Buddha’s birthday was taken at the first conference of the World Fellowship of Buddhists in Colombo, capital of what is now Sri Lanka, in 1950, according to Buddhist scholars. In 1999, the UN gave the festival internatio­nal recognitio­n.

Hotel owners in Bodh Gaya said they have no earnings due to the pandemic, as they mostly depend on the flow of overseas tourists, who will not return until internatio­nal flights resume.

Gaya airport, about 5 km from the city, used to handle flights from Thailand, Vietnam, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia and Sri Lanka,

but they have been halted during the pandemic.

However, domestic flights to the airport from New Delhi, Kolkata and Mumbai are now operating again.

Thailand and Myanmar have expressed an interest in resuming flights to the airport, starting in September, according to the facility’s director, Bangjeet Saha, who said three Pacific Airlines chartered flights from Vietnam carrying pilgrims and tourists landed at the airport in March.

Street vendors selling antiques, trinkets, Buddha statues and other items are also having a hard time. Salesman Ritesh Shaw said: “The roadsides in Bodh Gaya used to be packed with tourists, but now they are deserted. We hope that once domestic and internatio­nal tourists start arriving, business will begin to thrive again.”

The number of overseas pilgrims visiting Bodh Gaya fell to 406 last year, from 253,787 in 2019, due to the pandemic, according to the Bihar government’s tourism department.

Kaulesh Kumar, secretary of the Associatio­n of Buddhist Tour Operators, said there are about 200 hotels and three dozen monasterie­s in the Bodh Gaya area that can accommodat­e a total of about 40,000 tourists, but most of the hotel rooms are now empty.

Vijay Kumar, a member of the Indian parliament from Bodh Gaya, said that with assistance from the central and state government­s, many beautifica­tion efforts have been launched in and around the city.

The runway at Gaya airport will be extended, while a master plan has been designed by the Airports Authority of India to give the facility a facelift, Vijay Kumar said, adding that a proposal has been sent to the federal civil aviation minister, calling for the resumption of internatio­nal flights.

G. Kishan Reddy, the federal tourism minister, said in a written reply to the Indian parliament in December that an action plan has been devised by the tourism ministry for a coordinate­d strategy for the revival of India as a global center of Buddhist culture and tourism, with a special focus on Bodh Gaya.

Last month, Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar inaugurate­d the Mahabodhi Cultural Center in Bodh Gaya. The venue has an auditorium with a capacity of 2,000, two large conference halls, a dining hall that can seat 800, an art gallery and an audiovisua­l room that meets internatio­nal standards.

Bodh Gaya is also home to many stunning Buddhist monasterie­s and pagodas run by foreign nationals and overseas organizati­ons.

The Bodh Gaya Temple Management Committee closed the venue to visitors from March to September 2020 and again from April to August last year to prevent a rise in COVID-19 cases. A complete lockdown was imposed, with hotels and monasterie­s closing their doors to visitors as Bihar witnessed a surge in infections.

Harpreet Kaur, senior police superinten­dent, said the authoritie­s in Bodh Gaya have now lifted all restrictio­ns, and no cases of COVID-19 have been reported in the city since January. “We are keeping a close watch, and security arrangemen­ts were strengthen­ed ahead of the Buddha Purnima festival,” Kaur said.

According to a census in 2011, there were 8.5 million followers of Buddhism in India, while a census taken last year put the figure at about 10 million. The states of Maharashtr­a, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal, along with those in the northeast of the country, have large Buddhist population­s, according to the 2021 census.

Buddha Purnima, which is a public holiday in India, was celebrated this year in many places where COVID-19 restrictio­ns had been lifted.

The festival was marked enthusiast­ically at popular pilgrimage sites in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. Buddhists performed prayers, sermons and scripture recitals at these sites and also distribute­d food and clothing to the destitute.

The celebratio­ns in Bodh Gaya started with a procession from the city’s 24-meter-high Buddha statue to the Bodhi Tree behind the temple. Hundreds of monks, devotees — including members of the Internatio­nal Buddhist Council — and the public took part in the procession.

The temple premises and adjoining area were adorned with colorful bunting, flowers and other decorative items. The festival was also celebrated in the evening with a procession from the temple.

“Special prayers and recitation­s of sacred scriptures for world peace were organized under the Bodhi Tree,” a member of the Bodh Gaya Temple Management Committee said.

As in the previous two years, there were no Chinese tourists in Bodh Gaya, as direct flights between India and China have been halted due to the pandemic, the committee member said.

N. Dorjee, the committee’s secretary, said that before the pandemic emerged, hundreds of monks and devotees from China, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Vietnam, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos and Malaysia used to attend the festival every year.

This year, the festival was celebrated in several areas of New Delhi, the Indian capital. The city’s Karuna Buddha Vihar temple began the day with prayers, later released birds and fish in the Yamuna river, and also organized cultural events to mark the event.

 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED BY BODH GAYA TEMPLE MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE ?? Monks pray under the Mahabodhi Tree, behind the Mahabodhi Temple, in Bodh Gaya, India.
PHOTOS PROVIDED BY BODH GAYA TEMPLE MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE Monks pray under the Mahabodhi Tree, behind the Mahabodhi Temple, in Bodh Gaya, India.
 ?? ?? The Mahabodhi Temple in Bodh Gaya.
The Mahabodhi Temple in Bodh Gaya.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States