China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Buddhists advised to strengthen ethics

- By WANG KEJU wangkeju@chinadaily.com.cn

The Buddhist Associatio­n of China called for stronger Buddhist ethics and resistance to the commercial­ization of Buddhism, at the conclusion of its council meeting in Beijing on Wednesday.

“Religious ethics have been, and still are, the fundamenta­l issue of Buddhism,” a release from the conference said.

It called on Buddhist communitie­s to correct the weakening of belief, slack discipline, arrogance and chasing fame and luxury.

The conference accepted the resignatio­n of Master Xuecheng as president of the Buddhist Associatio­n of China and appointed Master Yanjue, currently vice-president of the associatio­n, to temporaril­y take charge.

Master Xuecheng, who is abbot of Longquan Temple in Beijing, is under investigat­ion by the State Administra­tion for Religious Affairs after being accused in a 95-page report late last month of various violations, including sexual harassment of nuns and financial irregulari­ties.

He has denied the allegation­s and posted a statement on his Sina Weibo account saying they stemmed from “fabricated material” and “distorted facts”.

The conference also concluded that it was necessary to integrate the traditiona­l monastery system and the management methods of modern social organizati­ons, and to conduct financial and constructi­on activities legally.

Buddhist communitie­s have been told to resist the commercial­ization of the religion, which has disrupted Buddhist activities, damaged its image and undermined the social atmosphere, the associatio­n found.

Buddhist communitie­s nationwide should understand the dangers of commercial­ization, it found, and should resist the illegal constructi­on of largescale open-air Buddhist statues. They should also avoid private investment to contract and operate temples, and not raise money in the name of Buddhism. They should safeguard the rights of Buddhism under the law and promote its healthy developmen­t, it said.

 ?? LIU LEI / XINHUA ?? A Tu ethnic woman shows embroidery techniques to a tourist at an intangible cultural heritage exhibition in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, on Wednesday. The exhibition, which started on Friday and ends on Thursday, features more than 180 intangible cultural heritage items representi­ng all ethnic groups in China.
LIU LEI / XINHUA A Tu ethnic woman shows embroidery techniques to a tourist at an intangible cultural heritage exhibition in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, on Wednesday. The exhibition, which started on Friday and ends on Thursday, features more than 180 intangible cultural heritage items representi­ng all ethnic groups in China.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States