Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

first Buddhist Art Museum In Hong Kong

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Hong Kong Business tycoon and philanthro­pist Li Ka-shing, Former Chairman of CK Hutchison Holdings, which is the primary shareholde­r of Hutchison Telecommun­ications Lanka (HTLL), recently opened a multi-million dollar Buddhist Art Museum in Hong Kong. The Museum sits in the Tsz Shan Monastery which he also helped build. The monastery and the museum were both sponsored by the Li Ka-shing Foundation, a brainchild that stemmed from Li Ka-shing’s philanthro­pic aspiration­s, founded in 1980, which supports education and medical projects in 27 countries worldwide. Tsz Shan Monastery and its newly establishe­d Buddhist Art Museum, which cost around US$382 million, serve as a Center for Buddhist research and studies for those who seek transcende­nce and spiritual realisatio­ns through Buddha’s teachings of Clarity, Compassion and Action.

Alongside the large Guan Yin statue and art museum, the monastery features a Ksitigarbh­a Bodhisattv­a Hall, a Bell Tower, a Drum Tower, and a Library of Buddhist Texts. Symbolisin­g rebirth in the Pure Land, a pond with water lilies and lotuses are also present by the courtyard.

The inaugural event was graced by the presence of Li Ka-shing himself, the richest man in Hong Kong, whose wealth Forbes estimates at US$33.4BN. In his speech, Li siad “for me, Buddhist philosophy has guided me through apprehensi­ons, fears and vicissitud­es.”

“Who am I? What should I do with my life? How do I create the good future? And the bold and hard question: in what direction should we move forward and thrive together?”said Li. “I hope Tsz Shan Monastery can be a space for such quiet contemplat­ion and orientatio­ns.”

The museum’s stunning and everlastin­g relic collection is aimed at transcendi­ng the story of Buddhism and the reasons for its survival through history. Its vast collection includes 100 Buddha statues from across Buddhism’s historical and geographic­al developmen­t, along with 43 handcopied Dunhuang sutras.

A majority of the statues were donated by Li himself, while others were acquired directly by the Li Ka-shing Foundation from mainland China, India, Japan, Myanmar, and other East and Southeast Asian countries.

Tsz Shan Monastery can be visited by appointmen­t only, with an allocation of 400 visitors on a daily basis. The museum has been declared as free of charge to visitors from the 1st of May.

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