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The Monastery at the Guan-yin Well



The Guan-yin Well is obviously a significant local pilgrimage site; one assumes that to its waters are attributed miraculous properties.

 

Adjoining it is a Buddhist monastery, around which on the hills are various stupas and chapels.

In 1998 the monastery was tended by a lone diminutive nun, who carefully observed all the rituals in the several chapels of the main building complex.  Each visitor was invited to light sticks of incense to place in front of the various images; on completion of the service, she insisted on offering breakfast.

Here is a view of the shrine to Guan-yin in one of the small chapels accessible by a somewhat treacherous path that leads up above the monastery.  More about Guan-yin (Kuan-yin), the Chinese embodiment of the bodhisattva Avalokitesvara, will be found on the separate pages being created about the Lotus Sutra and its imagery.

© 1999 Daniel C. Waugh