The website of the Economic & Urban Newspaper

Tuesday, 07 September, 2010

HOME
NEWS
Vietnam
Hanoi
Comment & Analysis
HA NOI 1,000 YEARS
ECONOMY
INVESTMENT
SOCIAL AFFAIRS
SCIENCE & TECH
TRAVEL
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
HEALTH - EDUCATION
MY HANOI
PHOTO GALLERY
VIETNAMESE EDITION

Search

Exchange rate
Weather forecasts
Bringing Vietnamese Culture to the World
NEWS >> Vietnam
 
King’s attainment of Nirvana commemorated

Posted at 15h44, day 17 December, 2009

The Hanoi Times - The Vietnam Buddhist Sangha hosted a solemn ceremony at the Yen Tu Holy Mountain o­n December 16 to commemorate the 701st anniversary of the attainment of Nirvana of King-Monk Tran Nhan Tong, the founder of Vietnamese Zen Buddhism.

Construction of a copper statute dedicated to the King also began at the An Ky Sinh area o­n the Yen Tu Holy Mountain where the King-Monk’s passage to Nirvana took place. It is designed to be 9.9 m high and weighing about 100 tonnes.

Localities nationwide simultaneously celebrated the 701st anniversary of the attainment of Nirvana of King-Monk Tran Nhan Tong.

At the Quang Duc Zen Monastery in Ho Chi Minh City, hundreds of Buddhist dignitaries and followers gathered to offer incense to the King.

Venerable Thich Tri Quang, Vice President of the Vietnam Buddhist Sangha’s Executive Committee, recalled the lesson in how King-Monk Tran Nhan Tong brought compassion into society under his reign, hoping this valuable lesson would be studied and applied practically at present.

A grand ceremony was held in the central province of Quang Nam to honor King-Monk Tran Nhan Tong, who was famed for twice defeating Mongol invaders under his reign.

The ceremony was a tribute to the King’s great services to the nation and Buddhism, said Venerable Thich Chi Dao, Vice Head of the Quang Nam Buddhist Sangha’s Executive Committee.

Tran Nhan Tong (1258-1308), the third emperor of the Tran dynasty, ascended to the throne when he was just 21. He is famed for defeating Mongol invaders.

He abdicated his throne at the age of 35 and spent the rest of his life o­n the Yen Tu Mountain practising and propagating Buddhism, and founded the Truc Lam School of Zen (the Bamboo Forest School).

During that time, the King-Monk worked to unify different sects of Vietnamese Buddhism into Vietnamese Zen Buddhism.

The Vietnam Buddhist Sangha Central Committee has long observed the day King Tran Nhan Tong attained Nirvana (the first day of the eleventh lunar month) as the national anniversary of Vietnamese Buddhism.

The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism is working with relevant ministries and the Quang Ninh authorities to compile a record o­n King-Monk Tran Nhan Tong for submission to UNESCO to recognise him as a World Cultural Celebrity.

KTDT/VNA


Print Send to friend  Send Your Idea
Others:
Vietnam tops medal standings at SEA Games 25(17 December, 2009)
Street markets survive city ban(17 December, 2009)
HCM City celebrates Hanoi’s upcoming millennium with food festival(17 December, 2009)
Vietnam aviation wins international award(17 December, 2009)
Gazprom to invest Vietnam offshore fields(17 December, 2009)
Airline to resume service after new capital infusion(17 December, 2009)
MoIT leads Vietnam ICT Index 2009 ranking(17 December, 2009)
Nature & nurture(16 December, 2009)
Cam Ranh airport goes international(16 December, 2009)
Gov’t programme reduces number of poor households(15 December, 2009)

SPECIAL REPORTS

Hanoi’s CPI rises 0.75 percent in March

VNA launches Thang Long-Hanoi website

Spring festival Thăng Long-Ha Noi opens

Festival to honour heroic Trung Sisters opens

State President attends 1,000-year-old ploughing festival

Local industries spin-off component producers

Vietnam Airlines to open Hanoi-Rangoon route

Why invest in Hanoi?
 

About us  l  Contact us  l  Vietnamese  l 

© Copyright 2004 Economic and Urban Newspaper English edition The tribune of Hanoi City People’s Committee
Licence No: 511/GP-BVHTT issued by the Ministry of Culture and Infomation on October 11, 2001
Headquarters: No. 21 Huynh Thuc Khang Street, Dong Da District, Hanoi
Tel & Fax : 37732198 - Email : hanoinet@fpt.vn
Editor- in- Chief : Ta Viet Anh
Senior Editor : Nguyen Hong Thanh