Vishwa Shanti Stupa ('World Peace Stupa') is a large white Peace Pagoda in Rajgir, Nalanda District, Bihar, near Gitai Mandir. Statues of the Buddha are mounted on the stupa in four directions. It also has a small Japanese Buddhist temple with a large park. There is a temple near the stupa where prayers are conducted for universal peace. The initial pagoda was completed in 1969. New initiatives in 1993[1] resulted in the present form. It is one of around 80 Peace Pagodas which have been built around the world by the neo-Buddhist organisation Nipponzan Myohoji.[2] These were a dream of Nichidatsu Fujii, inspired by Mohandas K. Gandhi, as a reaction to the atomic bombing of Japan, the first, and more well known Vishwa Shanti stupa, being built on Ratnagiri Hill in Rajgir.[3]
Shanti Stupa | |
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Religion | |
Affiliation | Tibetan Buddhism |
Location | |
Location | Ratnagiri Hills, Rajgir, Nalanda District, Bihar, India |
Country | India |
Geographic coordinates | IN-BR 25°00′44″N 85°44′45″E / 25.01222°N 85.74583°E |
Architecture | |
Founder | Nichidatsu Fujii |
Date established | 1969 |
The Stupa
editLocated on about the top of 400 m high Rajgir Hills in the lush-green valley of Rajgir, the white stupa stands 120 ft tall with a total diameter of 103 ft. The stupa is studded with four gold gilded statues of Buddha, showing four important events of his life. This stupa was constructed by Mackintosh Burn Limited, a renowned PSU construction company under Government of West Bengal.
References
edit- ^ M. V. Kamath, Gandhi's Coolie: Life & Times of Ramkrishna Bajaj, p. 354, Allied Publishers, 1988 ISBN 81-7023-487-5.
- ^ J.A. Kempf, Silicon Valley Monk: From Metaphysics to Reality on the Buddhist Path, Dharma Gates Publishing, 2014 ISBN 0-9908951-0-6.
- ^ Aruna Deshpande, Buddhist India Rediscovered, Jaico Publishing House, 2013 ISBN 81-8495-247-3.
Further reading
edit- Siby K. Joseph, Bharat Mahodaya (eds), Essays in Conflict Resolution, Institute of Gandhian Studies, 2007
External links
edit- Media related to Peace Pagoda, Rajgir at Wikimedia Commons
- Bihar Tourism