Chinese monk tweets enlightenment
Updated: 2015-05-20 09:00
(English.news.cn)
|
||||||||
At Longquan Monastery, a 1,000-year-old courtyard building at the foot of the mountains in Beijing's western suburbs, Venerable Master Xuecheng meets with friends and talks about Buddhism.
Wearing his traditional robe and cloth shoes, Xuecheng looks like the other monks in the monastery. However, the newly elected president of the Buddhist Association of China has a modern approach to developing and spreading Buddhism.
Xuecheng said at his election conference in April that Buddhist religious doctrine should positively and actively respond to modern technology and society.
In 2006, he became the first Buddhist monk to have a blog on the Chinese mainland. It has received more than 10 million visits.
In 2008, he used the Longquan Monastery website to promote Buddhist teachings.
And in 2011, Xuecheng launched microblogs in Chinese, English, French, German, Spanish, Korean, Japanese, Russian, Thai and Tibetan across multiple social media platforms, including Sina Weibo, Tencent and Twitter. The Weibo account has more than 300,000 followers.
"All the translation is done for free by about 300 domestic and foreign volunteers," he says.
He expects his microblogs to act as bridges between different countries, nationalities and cultures.
Jetman duo zip across Dubai sky
Creativity marks graduation photos
Ten photos you don't wanna miss - May 20
In photos: Cities in the clouds
Premier Li Keqiang welcomed by Brazilian president
Weirdest towns in the world
Students from vocational schools also make big bucks
Ten photos you don't wanna miss - May 19
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
![]()
|
![]()
|
![]()
|
![]()
|
![]()
|
![]()
|
Today's Top News
China, Brazil launch new era of economic relations
China premier 'savior' to Brazil government: newspaper
US should end its 'backyard' zero-sum game
Xiaomi debuts in US, Europe with online store
More than 450 scholars urge Japan to address history issues
Brazil embraces third wave of Chinese investment
Taoist teaches US official one or two things about feng shui
White House bans police from using certain military equipment
US Weekly
![]()
|
![]()
|