Zeedijk Temple / Fo Guang Shan He Hua (Amsterdam)
Netherlands /
Noord-Holland /
Amsterdam /
Zeedijk, 106-118
World
/ Netherlands
/ Noord-Holland
/ Amsterdam
World / Netherlands / Zuid-Holland
interesting place, buddhist temple
The 'Zeedijk' or 'Fo Guang Shan He Hua' Buddhist Temple in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Fo Guang Shan (Chinese: 佛光山; pinyin: Fóguāngshān; literally "Buddha's Light Mountain") is an international Chinese Mahayana Buddhist monastic order that has gained a worldwide presence, and has chapters around the world. The headquarters of Fo Guang Shan, located in Kaohsiung, is the largest Buddhist monastery in Taiwan. The organisation itself is also one of the largest charity organizations in Taiwan. The order also calls itself the International Buddhist Progress Society.
Founded in 1967 by Venerable Master Hsing Yun, a renowned Chinese Buddhist monk and scholar, the order promotes Humanistic Buddhism, a modern Chinese Buddhist philosophy developed through the 20th Century, and made popular by this and other modern Chinese Buddhist orders. Humanistic Buddhism aims to make Buddhism relevant in the world and in peoples lives and hearts. Like most modern Chinese Buddhist organizations, the ordination lineage is from the Rinzai Zen (Chinese: 臨濟宗; pinyin: Línjìzōng) school. However, Fo Guang Shan declares clearly that it is an "amalgam of all Eight Schools of Chinese Buddhism" (八宗兼弘), including but not limited to Pureland. In this sense, it is a monastic order, and not a doctrinal school of thought per se.
See also:
(Dutch/English site) www.ibps.nl/en/hehuatemple.htm
Fo Guang Shan (Chinese: 佛光山; pinyin: Fóguāngshān; literally "Buddha's Light Mountain") is an international Chinese Mahayana Buddhist monastic order that has gained a worldwide presence, and has chapters around the world. The headquarters of Fo Guang Shan, located in Kaohsiung, is the largest Buddhist monastery in Taiwan. The organisation itself is also one of the largest charity organizations in Taiwan. The order also calls itself the International Buddhist Progress Society.
Founded in 1967 by Venerable Master Hsing Yun, a renowned Chinese Buddhist monk and scholar, the order promotes Humanistic Buddhism, a modern Chinese Buddhist philosophy developed through the 20th Century, and made popular by this and other modern Chinese Buddhist orders. Humanistic Buddhism aims to make Buddhism relevant in the world and in peoples lives and hearts. Like most modern Chinese Buddhist organizations, the ordination lineage is from the Rinzai Zen (Chinese: 臨濟宗; pinyin: Línjìzōng) school. However, Fo Guang Shan declares clearly that it is an "amalgam of all Eight Schools of Chinese Buddhism" (八宗兼弘), including but not limited to Pureland. In this sense, it is a monastic order, and not a doctrinal school of thought per se.
See also:
(Dutch/English site) www.ibps.nl/en/hehuatemple.htm
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fo_Guang_Shan
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 52°22'25"N 4°54'0"E
- Diamond Way Buddhism Center Unna 212 km
- Temple Bouddhiste 432 km
- Buddhist retreat center Becske 1143 km
- Gompa 1171 km
- Budist Temple 1255 km
- Datsan Gunzechoinei or Buddhist Temple 1769 km
- Buddhist temple "White Lotus" 1921 km
- Mynkivka Retreat Center 2155 km
- Viet pagoda 2190 km
- Burkhan Bakshin Altan Sume 2896 km
- Red Light District 'De Wallen' 0.2 km
- Singelgracht 0.2 km
- Amsterdam City Centre 0.3 km
- Herengracht 0.5 km
- Keizersgracht 0.6 km
- Waterlooplein 0.7 km
- Amsterdam (municipality) 2.1 km
- IJ 2.3 km
- Amsterdam-Noord 5.4 km
- North Holland 35 km