The Taer Monastery in northwest China's Qinghai Province, one of the six best known
monasteries of the Yellow Sect of Tibetan Buddhism, will undergo a
repair this year, according to local cultural heritage
authorities.
Three major buildings and an exhibition museum in the monastery
would be restored, said Ma Weimin, deputy director of Qinghai
Provincial Cultural Heritage Bureau.
The four have not been repaired in previous restorations in the
past 15 years.
A leading team for the restoration has been set up and the
project will be completed within this year, according to Ma.
The Ministry of Finance will allocate ten million yuan (about
US$1.28 million) for the repair.
Construction of the monastery, 27 kilometers south of the
provincial capital Xining, began in 1560 to honor the memory of
Tsong-Khapa, founder of the Yellow Sect of Tibetan Buddhism.
It is noted for the architectural brilliance of its halls and
rooms and about 20,000 religious paintings, appliques and yak
butter sculptures.
The monastery has undergone various damage in fires,
earthquakes, landslides and foundation subsidence in the past four
centuries.
A large-scale restoration project was carried out between 1992
and 1996 at a cost of nearly 40 million yuan, covered by the
government and donations.
In 2001, the government allocated another 30 million yuan for
the restoration of a palace in the monastery.
(Xinhua News Agency February 21, 2007)