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Guan Yin Monastery

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Guan Yin Monastery
Guan Yin Monastery
Guan Yin Monastery
Guan Yin Monastery
Guan Yin Monastery
Guan Yin Monastery
Guan Yin Monastery
Guan Yin Monastery
Guan Yin Monastery
Guan Yin Monastery
Guan Yin Monastery
Guan Yin Monastery
Guan Yin Monastery
Guan Yin Monastery
Guan Yin Monastery
Phone:
0769-8803248

Address:
Guan Yin Monastery, Dalingshan Tree Farm, Dongguan 523926, China

Guanyin or Guan Yin is the most commonly used Chinese translation of the bodhisattva known today as 'Avalokitesvara'. In English usage, Guanyin refers to the Buddhist bodhisattva associated with compassion and venerated chiefly by followers of Mahayana Buddhist schools as practiced in the sinosphere. Guanyin also refers to the bodhisattva as adopted by non-Buddhist religions such as Daoism, Chinese folk religions and other religions, where she is often known as the Goddess of Mercy in English. The Chinese name Guanyin, is short for Guanshiyin, which means [The One Who] Perceives the Sounds of the World.Some Buddhists believe that when one of their adherents departs from this world, they are placed by Guanyin in the heart of a lotus, and then sent to the western Pure Land of Sukhāvatī. Guanyin is often referred to as the most widely beloved Buddhist Divinity with miraculous powers to assist all those who pray to her, as is said in the Lotus Sutra and Karandavyuha Sutra. Several large temples in East Asia are dedicated to Guanyin including Shitennō-ji, Sensō-ji, Kiyomizu-dera, Sanjūsangen-dō, Shaolin, and Dharma Drum Mountain. Guanyin is beloved by all Buddhist traditions in a non-denominational way and found in most Tibetan temples under the name Chenrezig, and found in some influential Theravada temples such as Gangaramaya and Kelaniya of Sri Lanka. Statues are a widely depicted subject of Asian art and found in the Asian art sections of most museums in the world. Generally accepted among East Asian adherents, Guanyin originated as the Bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara, but in Chinese folk religion, the mythical accounts about Guanyin's origins do not associate with the Avalokiteśvara described in Buddhist sutras. Commonly known in English as the Mercy Goddess or Goddess of Mercy, often depicted as both male and female to show this figure's limitless transcendence beyond gender, and revered by Taoists as an immortal.
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