Latest News:  

English>>Travel

Heavenly grottoes

By Li Yang (China Daily)

08:22, March 21, 2013

The 1,500-meter high Maiji Mountain is home to an abundance of relics dating back 1,600 years ago when Buddhism was first introduced into China. (China Daily/Tianshui Tourism Bureau)

The caves, Buddhist sculptures and murals on Maiji Mountain in Gansu province have survived many natural disasters throughout the centuries. Li Yang feels spiritually recharged after a visit.

Before the trip to Maiji Mountain, I was only expecting to see a wheat-stack-shaped mountain, as its Chinese name indicates.

I drove all the way to the middle of the mountain without realizing that the clumsy and dull red sand rock koppie standing in front of me was it, until I saw the stone tablet carrying its name.

Maiji nestles at the base of high rocks. Although it is less than 100 meters high from bottom to top, its elevation is 1,500 meters.

Facing a large valley to its south cliff, Maiji appears to be the commander of all surrounding mountains.

Maiji stands tall as an isolated peak. It is a red sand rock cylinder peak, rare in the region, contrasting sharply with the others.

Nature has put it in the focus of the valley.

When my eyes turned around a protruding rock, I caught sight of a large pair of feet, 3 meters wide at least, carved out of the mountain stone in a big cave.

I had no idea that I was already standing at the feet of three great Buddha statues of a five-story building's height - one Amitabha statue flanked by two bodhisattvas.

All of them wear robes and a smile, with eyes half-opened.

They were carved in the Northern Wei Dynasty (AD 386-534) and mended in Song (960-1279), Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1911) dynasties.

The tour guide told me the latest repair in 1984 found a white china bowl made in the Song Dynasty and a well-preserved booklet of Buddhist scripture in the left cheek of the Amitadha statue.

The story adds to the mysteries of the Buddha statues, making my trip more like an exploration for treasures.

The bright sunshine casts shadow on the large statue's face, and the moving shadow gives the still face different expressions.

【1】 【2】 【3】


We recommend:

Those Xiaorenshu we read in childhood

Trip planner: four-day trip to S China

Wonderful snapshots of flying buzzards

Forever Shangri-la: China's heaven on earth

Top 10 ever-victorious generals in history

Dreamy log cabins among woods

Top 10 best airports in China 2012

Mysterious Zhongnanhai in Beijing

Top 10 Chinese 'Kung Fu Kings' in Minguo period

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:DuMingming、Ye Xin)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Terrorist attack cracked

  2. Radar station of East China Sea Fleet

  3. Graduation ceremony of police academy

  4. Cheap chopsticks may be toxic, expert says

  5. Cute dolphins nursed and trained in HK

  6. Apiarists busy with keeping bees

  7. Tang Wei: She's no Barbie

  8. A unique feat of Sichuan opera

  9. Microsoft launches online store on Tmall

  10. Train tickets may cost more than air travel

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Commentary: To pivot to Asia or peace?
  2. Lavish behavior punished
  3. Migration part of global development
  4. CCTV in hot water after corporate exposé backfires
  5. Cultural parks no substitute for talent
  6. Planning vital to diplomacy
  7. Loopholes for rich make estate tax meaningless
  8. How to start transformation and upgrading?
  9. Bigger does not always mean better for megacities
  10. Railway ministry revamp will not impact ratings

What’s happening in China

Central China tornado kills 3
Injuries rises to 52

  1. Residents brace for another cold spell
  2. Recycled water flows to south Beijing
  3. Official turns big profit on graveyard
  4. Health service hotline operational in 26 provinces
  5. Police crack major car theft network