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GeneChing
12-09-2009, 10:25 AM
Writer Marianne Barriaux interviewed me via email over the last month or so. We exchanged several emails. She was shocked about the way Shaolin was, but then most people who weren't there are. When people call Shaolin Disneyland now, they just don't know what it used to be like.


China's Shaolin Temple rakes in cash and controversy (http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iGr1RduvPwLH8WP4KGjwv5dR_lZA)
By Marianne Barriaux (AFP) – 13 hours ago

SHAOLIN TEMPLE, China — "An enchanting place, home of the warriors," promises the pop music blaring from a giant screen as excited visitors board buggies fit for a theme park.

Welcome to the Shaolin Temple in central China, known as the birthplace of Zen Buddhism and world-famous for its kungfu.

It is a place that has inspired awe and mysticism through the centuries but has lately attracted controversy in China over charges of rampant commercialism.

"The first time I came here, I thought the taxi driver had made a mistake. I thought I'd see a monastery deep in the forest, and I was very disappointed," said Julie Desjardins, a French tourist and kungfu enthusiast.

The Shaolin Temple was established in 495 AD. According to legend, prince-turned-monk Bodhidharma from India later came to Shaolin and meditated for nine years in a mountain cave behind the temple, founding Chinese Zen.

The monastery has been destroyed and rebuilt several times over the centuries. In 1928, a warlord attacked the temple, which burnt for 45 days, destroying many of the buildings, books and records.

During the radical political campaigns of the turbulent 1966-76 Cultural Revolution -- when religion was basically banned -- still more buildings, statues, and relics were destroyed.

But in recent decades China has allowed the religion to develop again, albeit within strict parameters, and Buddhism has rebounded dramatically, allowing for the reconstruction or restoration of many of the temple structures.

Shaolin last year drew 1.6 million people who paid 100 yuan (15 dollars) to pass through its Disneyland-style turnstiles in Henan province, watch a half-hour kungfu show and take photos with performers for another 20 yuan.

The temple makes millions every year from entrance fees, online sales of Shaolin items such as nunchakus, spearheads, fans and clothing, and its travelling performing troupes.

Its fame has been a boon to the neighbouring area, attracting more than 80 mostly private kungfu schools, where more than 60,000 people train to be like the monastery's 200 warrior-monks.

On a recent visit, Nie Rui of Henan province found the temple more rowdy than she would have expected from the epicentre of Zen Buddhism, but the commercial aspect did not dampen her enjoyment.

"When tourists come here, there are so many people that they don't feel it's that calm," said Nie, 24.

"But I still like it."

The temple's money-making success is largely attributed to abbot Shi Yongxin, a small, plump monk who took charge in 1999.

Dubbed the "CEO of Shaolin," he has been repeatedly criticised for his perceived pursuit of money.

Last month, a hacker replaced the Shaolin website's front page with a mock letter of remorse in Shi's name, state press reported. The post accused him of commercialising the 1,500-year-old temple.

"I'm not a businessman, I don't hold shares," Shi told AFP, as he sat for an interview wearing a yellow robe in one of the temple's halls.

"The Shaolin temple is just like a family. There are old people, young people, it's like a big family," he added, his gentle demeanour standing in sharp contrast to the stern expression on his face.

Shi also defended Shaolin's commercial ventures, which he refused to describe as businesses, but rather as ways of raising the temple's profile.

"Believers have demands, and we must satisfy and serve them to the best of our ability -- it's a service that provides faith products," he said of the temple's online sales.

Still, some Shaolin events have raised eyebrows.

In 2006, parts of a reality TV contest to find a new kungfu star were shot there, while a bikini fashion show this summer caused controversy.

But Gene Ching, the US-based publisher of Kung Fu Tai Chi -- a periodical devoted to Chinese martial arts -- and a former student at Shaolin, defended Shi, saying he was moving with the times.

"Shaolin is a medieval monastery that is trying to remain vital and meaningful in today's modern world," he said.

Ching said that before Shi took over, the grounds of Shaolin were full of tourist traps such as a terracotta Buddha with a house of horrors inside, a roller skating rink, video game arcades and karaoke bars.

"That's what it looked like when I first went in 1995. It was less like Disneyland, more like a surreal circus carnival," he said.

"When Abbot Yongxin was inaugurated, his first act was to purge Shaolin of all that... The process took several years... (and) caused a lot of animosity."

herb ox
12-09-2009, 11:06 AM
Nicely put, Gene!

Warrior, scholar, now statesman....

Shaolin should be grateful for your eloquent defense.

Be well

ox

MasterKiller
12-09-2009, 11:55 AM
America's Funniest People?

GeneChing
12-09-2009, 11:59 AM
Agence France-Presse (http://www.afp.com/afpcom/en).

Lucas
12-09-2009, 12:17 PM
Good deal Mr. International!

GeneChing
12-09-2009, 03:47 PM
The reality TV contest was K-Star, but that thread got deleted. There's mention of it on the Jackie Chan's Disciples thread (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=45829).

The Shaolin site hacking is here (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=55527).

Not sure about the bikini fashion show. That could have been the Miss Tourism Queen International 2009 pageant (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showpost.php?p=956138&postcount=21), or something else entirely.

The CEO of Shaolin moniker cames from a documentary (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?p=617640&highlight=ceo#post617640) that I still have yet to see.

hui
12-09-2009, 06:45 PM
AFP - The abbot of Shaolin Temple, Shi Yongxin, speaks to AFP at the famous temple in Henan province. Shaolin Temple, known as the birthplace of Zen Buddhism and world-famous for its kung fu -- is a place that inspires awe and mysticism in the West but attracts controversy in China over its rampant commercialism.
"An enchanting place, home of the warriors," promises the pop music blaring from a giant screen as excited visitors board buggies fit for a theme park.

Welcome to the Shaolin Temple in central China, known as the birthplace of Zen Buddhism and world-famous for its kungfu.

It is a place that has inspired awe and mysticism through the centuries but has lately attracted controversy in China over charges of rampant commercialism.

"The first time I came here, I thought the taxi driver had made a mistake. I thought I'd see a monastery deep in the forest, and I was very disappointed," said Julie Desjardins, a French tourist and kungfu enthusiast.

The Shaolin Temple was established in 495 AD. According to legend, prince-turned-monk Bodhidharma from India later came to Shaolin and meditated for nine years in a mountain cave behind the temple, founding Chinese Zen.

The monastery has been destroyed and rebuilt several times over the centuries. In 1928, a warlord attacked the temple, which burnt for 45 days, destroying many of the buildings, books and records.

During the radical political campaigns of the turbulent 1966-76 Cultural Revolution -- when religion was basically banned -- still more buildings, statues, and relics were destroyed.

But in recent decades China has allowed the religion to develop again, albeit within strict parameters, and Buddhism has rebounded dramatically, allowing for the reconstruction or restoration of many of the temple structures.

Shaolin last year drew 1.6 million people who paid 100 yuan (15 dollars) to pass through its Disneyland-style turnstiles in Henan province, watch a half-hour kungfu show and take photos with performers for another 20 yuan.

The temple makes millions every year from entrance fees, online sales of Shaolin items such as nunchakus, spearheads, fans and clothing, and its travelling performing troupes.

Its fame has been a boon to the neighbouring area, attracting more than 80 mostly private kungfu schools, where more than 60,000 people train to be like the monastery's 200 warrior-monks.

On a recent visit, Nie Rui of Henan province found the temple more rowdy than she would have expected from the epicentre of Zen Buddhism, but the commercial aspect did not dampen her enjoyment.

"When tourists come here, there are so many people that they don't feel it's that calm," said Nie, 24.

"But I still like it."

The temple's money-making success is largely attributed to abbot Shi Yongxin, a small, plump monk who took charge in 1999.

Dubbed the "CEO of Shaolin," he has been repeatedly criticised for his perceived pursuit of money.

Last month, a hacker replaced the Shaolin website's front page with a mock letter of remorse in Shi's name, state press reported. The post accused him of commercialising the 1,500-year-old temple.

"I'm not a businessman, I don't hold shares," Shi told AFP, as he sat for an interview wearing a yellow robe in one of the temple's halls.

"The Shaolin temple is just like a family. There are old people, young people, it's like a big family," he added, his gentle demeanour standing in sharp contrast to the stern expression on his face.

Shi also defended Shaolin's commercial ventures, which he refused to describe as businesses, but rather as ways of raising the temple's profile.

"Believers have demands, and we must satisfy and serve them to the best of our ability -- it's a service that provides faith products," he said of the temple's online sales.

Still, some Shaolin events have raised eyebrows.

In 2006, parts of a reality TV contest to find a new kungfu star were shot there, while a bikini fashion show this summer caused controversy.

But Gene Ching, the US-based publisher of Kung Fu Tai Chi -- a periodical devoted to Chinese martial arts -- and a former student at Shaolin, defended Shi, saying he was moving with the times.

"Shaolin is a medieval monastery that is trying to remain vital and meaningful in today's modern world," he said.

Ching said that before Shi took over, the grounds of Shaolin were full of tourist traps such as a terracotta Buddha with a house of horrors inside, a roller skating rink, video game arcades and karaoke bars.

"That's what it looked like when I first went in 1995. It was less like Disneyland, more like a surreal circus carnival," he said.

"When Abbot Yongxin was inaugurated, his first act was to purge Shaolin of all that... The process took several years... (and) caused a lot of animosity."

Shaolindynasty
12-10-2009, 11:10 AM
Most people who charge the temple with rampant commercialism went there (or didn't) with preconvieved notions of what shaolin is suppossed to be. It's hard to know what shaolin really is before you go yourself considering most documentaries on shaolin are complete fiction.

I didn't think that shaolin was anymore commercial than other temples I visited like white horse or po lum in hong kong for that matter. Famous religious sites bring alot of tourists/pilgrims.


"The first time I came here, I thought the taxi driver had made a mistake. I thought I'd see a monastery deep in the forest, and I was very disappointed,"

These kind of statements are funny/annoying. So she thought that the taxi was going to take her to a secluded forrest in the middle of nowhere? It's funny how people go there as a tourist then complain that there are other tourists there, duh:rolleyes:

People need to exercise common sense

Anyway, good job gene