Monk launches battle to save world's sacred sites

HONG KONG - A Buddhist monk from Taiwan said on Wednesday he was launching a movement to preserve sacred sites around the globe and urged leaders of all faiths to join with world leaders to prevent their destruction.

"War, environmental degradation, religious intolerance and cultural indifference threaten sacred sites around the world on a daily basis. No religion is spared. It is time to act," the Venerable Dharma Master Hsin Tao told a news conference in Hong Kong.

The monk said he was organising an international Commission for the Preservation of Sacred Sites and would invite some one hundred religious, cultural and political leaders to a first meeting of the group in Taipei in November.

In the last few months alone, the world has lost two monumental Buddha statues in Afghanistan and has watched attacks on Rachel's Tomb outside Bethlehem as Israeli and Palestinian clashes mounted, he said.

Afghanistan's ruling Taliban movement, which is trying to create the world's purest Islamic state, demolished the giant Buddha statues last month in the face of international protests. The massive figures were hewn out of sandstone cliffs around 1,500 years ago.

"I question and worry if the escalating ethnic clashes in Indonesia would affect the Borobudor monument...," the monk said, referring to one of the world's greatest Buddhist monuments, located on the island of Java.

He said he also was concerned about the possible destruction of art objects in Kashmir, an area regularly struck by separatist violence, and about the fate of sites in Cambodia.

Harvard University has been commissioned to do a comprehensive study on sacred sites that are in danger with the findings to be presented to the meeting in November, the monk said. The study will focus initially on the Balkans, the Middle East and Indigenous communities around the world.

The monk said he hopes the group's first meeting will coincide with the November 9 opening of his Museum of World Religions in Taipei.

The monk said the museum would be a safe haven for sacred texts and other objects representing numerous traditions, as well as a place of study and a platform where leaders could discuss problems of the present day.

Bawa Jain, a leader of the world interfaith movement, said the destruction of the statues by the Taliban had highlighted the need for better protection of sacred artefacts and commitments from all faiths to eradicate intolerance.

"Over a year ago, there were already people crying out for help. But they received very little response and as a result, the response did come but it was too late because tension had heightened," Jain told the news conference.

06:30 04-25-01

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