NBA Cleveland Cavaliers center Shaquille O'Neal (L) presents a basketball shoe with his signature to Shi Yongxin, abbot of Shaolin Temple, during his promotional tour in Shaolin Temple, central China's Henan province, July 13, 2009. [Xinhua photo] |
Shaolin Temple has kicked up a storm with its plans to build a modern Buddhism practice center and a four-star hotel in Shoalhaven city, Australia at the cost of 360 million Australian dollars ($281.2 million). Thanks to TV dramas and films, many residents are so accustomed to linking monks with simple lifestyles, that news of such a huge commercial deal provoked many critical comments.
That's also why, even after Shi Yongxin, principal abbot of Shaolin Temple, said the investment is being paid with donations by Shaolin followers and all the temple will do is to manage the practice center, several domestic media outlets rushed into the furor accusing the martial arts superstar temple of trying to cash in on its fame, with some of them even calling for intervention from the State.
In fact, such claims reflect a severe misunderstanding of Buddhism, even religion as a whole. Like all other civil organizations, religious institutions also need to cover their running costs.
Religions have never been divorced from economic needs - the institutions that spread them need money to support themselves and expand. Those that failed to gain material support have perished.
It is impossible for religious institutions to survive without some commercial operations, especially if they want to develop and prosper.
Anybody who has ever visited a famous temple in China must be familiar with ticket offices at the gates; most of them are run by the local governments to generate revenue, from which the monks in the temples will get a certain percentage for the temples' upkeep.
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