Wednesday, February 7, 2018
South Indian state Andhra Pradesh is looking for more heritage tourism by developing the Buddhist circuit- Amaravathi town in Guntur district.
There are 1,000 Buddhist monks descended on the ancient Amaravathi town in Guntur district and offered prayers at the Maha Stupa, the most sacred place for Buddhism in Andhra Pradesh, members of the local organisations engaged in tourism projects aimed at preserving and conserving the heritage of the soil reviewed the situation.
The residents of Amaravathi were taken by surprise at the sight of the monks collectively heading to the Stupa where they sat on the floor meditating and praying for a while.
His Holiness the Dalai Lama had in fact asked the monks in a video message to try and visit places of sacred and heritage value in Andhra Pradesh.
The residents felt happy mainly because the monks walked, for the first time, along the Heritage Walk, being developed under the Centrally-sponsored HRIDAY (National Heritage City Development and Augmentation Yojana)
From the Bodhi Tree, which has grown from the sacred sapling in the Amaravathi Heritage Centre and Museum, the monks were taken along the main temple road to the Maha Stupa via the ASI Museum. They then headed to the mammoth Buddha statue.
Pointing to the fact that there were no immediate ‘footsteps’ of Gautama Buddha in Andhra and that after displacement, most Tibetan settlements developed in the neighbouring states and not in Andhra Pradesh, he said the presence of the monks representing the Tibetan, along with Theravad and Mahayana rafts, added a lot of value to this place.
Tags: Amaravathi, andhra pradesh, Buddha tourism, dalai lama, HRIDAY
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