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Naidah Naing has written:
'Wajo dalam perspektif arsitektur =' -- subject(s): Architecture
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Lieutenant General Thet Naing Win is the Minister for Border Affairs for Burma.
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Coats,Scarves,Gloves,Hats,Snow Suits,Heated Jackets and Camera. You should take that because it is too cold there. Have a nice trip to Uranus...........
Htar Naing
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The cast of Burmese Refugee - 2012 includes: Riley Faison as Kitchen Coworker Al Medina as ESL Teacher Jack Mussry as Father Noah Mussry as Son Brian Nahas as Supervisor Fred Ochs as Fillmore Ova Saopeng as Win Naing Brian Sounalath as Moe Aung Adrian Zaw as San Aung
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The lifecycle of an ocelot typically involves mating, gestation period of approximately 70-85 days, birth of one to three kittens, nursing for a few months, and then learning survival skills from the mother before eventually becoming independent and leaving to establish their own territory. Ocelots reach sexual maturity at around two years of age.
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On average, there are approximately 5 million red blood cells per microliter of blood. A single drop of blood contains about 50-60 microliters, so there would be roughly 250-300 million red blood cells in a single drop of blood.
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106 Bengali Rohingya Muslims killed 8 Burmese Buddhists (beat eight Buddhists to death brutally) at an Indonesian detention centre after becoming enraged at news of deadly communal violence in their homeland, officials say. Agustian said 15 people, believed to Rohingya, were injured during the violence at the centre, where 106 Bengali Rohingya Muslims are being held.
The Rohingya Muslims launched the attack at the immigration centre on Sumatra island using weapons made from smashed-up beds and broom handles after seeing pictures of religious violence in Myanmar last month that left dozens dead.
The attack underscores the soaring Muslim-Buddhist tensions that have cast a shadow over political reforms in Myanmar, where the end of decades of authoritarian military rule has laid bare deep sectarian fault lines.Last month's disorder was the worst since an eruption of violence between Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims in the western state of Rakhine last year that left scores dead and tens of thousands - mainly Muslims - displaced. First cause of riots is the violence and long lasted tention was reignited on the 28th of May 2012, It was reported that daughter of U Hla Tin, of Thabyechaung Village named Ma Thida Htwe aged 27 was brutally raped then killed by three Muslim men
. These men were later arrested.On Mar 20, 2013, in Meikhtila, at about 9 in the morning U Khin Maung Win and Daw Aye Aye Naing came to New Weint Sein gold shop (Muslim-owned) to sell their gold comb. The Bengali-Muslim shop-owner and her elder sister slapped
the Burmese-Buddhist couple. The Bengali-Muslim husband of the shop-owner Htun Htun Oo (a) Ar-shid and his employee Nyi Nyi came in and started hitting U Khin Maung Win with timber 2x4 pieces
. They both were yelling out that the Burmese-Buddhist couple and their children were trying to rob their gold shop. As their Muslim relatives from other Muslim gold shops nearby joined the brutal attack and bullied on the Burmese-Budddhist family the bystanders started shouting at them to stop such unjust violence and they then call the police.
At that day (Mar 20, 2013), a Buddhist monk from Hanzar village of One-dwin township had come into the Meiktila town as a passenger on a motorbike and they were unknowingly riding through the Da-hart-tan Muslim ward the biggest Muslim quarters in Meiktila. Already-agitated Muslims saw the Buddhist monk and chased the motorbike and managed to strike the Buddhist monk from behind with a sword and he fell to the ground from his pillion-riding position on the motorbike. He had a long deep gash on back of his head just above his left ear. Muslim mobs forcefully took off his robe and brutally dragged the direly-wounded Buddhist monk into the nearby Myo-ma Mosque. Once inside the mosque they poured
acid and
petrol all over the wounded Buddhist monk
and burned him alive
.
An increasing number of Rohingya - viewed by many Burmese as illegal Bangladeshi immigrants - have been arriving on Indonesian shores.
"They managed to see some photos of the violence in Myanmar, including buildings on fire, and we believe that's when the violence broke out," Kiswanto told AFP.
He said all eight Buddhist men were dead by Bengali Rohingya Muslims when police arrived at the detention centre in the early hours of Friday morning.
Why Muslims kill everyone cowardly in the world? Because they obey the following verses from Quran.
I think most of the Muslims are pessimists and narrow minded because they are killing not only Buddhists, but also Christians, Hindus and Jews. Almost Bengali Rohingya Muslims are followers of Al quaeda, Taliban, Mujahideen according to Jihad law. Why they are killing Christians, Hindus, Jews and Buddhists in everywhere?
But NLD Members, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and 88 students ex. leader Min Ko Naing and his 88 students group were silent and biased about the case of Muslim terrorists killed Burmese Buddhist monk and people. I think, Min Ko Naing and his 88 students group fear of Muslim terrorists. Some Burmese people said that Min Ko Naing is so coward and he is neither a democratic leader nor student leader anymore. Patience is good. BUT patience has its LIMIT.
"Stand up for truth"
"Courage to stand for justice and truth"
"All Burmese respects a brave man but they despises a coward"
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U Wirathu is a 45-year-old Buddhist monk from Mandalay's Masoeyein Monastery who has acquired notoriety for spreading anti-Muslim sentiments under his nationalist "969" campaign. It encourages Burmese Buddhists to boycott and protect from Muslim businesses and oppressions of Islamic communities. Muslims killed and raped Myanmar people such as Kachin, Kayin, Chin, Bamar, Mon, Rakhine, Shan several times since 1942.
U Wirathu was sentenced to 25 years in prison in 2003 for inciting religious conflicts, but was released in January 2012. In October, he organized protests against the international Organization of Islamic Cooperation's plan to open a Burma office.
"The first 9 stands for the nine special attributes of the Lord Buddha and the 6 for the six special attributes of his Dhamma, or Buddhist Teachings, and the last 9 represents the nine special attributes of Buddhist Sanga [monks]. Those special attributes are the three Gems of the Buddha. In the past, the Buddha, Sangha, Dhamma and the wheel of Dhamma were Buddhists' sign. And the same goes for 969; it is another Buddhist sign………
Now people blame 969, saying it is involved in the atrocities because they cannot find the real culprits. But the 969 leaflets were not found and no one distributed it in Meikthila. When I came and made a sermon there, I shared 25 stickers and it says "Save Our Future". The 969 campaign was made the culprit, but actually it is innocent as it only represents the special attributes of the Buddha…….. I don't have any contacts in Pegu. So I have no idea. There was no problem in the place where I have formed and organized my campaign and it goes in accordance with my rules. And, I have been told about many cases, such as cases of fighting between Burmese and Muslims and rape cases of 4 and 7-grade girls. Most rape victims are students. Other cases are physically attacks and insulting to Buddhism-to tell you the truth, there was a case of verbal abuse of monks. Other cases include illegal mosques; mosques and Muslim graveyards constructed without government permission. I'm received over 50 such cases and I provided suggestions in over 100 cases. I told them to solve the cases in accordance with the law and most take my advice, even the senior monks. Everything is fine as I deal with the cases within the law. In our community, the real 969 [campaigners] do not use violence." U Wirathu said.
"I have been supporting Daw Aung San Suu Kyi through the years, but she was not a reliable leader during the Arakan State [sectarian] unrest. I think it is because of the people around her. And also, nearly every NLD township office is operated by Muslims. Because of them, Burmese coming there are turned back. In some towns, as the NLD offices are rented from Muslim house owners, the NLD members don't offer meals to monks on the day of General Aung San [Burma's Martyr's Day] as it is prohibited by the house owners. So I said the symbol of the NLD peacock is becoming a symbol for Muslims. I rely so much on the [88 Generation Students] group of Min Ko Naing as the second biggest opposition force and I have much hope for them in the future. But they are not very reliable in supporting the public in the case of the Arakan State riots. They don't stand on the side of the public. After helping refugees in Arakan they made a press conference on the issues. That's all. They don't issue a specific statement to say that Rohingyas [Muslims] are not a recognized national minority [in Burma] and they should condemn the killing of Arakanese [Buddhists] by Bengalis [Muslims]. So as a man who is supposed to stand for justice and against injustice, Min Ko Naing was not standing up for justice in the Arakan unrest. This is what I said in my sermon."
"Yes, serious actions need to be taken. Rather than the prominent activists, it will be more effective to take actions to those who are trying to divide people with propagandas. For instance, Mawlawis (Islamic religious teachers or leaders). They are teaching children, and they instill hatred in children. The way Muslim children look at the monks is like as if we are their enemies. The way they look at Burmese (Buddhists) people is as if we are their enemies." Sayadaw U Wirathu said.
==U Wirathu and self-defense duties for Buddhism==
Sayadaw U Wirathu is a PATRIOT, self defender for Buddhism and nationalist monk in Burma (Myanmar). Self-defense or private defense is a countermeasure that involves defending oneself, one's property, or the well-being of another from harm. The use of the right of self-defense as a legal justification for the use of force in times of danger is available in many jurisdictions, but the interpretation varies widely.
Physical self-defense is the use of physical force to counter an immediate threat of violence. Such force can be either armed or unarmed. In either case, the chances of success depend on a large number of parameters, related to the severity of the threat on one hand, but also on the mental and physical preparedness of the defender.
Many styles of martial arts are practiced for self-defense or include self-defense techniques. Some styles train primarily for self-defense, while other martial or combat sports can be effectively applied for self-defense. Some martial arts train how to escape from a gun situation, or how to break away from a punch, while others train how to attack. To provide more practical self-defense, many modern day martial arts schools now use a combination of martial arts styles and techniques, and will often customize self-defense training to suit the participants' lifestyles, occupations, age groups and gender, and physical and mental capabilities.
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How did Bin Laden's Muslims (KALAR) killed a Buddhist monk and calling for riots, Meiktila (Meikhtila, Meikhtilar), Myanmar?
On the evening of 28 May, a group of men robbed, raped and murdered an ethnic Rakhine Buddhist woman, Ma Thida Htwe, near the Kyaut Ne Maw village. The locals claim the culprits to have been Rohingya Muslims (followers of Bin Laden). The police arrested three suspects and sent them to Yanbye township jail. This event is first cause of riots of Rakhine.
The Muslim terrorists mobs have murdered a Buddhist monk at Mosque in Meiktila, Burma. The Muslim terrorists mobs have murdered many people in the world such as US, UK, Japan, China, India, Thailand, Myanmar, Indonesia, Pakistan, etc.
And by the way, can someone help me to answer this question asked by a non-muslim?
On March 20, 2013, at about 9 in the morning Buddhist couple U Khin Maung Win and Daw Aye Aye Naing came to New Weint Sein gold shop (Muslim-owned) to sell their gold comb. The Bangali-Muslim shop-owner and her elder sister slapped the Burmese-Buddhist couple. The Bengali-Muslim husband of the shop-owner Htun Htun Oo (a) Ar-shid and his employee Nyi Nyi (followers of Bin Laden) came in and started hitting U Khin Maung Win with timber 2x4 pieces. They both were yelling out that the Burmese-Buddhist couple and their children were trying to rob their gold shop. As their Muslim relatives from other Muslim gold shops nearby joined the brutal attack and bullied on the Burmese-Buddhist family the bystanders started shouting at them to stop such unjust violence and they then called the police. This is the first cause of riots of Meiktila Township.
At that day, a Buddhist monk from Hanzar village of One-dwin township had come into the Meiktila town as a passenger on a motorbike and they were unknowingly riding through the Da-hart-tan Muslim ward the biggest Muslim quarters in Meiktila. Already-agitated Muslims (followers of Bin Laden) saw the Buddhist monk and chased the motorbike and managed to strike the Buddhist monk from behind with a sword and he fell to the ground from his pillion-riding position on the motorbike. He had a long deep gash on back of his head just above his left ear. Muslim mobs forcefully took off his robe and brutally dragged the direly-wounded Buddhist monk into the nearby Myo-ma Mosque. Once inside the mosque they (followers of Bin Laden) poured acid and petrol all over the wounded Buddhist monk and burned him alive. This also is the first cause of riots of Meiktila Township.
We are so disppointed to Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, Min Ko Naing, 88 student leaders, President U Thein Sein and international medias (including BBC, VOA, RFA, DVD except CNN.com) because they ALL are NEGLECTING & SILENCING on first causes of riots: Muslims killed to Buddhist monk and Gold shop Muslim owner group beaten up to Buddhist couple.
How does the Quran portray the Muslim Faith to be a religion of peace?
In a previous question I was criticised by certain members of Webanswers for typing an English translation of certain passages from the Quran which confuse me and others into believing Islam is a religion of hate and violence. These passages are :-
Quran: 9:5 “Fight and kill the disbelievers wherever you find them, take them captive, harass them, lie in wait and ambush them using every stratagem of war.”
Quran: 9:112 “The Believers fight in Allah’s Cause, they slay and are slain, kill and are killed.”
Quran: 8:39 “Fight them until all opposition ends and all submit to Allah. So fight them until there is no more Fitnah and all submit to the religion of Allah alone ”
Quran: 4:89: They wish you would disbelieve as they disbelieved so you would be alike. So do not take from among them allies until they emigrate for the cause of Allah . But if they turn away (convert from Islam to other religion), then seize them and kill them wherever you find them and take not from among them any ally or helper.
Quran: 9:14 “Fight them and Allah will punish them by your hands, lay them low, and cover them with shame. He will help you over them.”
Quran: 8: 12 (Allah punishment)
Quran: 2:191-193 (Killing infidels)
Quran: 4:89-91 (Killing disbelievers)
Quran: 9:123 (Fighting unbelievers)
Quran: 8:72 “Those who accepted Islam and left their homes to fight in Allah’s Cause with their possessions and persons, and those who gave them asylum, aid, and shelter, those who harboured them—these are allies of one another. You are not responsible for protecting those who embraced Islam but did not leave their homes to fight until they do so.”
Quran: 9:29 (Fight non-Muslims)
Quran: 5:33; 5:38 (Cut off their hands)
Quran: 9:38 “Believers, what is the matter with you, that when you are asked to go forth and fight in Allah’s Cause you cling to the earth? Do you prefer the life of this world to the Hereafter? Unless you go forth, He will afflict and punish you with a painful doom, and put others in your place.”
Allah and Muhammad must be so ashamed about Muslims' cowardly attacking to innocent people in Burma, Thailand, India, Pakistan, USA, UK, Japan and in the World.
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According to legend, the Shwedagon Pagoda is 2500 years old. Archaeologists believe the stupa was actually built sometime between the 6th and 10th centuries by the Mon, but this is a very controversial issue because according to the records by Buddhist monks it was built before Lord Buddha died in 486 BC. The story of Shwedagon Pagoda begins with two merchant brothers, Taphussa and Bhallika, from the land of Ramanya, meeting the Lord Gautama Buddha and receiving eight of the Buddha's hairs to be enshrined in Burma. The two brothers made their way to Burma and with the help of the local king, King Okkalapa, found Singuttara Hill, where relics of other Buddhas preceding Gautama Buddha had been enshrined. When the hairs were taken from their golden casket to be enshrined some incredible things happened:
" There was a tumult among men and spirits ... rays emitted by the Hairs penetrated up to the heavens above and down to hell ... the blind beheld objects ... the deaf heard sounds ... the dumb spoke distinctly ... the earth quaked ... the winds of the ocean blew ... Mount Meru shook ... lightning flashed ... gems rained down until they were knee deep ... all trees of the Himalayas, though not in season, bore blossoms and fruit. " The stupa fell into disrepair until the 1300s when the Mon king Binnya U of Bago had the stupa rebuilt to a height of 18 meters (60 ft). It was rebuilt several times and reached its current height of 98 meters (320 ft) in the 15th century. The Mon kingdom possessed two great pagodas of especial sanctity, the Shwemawdaw at Bago and the Shwedagon. Originally only twenty-seven feet high, it was raised to a height of sixty-six feet in 1362 by King Binnya U as an act of special piety. Dhammazedi's immediate predecessor, his mother-in-law Queen Shinsawbu (1453-72), raised its height to 40 meters (129 ft). She terraced the hill on which it stands, paved the top terrace with flagstones, and assigned land and hereditary slaves for its maintenance. When in 1472 she yielded up the throne to Dhammazedi, she retired to Dagon, and during her last illness had her bed placed so that she could rest her dying eyes upon the gilded dome of the sacred fane. The Mon face of the Shwe Dagon inscription catalogues a list of repairs beginning in 1436 and finishing during Dhammazedi's reign. It mentions Queen Shinsawbu under a terrific Pali name of sixty-six letters. By the beginning of the sixteenth century the pagoda had become the most famous place of pilgrimage in Burma. [1] A series of earthquakes during the next centuries caused damage. The worst damage came from a 1768 earthquake that brought down the top of the stupa and it was raised to its current state by King Hsinbyushin (lit. Lord of the White Elephant) of Konbaung Dynasty. A new hti or crown was donated by King Mindon Min in 1871 after the annexation of Lower Burma by the British.
Waddy H. Naing
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The Shwedagon is the greatest pagoda of its kind in the world, comparable in size and grandeur to the Angkor Wat of Cambodia and the Boro Budur of Indonesia. "Shwe" means gold and Dagon is a former name of Yangon. Hence, Shwedagon means the golden pagoda at the city of Dagon, It is believed to have been built nearly 2600 years ago, that is, during the Buddha's life time. According to the legend of the pagoda, two trader brothers from Myanmar, by the names of Tapussa and Bhallika, led a caravan of bullock-carts to India and there they came across the Buddha who had recently attained His Enlightenment or Buddhahood.
The two brothers offered honey balls and another kind of cake called Kywet kyit cake to the Buddha and received in return eight strands of the latter's hair. The two brothers and their followers joyfully returned to their native town Okkalapa which was an even older names of Yangon.The Ruler of Okkalapa who had received the wonderful news in advance welcomed the sacred hairs with great pomp and ceremony. Then the hairs were enshrined in a zedi or pagoda which was specially erected for the purpose, amidst . The sacred relics of three other Buddhas of this world are also said to be enshrined in the pagoda .So you can imagine how profoundly Buddhists all over the world revere this pagoda. According to traditional Buddhist cosmology, there are innumerable kalpas or worlds in the universe only some of which are blessed with the appearance of Buddhas.One to five Buddhas may appear in some worlds while none may appear at all in others. Such Buddhaless worlds are known as zero worlds. Those where five Buddhas arise are called Badda Worlds (kalpas) and our world is one of them. So far, four Buddhas have visited our world the last of whom was Siddhartha Gautama of Kapilavastu in India.
One Buddha is yet to appear in our world and devout Buddhists are preparing themselves for His Advent. A Buddha means an enlightened one -- a human being who attains Buddha: hood by means of His discovery of the Four Noble Truths. Of course, His realization of ~e Four Noble Truths is at a much higher level than that of ordinary human beings. Buddhas appear in some worlds at certain times to guide erring creatures- to their liberation. D. According to one oft-quoted saying, as many Buddhas as the number of grains of sand in the Ganges River have appeared so far. The pagoda was only 66 feet high when it WAS first built. It attained its present height and shape only in the 14th and 15th centuries when it was overbuilt and enlarged by a succession of Mon Kings and a queen who were rulers of Lower Myanmar in some periods of our ancient history. Of course various Myanmar Kings also made major improvements upon it and around it, installing new "htees" or umbrellas and great bells, gilding it and building rest-houses and "tazaungs " or prayer halls .
Today, the pagoda has a height of 326 feet and a circumference of 1420 feet at the base. At first the pagoda was only gilded from top to bottom. But the upper part of the pagoda-- from the "banana bud" at first and later, from the "baung yit" upwards -has been covered with plates of gold each measuring one square foot and weighing five-later six-ticals since 1900.As to the umbrella, it is covered with gold and encrusted with numerous gems so that its value will be very hard to calculate indeed. You are probably aware that the Myanmars are very generous and charitable by nature.
Hence, they offer only the very best to the pagodas especially the great Shwedagon -- which are symbols of the Lord Buddha. The result is that the Shwedagon has become a repository of the best in Myanmar culture - architecture, sculpture, arts, crafts and all. In other words, it is a unique museum of Myanmar arts and crafts. That's why the Shwedagon complex has
become our chief tourist attraction. From the covered stairways to the numerous structures and the pagoda itself, everything about the Shwedagon is permeated with beauty and art born of loving veneration. The Shwedagon is the holiest place of worship to Buddhists all over the world and practically the whole complex is a work of art.
Most of the buildings around the pagoda are decorated with the best specimens of Myanmar painting and sculpture so that a few hours' study of the pagoda and its environs can give you a fairly good idea of Myanmar arts and crafts. Various parts of the pagoda are known by different names describing their shapes. The highest part of the pagoda is the "seinbu" or diamond bud which is a spherical globe of gold 10 inches in diameter and inlaid with 4,350 diamonds and 93 other precious stones. Just below the seinbu is the "hngetmanar" ( meaning where birds do not perch) or vane which is a flag-shaped metal frame.)
Some people also call it "hngetmyatnar" meaning a perch for the holy bird.
Next come the htee and the "hngetpyawbu",the banana bud. Below the banana bud come the "kyalan" (the up-turned lotus), the "thabeik" (the alms - receiving bowl), the "kya-hmauk" (the downturned lotus), the "baungyit" (the turbanwrapper), the "panswe" (the hanging flower) and the "khaung laung" (the. bell) in that order. The lower part of the pagoda comprises three pyitsayas or platforms namely the first, the second and the third pyitsayas.
At the bottom lies the main platform measuring 900 feet from north tc south and 700 feet from east to west. The pagoda is known to have suffered from no less than eight earthquakes since 1564 A.D. and a big fire in 1931.i. One intriguing event in the recent history of the pagoda was the "visit" of a tigress that was found crouching at the lower edge of the bell shaped part in 1904. i. At last, it was shot dead by British soldiers.'. Another interesting development was the long fight waged by Myanmar Buddhists against Europeans wearing shoes at the pagoda. ,.The fight was. won by the Buddhists in the end and no one has been allowed to wear shoes,. socks and the like at the pagoda ever since. The Shwedagon Pagoda is of the utmost interest to Buddhists and non-Buddhists alike.
To foreign visitors, the pagoda represents the best in Myanmar culture - her piety, arts and crafts and so on. The pagoda and its environs constitute a veritable museum of everything Myanmar. In other words, they present Myanmar Naing-ngan -- the
land of Myanmar-in a nutshell. Hence, if a person wants to be acquainted with Myanmar and he or she has only two-three hours to spare, then I would urge that person to visit the Shwedagon Pagoda.
That's talking in general and now I'd like to go into some specific points of interest. First of all, I should like to mention what is known as "the sacred-hair well." Here's something out of the ordinary - "the sacred-hair well" It lies in a building just about two dozen steps away to the north of the northern prayer hall which-is attached .- to the pagoda. The entrance to it has been closed to prevent the adventurous and the curious from going down at the risk of their lives. As you can see, the entrance to it has been barred so that inquisitive people might not go down risking their limbs and lives. According to an oft-told tale, a Buddhist novice went down the well a few decades ago and never came back.
Maybe that's the reason why the entrance to the well has been closed. This pit or well is widely believed to lead to the hall right at the bottom of the £eat pagoda where the sacred hairs and other relics of four Buddhas are enshrined. A translation of an intriguing "eye-witness account" of a European -- an Italian if remember right -- who supposedly went down the well "long ago" was carried by the local papers about thirty years ago. . He claimed to have reached the relic - chamber.
According to his account, the sacred relics were placed -- presumably in a reliquary -- on a raft, implying that there was/is water at the bottom of the pagoda. That statement is highly plausible as the common experience is that water comes out wherever you dig the ground a few feet in Yangon. A legend says that the relic chamber was/is guarded by "sword and spear machines" or automatons armed with swords and spears to fend off would-be robbers and plunderers.
You probably know that most relic-chambers inside Myanmar pagodas are virtual treasure houses filled with offerings of jewellery worth zillions. It will be a fantastic journey indeed if we can go down the well today with lights and other necessary equipment. As befitting the hollest Buddhist shrine in Myanmar -and debatably-in the whole world - the Shwedagon Pagoda abounds in secrets or points of interest and mistery, To mention one, there is the Bo Bo Aung (donated) Image Lying in a small shrine adjacent to the Eastern Shrine or prayer hall. The image is said to have been donated by Bo Bo Aung, the most well-known Weikzar in Myanmar folklore.
According to our tradition, a Weikzar is a human being who has achieved supernatural powers by pursuing alchemy successfully or by other means. Incidentally, the Shwedagon Pagoda is generally believed to be a favourite haunt of Weikzars, hermits endowed with magical powers and similar beings who have come to do obeisance to it in order to' gain eternal merit for their well-being in fu- ture lives. Hence, you might run into one if you are destined to do so and that being might grant you a boon or two, so watch out! Of course that mystic will not be obviously dressed: he or she is more likely to be in disguise to test your charitableness or generosity. So, the mendicant you gave one kyat to might turn out to be a Weikzar after all and bring you lots of blessings. Three images of the Buddha at the Shwedagon Pagoda are generally believed to be especially endowed with powers for answering prayers. '. One of them is the One entrance-cave Image which is situated right at the middle point of the eastern upper platform of the pagoda. It is said that in the days of Myanmar Kings, princes were prohibited from visiting this image for fear that its prayer-answering powers might be utilized in conspiring against the king. One snag is that it is impossible for ladies to visit this image as it lies on the upper platform which is off limits out of bounds to them. But, never mind.Youladies can always pray to your heart's content if you wish, at the other two especially wish-fulfilling pagodas or images. One is the big image-sitting in the eastern prayer hall.. Its unusual and wish-fulfilling feature is the mudra or position of its right hand: its palm is turned upward or outwards, indicating that it is about to give away boons or disperse blessings.
Perhaps you are aware that most other images of the Buddha have their right palms turned downwards. The other is popularly known as the Shinsawpu Pagoda. . It was probably built by Shinsawpu, the only Queen in the recorded history of Myanmar, who made great changes or rather improvements in the shape and size of the Shwedagon Pagoda. Lying near the iron shrine in the Rahu (north-west) Corner, the pagoda is also called 'The Four Bars Pagoda. The implication is that four monks whose titles (names) began with Bar such as Bartamort and Barmeh and who were famous for their occult powers played a major role in. the creation of the pagoda or rather the image. Four ZAGAR trees growing nearby may be part of the magical scheme. One well-known habitat of zagar trees is Mt.Popa in Central Myanmar which may be compared with Mt.Olympus in Greece in that it is believed to be a favourite abode of Nats or spirits in Myanmar. Some spirit worshippers in Myanmar pay respects to the memory of Pabai Maung Tintdai (Mr. Handsome, the blacksmith). He was said to be burnt to 'death at the foot of a zagar tree in the Tagaung Era. He is believed by some to have become the guardian spirit of the interior-of- the house. He is also known as Interior-of-the House Lord-of-the--Great-Mountain, that is Mt.Popa. I'm telling you all this to let you know that zagar trees or flowers always have a special association with the spirt-worship in our country.. Besides the three prayer-answering pagodas or images .I've mentioned, there are many other pagodas of special interest to those in the know, at the Shwedagon.. One of them is the image believed to have been cast by the famed Monk GoatBull of the Bagan Era. Monk Goat-Bull was an alchemist who presented his philosopher's stone to the - king saying in writing that it needed to be treated with excrement before it achieved its supernatural powers.
Unfortunately the king's reader dared not read out the offensive word--excrement intheroyalpresence and sub situated it with 'something sour' which is a similar word in Myanmar language. The king passed an order that it be done and the order was carried out. Needless to say nothing happened and the stone remained a lifeless, powerless stone since its last alchemic requirement wasn't fulfilled. Considering that the monk had improperly pulled his royal- leg, the king had the monk's eyes-pulled out and returned- the stone to him. The monk. was so angry at his stone that he had it thrown into the latrine at the monastery. And lo and behold! The stone underwent magical transformation and became a full-fledged philosopher's stone, sending out flashes of light at the same time, since the last condition in the alchemic.-process had been met. Realizing that his stone had a5bieved-success, the monk had it retrieved and sent his novices to the market to bring back whatever eyes of carcasses they could find to restore his eyesight by means of his philosopher's stone.
However, the novices managed to bring back only an eye of a goat and an eye of a bull as it was late in the morning and the market was about to break up. Not making a fuss of it the monk put the eyes into his empty eye-sockets and touched them with his philosopher's stone. Instantly, the eyes became his and he could see again. Henceforward, he came to be known as Monk Goat-Bull. Being a monk, he had plenty of fortitude and magnanimity and he forgave the king. Not only that he also showered gold and silver all over the land of Bagan. He brought so much wealth to Bagan that even widows were said to be able to build pagodas. You now know at least one version of why there are so many pagodas in and around Bagan.Since this image has one eye larger than the other just like Monk Goat Bull's, you can easily imagine who the builder of this pagoda might have been. It can be seen in the northwest corner of the prayer hall Lying to the south of the Naungdawgyi (Older Brother) Pagoda. The Shwedagon Pagoda and its environs abound in so many mysterious and intriguing objects of worship and works of art that it will take one weeks if not months to visit and study all of them in some detail. Let me draw your attention to some more of them in addition to the ones I have already described. There are two more pagodas associated with Weikzars and Zawgyis just like the Bo Bo Aung and Shin Saw Pu pagodas. They are the Weikzar Zawgyi Pagoda and the Shin Mahtee Pagoda. The former is situated at the Saturday (South-western) corner of the (Shwedagon) Pagoda and the latter can be found inside the Shin Mahtee prayer hall Lying to the north of the Naungdawgyi (Older Brother) Pagoda. A Zawgyi is somewhat similar to a weikzar in that both of them are human beings who have risen td supernatural status through occult means. I'm sorry I can't tell you the exact difference between the two as I'm no expert in such matters. Some surmise that the name Zawgyi is derived from the Indian (Sanskrit ? Pali ? ) word Yogi denoting a person who practice yoga-various systems of bodily and mental control--to attain physical and mental well. On the other hand, weikzar is a Pali word meaning enlightenment. So a weikzar is someone who has attained enlightenment and the resulting special powers. However both a weikzar and a zawgyi are said to be not above enjoying sex now and then . It is said that there is a forest in the Himalayas where trees bear fruits which are exact replicas of the human body, both male and female. When weikzars and zawgyis who spend most of their time at the Himalayas feel like having a little fun, they touch, the female-shaped fruits known as 'illusory females' with their magic wands bringing the fruits to life for a short duration.
You can imagine the rest to be sure. You can see figures of zawgyis at the weikzarzawgyi pagoda. If you want to see an 'illusory female' however, you will have to go to the old brick entrance hall behind the figures of ogres near the southern entrance to the pagoda. There you can see her in her birthday suit, gamboling with her zawgyi friends. The Shin Mahtee Pagoda or Image is believed to have been made about a thousand years ago by Shin Mahtee, a monk who was reputed to be a weikzar. There are quite a number of people who believe that special blessings or favours will be granted to them if they worship at the pagodas or images built or dona4cd by weikzars and zawgyis. A few of them may even be aspiring to be weizars or zawgyis themselves. Another image of the Buddha associated with the occult world is the Padarshin (living Mercury Ballsome thing Similar to a philosopher's stone) Image. The forehead of that image is slightly protruding in the middle suggesting that a padarshin ball has been enshrined there. The implication is that since the image has an all-power- ful padarshin ball enshrined in its forehead, whatever you pray for at this image is likely to be granted. One striking feature of this image is the fact that it is very proportionally made. In fact, it is one of the handsomest brass images of the Buddha to be seen at the -Shwedagon Pagoda.
Another image of special note is the Myetshin (Living Eye) image well-known for its remarkably clear eyes. It is a brick image sitting cross-legged inside a shrine to be found in the Sunday (Southeastern) Corner of the Shwedagon Pagoda. Some people practice meditation at its foot in the belief that their vows will be fulfilled more easily owing to its special powers. By now, it should be obvious you that the Shwedagon and its environs abound in things of cultural interest. . Look anywhere at the pagoda and you are likely to find something that will intrigue you either by its appearance or its background or the myth behind it. For instance, there's the figure of king Okkalapa, the . builder of the original Shwedagon Pagoda which has been overbuilt again and again until it has attained the present shape and grandeur.[. You can see it at the Rahu (west-northwest) corner, hanging just below the first Pyitsaya (Platform). The figures of Sakka and MaiLamu (Miss Mangrove), the legendary parents of King Okklapa, can be seen at about the same height in the Saturday corner. Incidentally, it might be a good idea to bring binoculars to the pagoda so that you could see these figures and other interesting sights especially the jewels in the 'umbrella' of the pagoda, in close up. And you might be interested to know that: Sakka was the king of Devas or gods and MaiLamu was a fruitmaiden born of a man grove tree. To be more specific, there are six realms of gods altogether existing one on top of another according to traditional Buddhist cosmology and Sakka was only the ruler of the two lowest realms. MaiLamu grew up into a fine young woman with whom Sakka fell in love and King Okkalapa was the offspring of their union. D. Oh, would you like to visit the birth place of MaiLamu? You can do so easily. It is none other than the site of the Mai Lamu Pagoda, less than two miles to the north of the World-Peace Pagoda. There you can still see many mangrove trees growing near the pagoda which is worth a visit per se as it is noteworthy for its unusual tableaux in concrete depicting some incidents from the life of the Buddha or some of His disciples. If you want to sample some avant-garde Myanmar Buddhist sculpture, that's the place you ought to visit. Now let me tell you about some more notable features of the Shwedagon on.. There's a figure of a ' Brahma-a superior kind of god embracing a baby, to the east of the southern entrance prayer hall. Some people believe that prayers to the figure for the gift of a child are answered as a merit is also said that infants possessed by evil spirits can also be made well by praying to the figure. If you are interested in ogres, you can see two behind the two large figures of lions sitting on either side of the southern entrance and two more beside the wall near the top of the northern stairway. The former were donated by King Tharrawaddy when he visited the pagoda in 1841 and the latter were the gifts of Queen Shin Saw pu. Of special interest to scholars are the (stone) inscriptions of King Dhammaceti set up in 1485. There are three of them telling the story of the foundation of the pagoda in Mon Pali and Myanmar languages. They can be found in the north eastern corner of the main platform. Buddhists revere the Buddha so much that they even pay homage to His footprints- genuine or symbolic. There are three symbolic footprints of the Buddha at the Shwedagon, one in a shrine near the northern prayer hall and two in a shrine in the Tuesday Corner. Two big bells of special interest can also be seen at the Shwedagon.
One cast in 1778 and donated by King Singumin weighs about 24 tons. It was taken away as a trophy by the British during the First Anglo Myanmar War (1824-26), but sank in the Hlaing River. It was salvaged and replaced in the Rahu Corner of the pagoda in 1926, after a lot of Buddhists. The largest bell at the pagoda is the one donated by King Tharrawaddy in 1841. It weighs about 42 tons and can be seen in the Sunday Corner.
This bell has a very pleasant sound which is said to have three tones at least; its name in Pali is Maha Tisadda Ghanta meaning the great three toned bell.
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