Bhudha temples in the world

Statues and paintings of Buddha have been kept in the grounds of temples and gardens since ancient times, and horticulture has strong links with Buddhism:

It is believed that;

The soil of the garden represents the fertile land of the Buddha's mind. A sangha (Pali for Buddhist community) is similar to a community of plants in a garden. Dhamma (teachings of Buddha) is an expression of knowledge that is in the temple garden.

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If a garden can be considered a mind:

Paths represent ways of enlightenment. Clay represents the state of our own inner karma. This planting represents fertile and blooming ideas. The changing seasons represent a changing mood. The Eastern tradition also states that the Buddha should not face south, as it is associated with the Hindu deity and Yama, the judge of the dead. North direction is the preferred direction when placing Buddha statues in the garden.

Buddhist Garden

Pure Land Buddhism

The construction of Buddhist gardens in Japan was inspired by the Pure Land Buddhist movement that originally came from China. Mandla as its center featured Buddha with a temple and a garden - this has led to the creation of gardens with similar symbolism.

Jain Buddhist

Zen Buddhism believes that building a good garden can contribute to knowledge and satisfaction. It requires a deep understanding of nature combined with skill, artistic judgment, and constant attention. Therefore, horticulture can be considered a religious activity.

They should usually be:

A beautiful place to sit quietly or meditate.
Several avenues for the practice of walking meditation.
Lotus pool with Buddha statue.
A place to feed fish, birds or animals.
The ten most beautiful Buddhist gardens in the world

1. Totekiko Temple Garden, Kyoto Japan

Kyoto, the temple of Totekiko, Japan, is one of the five gardens of Ryojan. It was laid in 1958, and is said to be the smallest Japanese rock garden. It is a small enclosed garden, made up of attractive simple stelae laid on sanded sand. These rocks are surrounded by a narrow gravel enclosure and are joined by parallel ridges and furs. The sun is received in the garden at around noon each day, and it is sometimes covered with snow in winter. The garden, representing a Zen, states that the harder a stone is thrown, the larger the waves will be.

2. Imperial War Museum Peace Garden, London UK

This beautiful and serene area is located in the park opposite the Imperial War Museum in Lameth. The park aims to encourage world peace and promote non-violence. Its Tibetan name is translated as "The Garden of Contemplation". This decoration uses many Buddhist symbols. A long column in the Dalai Lama's message about the importance of choosing non-violence is in four languages.

The layout of the garden is based on an eight spoke Buddhist wheel which represents the Noble Eightfold Path. The Noble Eight-fold Path has eight stone seats in a circle representing the eight principles. When you sit here you can focus on the center of the garden. Outside the region there is a trellis and plants from the Himalayas. The garden consciously represents elements of earth, fire, air and water, and space is often visited by Tibetan Buddhist teachers in London.

3. Mahabodhi Temple Garden, India

This temple is built on the actual place where Buddha reached for enlightenment sitting under the Bodhi tree. Almost all the activity in the temple takes place in the large garden surrounding this huge stone spire. It is full of tall, shady trees and small lawns, monuments and marigolds. The most sacred place of the Mahabodhi Temple is under a Bodhi tree. This Bodhi tree is grown from cuttings from a series of earlier Bodhi trees, which come from the original Bodhi tree under which Buddha sat and meditated 2,500 years ago. Buddhists from all over the world come to visit this holy site.

Some people sit near the Bodhi tree and some come in a group of Buddhist pilgrims from the same country. You see people worshiping in the garden of Mahabodhi Temple. The Bodhi tree is the place where all Buddhist meditation began. Around the Mahabodhi Temple you see people practicing Walking Meditation - walking slowly along the path that always makes the temple garden do so in a clockwise direction.

There is a beautiful meditation park on the east side of the temple which has many curved paths for meditation and small marble platforms where people can sit and meditate. This garden is filled with the sounds of thousands of brown myna birds. To the south of the Mahabodhi temple is a large, rectangular Lotus pool. In the center of the pool is a statue of Buddha. Aarethe tus pool is filled with large catfish.

4. Ryon-ji Temple Garden - The Temple of the Peaceful Dragon, Kyoto Japan

It is a Zen temple located in northwestern Kyoto, Japan. The temple is one of the historical monuments of Kyoto and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site characterized by a dry landscape rock garden. The dry landscape rock garden was built at the end of the 13th century. It consists of boulders covered with baked gravel and fifteen mosses, so that when looking at the garden from any angle, only fourteen boulders are visible at a time.

5. Sigiriya Temple, Sri Lanka

It is a World Heritage Site and is sometimes said to be the oldest surviving garden in Asia. It was originally a residential palace garden which later became the garden of the Mahayana Buddhist Monastery. The current layout of Sigiriya is believed to date to the 5th century AD.

6. Lumbini, India

It was the site of Buddha's birth. The site was rediscovered in 1896. At the time of its discovery, there were earth banks in the sacred pool. It now has a paved margin and stages - but is an exceptionally quiet place. The garden also includes a bath tank of sakis where the water is bright and clear as a mirror and covers its surface with a mixture of flowers. It was here that the Bodhisattva was born.

7. Kagyu Sami Ling Monastery, Scotland

This location is a Tibetan Buddhist complex located in Esselademir near Dumfries, Scotland. Tara Healing Garden preserves and promotes medicinal herbs native to Tibet. The grounds have a garden of world peace, an organic kitchen garden, a winery with a greenhouse, peach-houses, and a traditional herb garden (Tarahelinggarden) that preserves and promotes medicinal herbs native to Tibet. The orchard is surrounded by woodland and is arable land grazed by yak herds.

8. Secret Buddha Garden, Kou Samui, Thailand

This beautiful place of Ko Samui is one of the most important tourist attractions of Ko Samui. It was designed and built in 1976 by a fruit farmer named Nim Thongsuk, who was 77 years old when he started building the garden. The region also has another name - "Uncle Nimm's garden". It is surrounded by forests and rocky hills and is a bit difficult to find as it is situated on an island high on a mountain. The entire garden is replete with statues and statues depicting humans as well as various gods and Buddhas.

9. The Peace Pagoda and Peace Temple Gardens, UK

Founded by a Buddhist monk from Japan, Nikidatsu Fuji, who worked with Gandhi on finding peaceful ways to protest the government's wrongdoing. After World War II, it campaigned vigorously against nuclear weapons. He was 100 and his movement created 80 Shanti Pagodas and Peace Gardens all over the world. There are a thousand cherry trees in the beautiful gardens around the pagoda and cedars have been planted to remind the victims of all wars.

To the left of the pagoda are a small Japanese garden of rocks, a water lily pond full of moss and bushes and carp, and a small moss garden to the right of the temple. Behind the temple is a distinctive Zen garden of rocks and gravel. Finally, there is a stupa behind the Zen garden.

10. Wenshu Math Garden, Chengdu, China

This Zen Buddhist monastery temple is set in gardens with magnificent landscapes, with examples of religious Chinese architecture, as well as luxurious vegetarian restaurants.

The terrain park within the Wenshu Monastery is very beautiful and serene and is beautifully maintained and clean and has many trees and shrubs as well as spectacular water features. The courtyard and garden look melting into each other for a very calm and reflective atmosphere.

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