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ellisonz

(27,759 posts)
Thu Jan 26, 2012, 02:41 AM Jan 2012

Buddhism's Sacred Places: Photos By Kenro Izu

First Posted: 5/29/11 10:09 AM ET Updated: 7/29/11 06:12 AM ET

A picture may say a thousand words, but taken by Kenro Izu it is more like a thousand silent breaths. In Izu's photography, ethereal moments, sacred places and holy people are frozen in motion. His medium -- platinum prints -- has a timeless, contemplative quality. And in fact, meditation is a part of how he gets the shot. Asked how he decides it's time to snap the photo, he responded, "I try to face a monument, blank my thinking, and see if it vibrates to my heart."

Izu has traveled the world with his custom camera, but we've compiled just 10 photos that brilliantly capture the geography -- inner and outer -- of Buddhism. The photographer has included insights into how he established each frame.



Mt. Kailash

More: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/05/29/buddhisms-sacred-places-p_n_867690.html#s273630&title=Mt_Kailash_in

There are 11 photos in total. Enjoy.
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Buddhism's Sacred Places: Photos By Kenro Izu (Original Post) ellisonz Jan 2012 OP
Seven Wonders of the Buddhist World- Documentary Ichingcarpenter Jan 2012 #1

Ichingcarpenter

(36,988 posts)
1. Seven Wonders of the Buddhist World- Documentary
Fri Jan 27, 2012, 09:22 AM
Jan 2012

In this fascinating documentary, historian Bettany Hughes travels to the seven wonders of the Buddhist world and offers a unique insight into one of the most ancient belief systems still practiced today.
Buddhism began 2,500 years ago when one man had an amazing internal revelation underneath a peepul tree in India. Today it is practiced by over 350 million people worldwide, with numbers continuing to grow year on year.

In an attempt to gain a better understanding of the different beliefs and practices that form the core of the Buddhist philosophy and investigate how Buddhism started and where it traveled to, Hughes visits some of the most spectacular monuments built by Buddhists across the globe.

Her journey begins at the Mahabodhi Temple in India, where Buddhism was born; here Hughes examines the foundations of the belief system – the three jewels.
At Nepal’s Boudhanath Stupa, she looks deeper into the concept of dharma – the teaching of Buddha, and at the Temple of the Tooth in Sri Lanka, Bettany explores karma, the idea that our intentional acts will be mirrored in the future



See video
http://www.peteava.ro/id-760713-bbc-seven-wonders-of-the-buddhist-world

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