US$ 3b Buddhist Centre for Lumbini
China is providing funds to Nepal to build a US$3 billion Buddhist
Centre to attract millions of pilgrims and spiritual tourists to the
birthplace of the Buddha.
Lumbini is a UNESCO World Heritage Site that attracts half-a- million
pilgrims every year from China, India, Japan, Sri Lanka and Thailand to
its ponds, gardens and temples. Planners hope to build an airport,
hotels, convention centres, highways, temples and a Buddhist university
at the site on Nepal's Western border with India, where Buddha was born
about 2,600 years ago.
The scheme is supported by a Chinese government-backed foundation.
It also has the support of Steven Clark Rockefeller, the heir to the
Rockefeller dynasty. According to Nepali officials devout Buddhists
spend more time at the other three main pilgrimage sites in India
because Lumbini does not have the infrastructure for longer stays.
Saranath, in India's Uttar Pradesh, where Buddha first taught the
Dhamma, Bodh Gaya in Bihar, where he attained Enlightenment under the
Sacred Bodhi tree and Kushinagar where he reached Parinibbana are all
drawing increasing numbers of high-spending tourists, and Nepal's
government wants to increase its share of this income.
China and Nepal signed an agreement earlier this year to develop the
site, and the Beijing-based Asia Pacific Exchange and Co-operation
Foundation has launched an ambitious campaign to raise the three billion
US dollars required for the site to be transformed into the world's
leading Buddhist pilgrimage site.
Nepali Government officials have made a number of fund-raising trips
to Singapore and Malaysia, and hope the project will create new jobs in
Lumbini, a poor area.
|