Ancient Buddhist monastery conserved in SW China's Tibet
www.chinaview.cn, November 12, 2009

<< Ceyun Bainco feeds a young Tibetan antelope at Sonam Daje Natural Protection Station in Hol Xil Natural Reserve in Northwest China's Qinghai Province, Oct. 23, 2009. (Xinhua/Hou Deqiang)
LHASA, Nov. 12 (Xinhua) -- First-phase of the project to conserve a more-than-1,000-year-old Tibetan Buddhist monastery in Ngari prefecture of southwestern China's Tibet Autonomous Region has been completed, and the second phase will begin soon.
Tsering Tashi, head of the prefecture's culture bureau, said Thursday that the second phase will focus on restoration and consolidation of monk dormitories and residential buildings of civilians surrounding the Khorchak Monastery.
The first phase, which began in October 2008, featured restoration of two main halls of the monastery, including anti-infiltration treatment and consolidation arrangements for the roofs, according to Tsering Tashi.
The original styles and features of the monastery have been maintained in the conservation project, which costs 15 million yuan (2.2 million U.S. dollars), he added.
<< Picture shows Tibetan lamas at a Buddhist scripture debate in Sera Monastery, Lhasa, capital of Tibet, Nov. 8, 2009. Buddhist scripture debate is a required course of study in Tibetan Buddhist monasteries and also a way to check the achievement lamas have made in religious philosophy. There are fixed places for conducting the debate and those who become qualified will receive academic degrees. (Photo: tibet.cn)
Located in Khorchak village of Burang county, the monastery is a well-known one for the Sakya Tradition of the Tibetan Buddhism. Built in 996, it boasts profounding influence among the Buddhist followers in Ngari prefecture and the nearby Nepal.
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