The news that came out about the attack on Mahabodhi temple is an attack on civilization..what is this .. we do not understand ...It is a great shame to the whole of humanity..feelings of insecurity and helplessness creep in ...and we even feel guilty for not making a serious attempt to protect our great monuments...which has contributed unimaginable and great wisdom tot eh whole world. Great monuments are not history , they are living things which inspire the whole world to think better and do good things ..
Varma
The whole humanity remembers you and is being inspired by
YOU and YOUR GREAT TEACHINGS and it will continue for ever and ever ......Bless us
Where Buddha became enlightened-
THE HINDU
· 
The Mahabodhi temple (top)
and the Bodhi tree.— PHOTOS : SARVESH, Ranjeet Kumar
· 
The
temple, Bodhi tree, and six other sacred spots spread over 12 acres is a World
Heritage site
Among the
four places held most sacred by Buddhists, the Mahabodhi temple complex in Bodh
Gaya, located about 115 km south of Patna, is the most visited. The other
three, Lumbini, where he was born; Kusinagar, where he attained
Mahaparinirvana; and Sarnath, where he gave his first sermon, are equally
important, but Bodh Gaya is special. It is here Siddharth the restless and
inquisitive prince turned Buddha, the enlightened.
The Bodhi tree (Ficus religiosa or Peepal tree) under which the
Buddha is believed to have meditated and attained enlightenment is located
within this temple complex and venerated.
Ashoka built first temple
Emperor Ashoka built the first temple near Bodhi tree during the
3rd Century BCE, almost 300 years after Buddha’s period (566-486 B.C.E). The
temple was later rebuilt, and the present structure is datable to the late
Gupta period — 6th century CE. Fahien and Hieun Tsang, the Chinese travellers
who visited in 5th and 7th century respectively, recorded the existence of the
Bodhi tree and the railing around it.
The temple was under worship until the 13th century when it fell
into disuse. By that time Buddhism had declined in influence.
The structure slowly went to seed. Only during the 19th century,
archaeologists and antiquarians began taking proper notice of Buddhist sites.
In 1861, British archaeologists conducted excavations in the
Mahabodhi complex and later restored the temple.
The existing structure, which is 55 m tall, is among the oldest
brick Buddhist temples in India and occupies an area of 5.5 acres. The temple,
the Bodhi tree, and six other sacred spots — together spread over 12 acres —
constitute the core heritage zone. This historic area was inscribed as a UNESCO
World Heritage site in 2002 for its cultural and archaeological significance.
Unique management structure
The Bodh Gaya temple has a unique management structure and is
governed by a special legislation.
The Bihar government owns the temple complex and enacted the
Bodh Gaya Temple Act in 1949. This special arrangement had to be put in place
since the Hindus who had built a Siva temple in the campus many years ago also
claimed rights to manage. The government, through this Act, formed a
nine-member committee in 1953 with five Hindu and four Buddhist members to run
the temple. The District Magistrate heads the committee.
There is a long standing demand to implement the recommendation
of the National Commission for Minorities to hand over the management of the
temple complex to the Buddhists
The whole humanity remembers you and is being inspired by
YOU and YOUR GREAT TEACHINGS
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