Sariras enshrined again in 1,200-year-old Buddhist pagoda
2015-09-16 The Korea Herald
Sacred sarira relics were placed back in an ancient Buddhist pagoda at the Bulguk Temple in Gyeongju on Wednesday as ongoing repairs are near completion.
Sariras are crystals that are sometimes found among the cremated remains of Buddhist monks. They were put in a hole inside the main structure of the Seokga Pagoda, along with their container and a document on the history of repairing the pagoda after a brief Buddhist ritual.
"Sariras are bright, transparent and incomparable to any treasures. We put
them in the Seokga Pagoda that carries the dreams of the Silla Dynasty on Sept.
16, 2015. If enshrined today, they will be exposed one or two thousand years
later if things go normally," a chief monk of the temple said in his
speech during the ritual.
The authorities took out a total of 46 sariras in 2013 while disassembling the
pagoda to repair cracks found in the foundation stone. But only 28 of them were
enshrined again there, with 18 to be placed in a museum run by the temple.
The National Research Institute of Cultural Heritage in charge of repairing the
national treasure said it will complete reassembling the three-story structure
so it can regain its original status by the end of the year.
The Seokga Pagoda is believed to have been completed in the mid-8th century,
about 200 years after the construction of the Buddhist temple in 535 in
Gyeongju, about 370 kilometers southeast of Seoul. The city was the
millennium-old capital of the Silla Dynasty that emerged from Korea's southeast
and later unified much of the Korean Peninsula. The Bulguk Temple has been
inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage list.
It has undergone two previous rounds of repairs. The most recent repairs were
done in 1966, when it was partly damaged by robbers in their unsuccessful
attempt to steal the sarira container. In the repair process, lots of cultural
assets, including the "Mugujeonggwang Great Dharani Sutra," known as
the world's oldest existing print done with wood blocks, were found in the
compartment inside the tower. (Yonhap)