The Giant Stone Buddha at Leshan

A 70-meter-high giant stone Buddha sits in the beautiful
Leshan Mountain at
the confluence of the Dadu, Qingyi and Minjiang rivers. Ten people together can
sit in the Buddha's hair bun and the space between his ear and face can hold two
standing people. Two people lying head to head and linking hands are shorter
than his toe, and the crown of an ordinary person's head does not reach the top
of his foot. The stone Buddha in his entirety can only be viewed from the other
side of the river.
The giant stone Buddha is properly shaped with accurate proportions, a solemn
expression and a strong sense of movement. It is amazing that ancient Chinese
artists and workers could make such a big statue with the simple tools they had
at that time. They were great talents with considerable creative spirit.
In Emperor xuanzong's reign of the Tang
Dynasty, an eminent monk named Haitong from Guizhou
Province once came to visit the Lingyun Temple
in Jiazhou (present-day Leshan County). He saw the torrents roaring in the river
under the cliff and heard that there were frequent shipwrecks at the spot. The
water course was an important channel connecting the Surrounding areas, so
Haitong decided to build a Buddha statue to control the floods and to promote Buddhism
among the people. He walked around the country to explain the spirit of
Buddhism, to collect funds and to look for capable craftsmen.
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