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XINING, March 5 (Xinhuanet) -- The ticket price to the Gumbum Lamasery, a holy shrine for the Yellow Sect of Tibetan Buddhism, in Northwest China's Qinghai Province, will be raised from 35 yuan (about 4.3 U.S. dollars) to 80 yuan (9.8 U.S. dollars) beginning March 15.
The price hike has been approved by the provincial
development and reform commission, a source from the commission said.
A public hearing was also organized about the price
adjustment late last year.
Active-duty servicemen, disabled military service
people, retirees from the military, as well as children before school age will
be allowed to visit the lamasery free of charge, while half-off discounts will
be given to students, senior citizens and the handicapped, an official from the
commission said.
The Gumbum Lamasery, also called "Ta'er Temple" in
Chinese, is located in Huangzhong County of Qinghai Province or 20 km away from
Xining, the provincial capital.
It was built in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) in memory
of Tzongkhapa, founder of the influential Gelugba Sect or Yellow Sectof Tibetan
Buddhism and a tutor of the Panchen and Dalai Lamas. It is one of the six
most eminent lamaseries of the Gelugba Sect or Yellow Sect of Tibetan Buddhism.
The lama temple is referred to by experts as "the
imperial palace of the northwest " because of the axis running directly through
its mid-section, dividing the temple into two symmetrical parts, just like the
imperial palace in Beijing. The temple has remained intact, but centuries of
weathering and the lack of maintenance have damaged the buildings, murals and
cultural relicsinside. Enditem |