Special report:
Tibet: Its Past and
Present
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A foundation-laying ceremony of Tibetan
Buddhism College is held in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet
Autonomous Region, on Oct. 18, 2008. With a total investment of 80 million
yuan (about 11 million U.S. dollars) and an area of 17.5 hectares, the
college is expected to be the first comprehensive higher educational
institution of Tibetan Buddhism in the region. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
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LHASA,
Oct. 18 (Xinhua) -- A general academy of Tibetan Buddhism, the first of its kind
in the southwestern autonomous region, began construction of the 80 million yuan
(11.7 million U.S. dollars) facility on Saturday.
The Tibetan Buddhism Academy in Nyetang Town, Quxu
County, covers an area of 17.4 hectares. Quxu is under the jurisdiction of the
regional capital Lhasa.
Its total investment is all from the central
government budget.
The first phase of construction will cost about 50
million yuan and is scheduled for completion in 2010. Its design includes a
library and buildings for religious activities.
"This will be the first comprehensive and high-level
Tibetan Buddhism academy in Tibet," said Lobsang Gyaincain, head of the United
Front Work Department of the Tibet committee of the Communist Party of China.
"The academy will contribute a lot to conducting
Buddhist studies and exchanges with the outside world."
The facility aims to train patriotic and devotional
religious personnel who are widely recognized both in their religious
accomplishments and moral character, he added.
In addition to religious theories, students will also
be taught knowledge of other disciplines such as politics and sociology.
Currently, Tibet has more than 1,700 religious venues
accommodating about 46,000 monks and nuns.
Since the 1980s, the central and local governments
have invested more than 700 million yuan for the preservation and maintenance of
monasteries and cultural relics in Tibet.