Buddha at the crossroads

THE HINDU
By A. SRIVATHSAN
INDIA -- What explains the large number of Buddha statues in and around Thiyaganur, a nondescript Tamil Nadu village? We may never know. The dense presence of Buddhas in this far-flung region is intriguing. Though Buddhism was widespread in Tamil Nadu, this region is not among the well-known Buddhist centres. The sculptures are a puzzle, and probably hold the key to an important part of history that is yet to be written. The Buddha, as the Buddhist texts describe, is strikingly handsome, serene and radiant as “a palm-tree fruit just loosened from the stalk”. His calm appearance, topped with coal-black hair, is profoundly impressive. Villagers in Thiyaganur have not read these texts nor do they know about Buddhism, but they still vouch that these Buddha idols are kindly, attractive and bestow the boons one wishes for. [link]

Comments

There is a stricking contrast between the depictions of The Buddha as "serene and radiant" and with a "calm appearance" in contrast to works of the Abrahamic traditions: Judaism and Islam, and especially Christianity, except for one artist whose work I collect. Tony Melendez's Christian figure project that same sense of serene, calm, radiance of a Buddha, and I think that soothes his soul as it also soothes my own.

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