The Central Highlands province of Gia Lai not only has majestic forests, endless coffee fields, poetic Biển Hồ (Sea Lake) and immense green tea hills, it also has a beautiful and unique pagoda named Minh Thành.
The main hall of Minh Thành Pagoda. — Photo phatgiao.org.vn
I was lucky enough to visit this pagoda after a two-day assignment in Pleiku City.
The pagoda is located in the heart of the city on a gentle hill on Nguyễn Viết Xuân Street. It has a unique, Japanese and Chinese-style architecture with exquisite carvings and a beautiful green campus, creating a peaceful space.
The pagoda was built in 1964 by Most Venerable Thích Giác Đạo and has since been restored and become more beautiful and splendid.
From a distance, the pagoda looks like a miniature palace in the misty and mountainous city. I could easily see the curved roofs of the pagoda amidst the blue sky. The pagoda was embraced by a fanciful mist that made it feel as if I was in Japan.
The pagoda yard is quite large and decorated with stone statues and wooden materials carved sophisticatedly. It also has a very green space designed with trees to make the atmosphere fresh and pure. Around the lake, many small willow trees hang down.
Old wind chimes in Minh Thành Pagoda. — Photo halotravel.vn
In the small alleys of the pagoda, there are many mossy walls interlaced with creeping vegetation, evidence of the age of the temple.
Minh Thành Pagoda has a total area of more than 20,000sq.m. The architecture of the pagoda is built in the form of a mandala which represents the universe and all the details carved here follow the foundation of Buddhist philosophy.
When arriving at the pagoda, I saw a nine-story relic tower, standing majestically amid the blue sky. The 72m-high tower is painted gold and is one of the tallest architectural works of Pleiku. The tower is built in the Japanese architectural style with a distinctive curved roof.
The nine-storey tower in Minh Thành Pagoda. — Photo 123didulich.com
The pagoda's main hall can be seen after passing a three-entrance gate. Its ceiling was made of pơ mu, a type of wood which is well known in the local forests. The six entrance doors are made of wood with a thickness of 20cm and carved with six Bodhisattvas.
The main worshipping hall has two stories, Đại Hùng Bửu Điện and Đại Bi Điện. Inside the hall is a Buddhist altar which is 6m long and 1.2m high. In the four corners are four statues of the Bodhisattva of Compassion.
The left of the hall is the two-storey bell tower with two bells, in which the heaviest bell weighs 3 tonnes. The right side is a three-storey tower, Từ Ân. It is decorated with stylised dragons and lotus flowers. It was built very similarly to the Japanese temple architecture but still has a Vietnamese cultural identity.
The top of Từ Ân tower seen in the late afternoon. — Photo traveloka.com
The main hall’s walls are decorated with more than 3,000 statues, all embossed into the wall very elaborately.
There is a big statue of Amitabha in the middle of Liên Trì Lake in front of the pagoda. The stone statue is 7.5m high and weighs 40 tonnes. Next to it is the largest bronze incense burner in Việt Nam, weighing 4 tonnes. After ascending 30 stone steps, I was surprised at the architectural beauty of the pagoda.
Strolling slowly under the trees, listening to the bell of the pagoda ring and the scent of frankincense spreading in the space, I felt lost in a fairyland. I took a deep breath and enjoyed some peace, quiet in the misty land of the mountainous city.
A corner of Minh Thành Pagoda. — Photo gody.vn
Lam Giang