Thursday, August 6, 2009

Cambodian Temple in Minnesota

It was big news a couple summers back -- a Cambodian temple opened in Minnesota.

The newspaper was full of pictures from the temple-opening ceremony, and after looking the over, Hubby and I decided we needed to check the place out. The images looked so similar to things we had seen while traveling in Cambodia ourselves.

And then...well, time passed. Somehow we never found the time to drive out and visit it.

Well, we made the time. We took a mini road trip to visit the Wat Munisota, which is about an hour drive from our home and just south of the Twin Cities.

But once you make it all the way out there, you feel like you're in the country -- the country side and an actual other county.

Our map took us down a dirt road and passed several corn and soy bean fields to get there. The temple is seriously out in the middle of nowhere and surrounded by green.

As soon as we pulled into the temple entrance we were greeted by a bald-headed monk in saffron robes painting light posts.

We wondered at the name ... was "Wat Munisota" supposed to be "Wat Minnesota"?

The temple was open to the public and full of ornate gold-painted Buddhas, vases of flowers and strings of glimmering beads. The life of the Buddha was retold in colorful paintings all the way around the worship hall.

We weren't the only "tourists" there either. A few other city folk had made the drive as well--a couple moms trying to give their elementary kids a cultural experience.

Besides them, the one monk we saw out at the main entrance, and a couple of landscapers who were working on a retaining wall, the place was pretty quiet.

It was really neat to see, though, and we were glad we'd made the time to go and check it out.

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3 Comments:

Blogger Mridula said...

Beautiful temple. We have quite a few in the Indian Himalayas too, I love the peace and quiet that goes with the temple.

August 6, 2009 at 8:30 AM  
Blogger Stephen Hartshorne said...

We have a really splendid Peace Pagoda on a hill in Leverett, Mass with giant statues of different figures in the history of Buddhism.
There was a wooden structure built by a Japanese order that was burned down by xenophobic locals during the Vietnam War, but then the community came together and helpd them build a giant concrete dome with gold trimmings. It's really something. I keep asking the nuns and monks what's inside, but they won't tell me.

August 6, 2009 at 5:46 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thats nice.
Peace is an asset.

August 6, 2009 at 9:01 PM  

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