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South China Morning Post
40 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
New head of scandal-hit Shaolin Temple avoids commercial activities, does manual work himself
The successor to the disgraced abbot of the internationally famous Shaolin Temple has shunned the lifestyle that got his predecessor into trouble. Advertisement Two days after Shi Yongxin, the former head of Shaolin Temple in central China's Henan province for more than two decades, was placed under investigation for financial and sex scandals, the temple announced that Shi Yinle, the abbot of The White Horse Temple, would replace him. Both holy places are located in Henan and are regarded as among the most significant Buddhist monasteries in China. Shi Yinle has been photographed driving a bulldozer as a mark of his commitment to honest work. Photo: Baidu The White Horse Temple is the first Buddhist temple in China and was established about 2,000 years ago. Shi Yinle, 59, has served as its abbot for 20 years. But, unlike his high-profile counterpart at the Shaolin Temple, Shi Yinle rarely appears in public, the Xinmin Weekly reported. Dubbed the 'CEO monk', Shi Yongxin transformed the Shaolin Temple into a multibillion-dollar cash cow. Advertisement Not only did all the items inside the temple, like bottled water and incense, come at a price, but monks frequently took part in commercial kung fu performances around the world.


The Standard
4 hours ago
- The Standard
Attacks in China and Japan raise concerns about xenophobia in both countries
Security personnel walk at a subway station platform in Suzhou, eastern China, where a Japanese woman living in China was reported to be attacked and injured on Thursday by a man, Friday, Aug. 1, 2025. (Kyodo News via AP)


South China Morning Post
6 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Sex, lies and video games: China's heated debate over sexism, misogyny
A young woman expelled from university for having sex with a foreigner. A man jailed for raping his fiancée after paying her the bride price. And a video game portraying women as gold diggers. Advertisement These are among the cases fuelling heated debate, and outrage, on Chinese social media in recent months over sexism, misogyny and gender stereotypes. The discussion started in April when a court in Datong, Shanxi province upheld the guilty verdict and three-year prison sentence of a man who had raped his fiancée the day after they got engaged. The case centred on whether the bride price he paid of 100,000 yuan (US$13,900) and a gold ring was considered marital consent and a tacit agreement for sex. In June, there was anger over stereotyping and sexism after a Chinese online game originally called Revenge on Gold Diggers shot to the top of gaming platforms on day one. Advertisement Players of the game are male characters being pursued by manipulative women who only want one thing: their money. The backlash prompted the game's creators to change the name to Emotional Anti-Fraud Simulator the day after its release.