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Devotees devastated as Guanyin statue vanishes from Batu Niah temple; committee appeals for its return
Devotees devastated as Guanyin statue vanishes from Batu Niah temple; committee appeals for its return

Malay Mail

time11 hours ago

  • Malay Mail

Devotees devastated as Guanyin statue vanishes from Batu Niah temple; committee appeals for its return

MIRI, June 9 — A porcelain statue of the Bodhisattva Guanyin, enshrined at the Batu Niah Town Tua Pek Kong Temple for more than three decades, was reported stolen in the early hours of June 6, leaving devotees in shock and sorrow. According to the temple's spokesperson, the disappearance was first noticed by a worshipper who arrived to offer prayers, only to find the statue missing. 'The temple committee was immediately informed of the incident,' she added. The spokesperson said the Guanyin statue holds deep spiritual and historical significance for the temple. 'It was the very first Bodhisattva statue ever enshrined at the temple's altar and was personally brought by the temple's founding monk, Venerable Master Sheng Lin, in 1994 when the temple was established. 'Since then, it has served as a symbol of the faith and the founding spirit of the temple,' she explained. The spokesperson noted that despite the temple being a simple wooden structure, it had never experienced theft before. 'The sudden and mysterious disappearance of the status has not only caused concern among devotees but also highlighted the need for better protection of religious artifacts,' she added. Meanwhile, Batu Niah Buddhist Association chairman Chong Teck Huat said a police report has been lodged and that police are investigating the incident. 'We urge anyone with information to come forward and assist,' he said, expressing hope that the statue can be recovered soon the restore peace of mind to the community. 'The statue is not just a status. It is a living testament to the temple's founding We sincerely hope the Bodhisattva can be returned to its rightful place soon.' He called on devotees to remain mindful, and continue praying, trusting that the truth would soon come to light. — The Borneo Post

Scenes from a Repatriation review – 12 ingenious questions about cultural ownership
Scenes from a Repatriation review – 12 ingenious questions about cultural ownership

The Guardian

time01-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Scenes from a Repatriation review – 12 ingenious questions about cultural ownership

Controversies over statues of cultural figureheads have churned in the news in recent years. The repatriation of a fictional 12th-century statue of a Chinese deity, carved in stone, forms the central dispute in Singaporean Joel Tan's play. The Bodhisattva Guanyin reclines in the 'royal ease' pose at one end of a traverse stage, designed by TK Hay, with a combination of screens and mirrors. The drama is formed of 12 distinct scenes, loosely connected around the statue. It begins choppily inside the British Museum with patronising or incendiary debate by protesters and curators, sometimes set beside flashes of 19th-century imperial history. The tone switches from serious-minded to satirical to gnomic. But its disparate parts coalesce and gather intellectual complexity as well as dramatic intensity, all enacted with zest by a six-strong cast: Kaja Chan, Aidan Cheng, Jon Chew, Fiona Hampton, Robin Khor Yong Kuan and Sky Yang. There is playful yet disciplined direction by experimentalists emma + pj, with actors using the auditorium in original yet unmessy ways. We travel from protests in London, inside and outside the museum, to a Chinese detention centre, Shanghai Pudong airport and a splashy Beijing party thrown by the industrialist who secures the return of the statue. An overseas Chinese student protester confronting his British tutor opens up ideas on identity, covert racism and art – a statue can be in exile like a refugee, says the student. A Chinese official interrogating a cartoonist offers new dimensions to cultural appropriation and artistic protest. The Beijing party brings troubling patriotism and anti-western contempt that intersects with shocking misogyny. These scenes are relatively brief but contain real depth of thought. Neither are they bluntly polemical but wrapped within character and incident. 'All of human history is basically people taking things from each other,' someone says. It does not seem to be an argument for leaving, for example, the Parthenon marbles in the British Museum, but the play cleverly muddies the idea of provenance and ownership. A character states that the Bodhisattva Guanyin is not even a Chinese figure but is in fact Indian. The play's various scenarios complicate the debate and lay bare the politics of repatriation. The Chinese magnate who virtually bribes the museum into returning the statue places it in Shanghai's airport so that the deity is turned into a symbol of power – and the rise and fall of empires. The Bodhisattva herself presides over all of it, watching over centuries of history, but the statue remains wrapped throughout. This obfuscation is puzzling – yet another one of the play's interesting ideas. This is innovative theatre, shining with intelligence, which brings richness to our cultural tussle with the problem of ancient statues and their rightful place in the world. At the Royal Court theatre, London, until 24 May

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