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  2. Peace Pagoda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_Pagoda

    A Peace Pagoda is a Buddhist stupa: a monument to inspire peace, designed to provide a focus for people of all races and creeds, and to help unite them in their search for world peace. Most, though not all, peace pagodas built since World War II have been built under the guidance of Nichidatsu Fujii (1885–1985), a Buddhist monk from Japan and ...

  3. Peace Pagoda, Darjeeling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_Pagoda,_Darjeeling

    The pagoda was designed by M. Ohka, and it took 36 months to construct. It houses the four avatars of Buddha including Maitreya Buddha. The height of the pagoda is 28.5 metres (94 ft) and diameter is 23 metres (75 ft).The Pagoda is situated on the slopes of the Jalapahar hills, in the town of Darjeeling.

  4. Nipponzan-Myōhōji-Daisanga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nipponzan-Myōhōji-Daisanga

    Nipponzan-Myōhōji-Daisanga (日本山妙法寺大僧伽), often referred to as just Nipponzan Myohoji or the Japan Buddha Sangha, is a Japanese new religious movement and activist group founded in 1917 by Nichidatsu Fujii, [1] emerging from Nichiren Buddhism. [2] "Nipponzan Myōhōji is a small Nichiren Buddhist order of about 1500 persons ...

  5. Vishwa Shanti Stupa, Rajgir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vishwa_Shanti_Stupa,_Rajgir

    Vishwa Shanti Stupa ('World Peace Stupa') is a large white Peace Pagoda in Rajgir, Nalanda District, Bihar, near Gitai Mandir. Statues of the Buddha are mounted on the stupa in four directions. It also has a small Japanese Buddhist temple with a large park. There is a temple near the stupa where prayers are conducted for universal peace.

  6. List of Buddhist temples in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Buddhist_temples...

    Chion-in (Head temple of the Jōdo-shū Buddhist sect) Daigo-ji; Daikaku-ji; Daitoku-ji; Eikan-dō Zenrin-ji (Head temple of the Seizan branch of Jōdo-shū) Ginkaku-ji (Temple of the Silver Pavilion) Higashi-Honganji (Head temple of the Ōtani-ha branch within the Jōdo Shinshū school) Kinkaku-ji (Rokuonji, Deer Garden Temple, Temple of the ...

  7. Nichidatsu Fujii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nichidatsu_Fujii

    The first Peace Pagodas were built as a symbol of peace in the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki where the atomic bombs took the lives of over 150,000 people, almost all of whom were civilian, at the end of World War II. Fujii returned to India and built a World Peace Pagoda in Rajgir, in 1965. He also built a Japanese style temple in ...

  8. Pagoda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pagoda

    The pagoda of Japan Pavilion at Epcot, Florida, built in 1982; Pagoda of Tianning Temple, the tallest pagoda in the world since its completion in April 2007, stands at 153.7 m in height. Nepalese Peace Pagoda in Brisbane, Australia built for the World Expo '88

  9. Japanese pagoda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_pagoda

    Pagodas in Japan are called tō (塔, lit. pagoda), sometimes buttō (仏塔, lit. Buddhist pagoda) or tōba (塔婆, lit. pagoda), and derive historically from the Chinese pagoda, itself an interpretation of the Indian stupa. [1] Like the stupa, pagodas were originally used as reliquaries, but in many cases ended up losing this function. [2]