Buddhist Relics to Stop in Toronto

September 5, 2004

Source: Toronto Star

http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1094206568354&call_pageid=991479973472&col=991929131147

On September 5, 2004 the Toronto Star reported, "More than 1,000 relics of the Buddha, Gautauma Siddartha, and many other Buddhist masters will stop for two days in Toronto during a world tour. The relics, rarely available for public viewing, are traditionally kept enshrined inside statues. Some of the relics on tour have been salvaged from desecrated statues in Tibet, says commercial real estate broker Paul Newton, 44, who is coordinating the Toronto stop on the tour. Others are from spiritual masters of the Chinese and Indian traditions... There is no admission charge, Newton says, but donations will be welcomed towards the building of a 152-metre bronze statue of Maitreya Buddha in Uttar Pradesh, northern India. The relics are intended to be eventually installed in the heart shrine of the statue, which is designed to be a monument to loving kindness. Most of the relics are pearl-like crystalline deposits or bone fragments collected from the cremated ashes of Buddhist masters. Buddhists texts suggest that visiting such relics can inspire peace and loving kindness in the viewers' hearts and minds. Relics will be visible inside display cases encircling a life-size Buddha statue."