Shwe Mawdaw Phaya (ရွှေမောဓောဘုရား)
Burmese. Name
of a Buddhist
pagoda
in
Bago, which houses a relic of
the
Buddha,
i.e. one of the three
strands of his hair that legends claims the Buddha gave to three
hermits,
who brought them to
Burma. One of the
other strands is today stored in
the
Golden Rock
on
Mount
Kyaihtiyo (fig.).
The temple's centerpiece is its
large bell-shaped pagoda which houses the Buddha's relic. In 1917, an
earthquake caused the pinnacle of the original
zedi
to collapse and tumble down. Hence,
the
stupa
was repaired and part of the former
peak has been preserved at the base of the pagoda and has been made into
a shrine in its own right.
The temple also features a
Buddhist Wheel of Health, i.e. a horizontal wheel with
small paddle boats, each with a marker bearing the
name of a
disease or an ailment and
circling around a larger boat at the center by a automated system.
Visitors can
gain merit by making balls from paper money, which they
aim at the passing boats, attemting to throw the money into the paddle
boat of their choice, and which corresponds to the
ailment
that troubles them, a friend or a relative. When
successful, it is believed that the
specific
ailment of those affected
will
pass away and their health be restored
(fig.).
The temple also has a small museum and a
Bamboo Buddha
known as
Mahalabamuni
(map
-
fig.).
See also
MAP,
TRAVEL PICTURES (1) and
(2).
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