Laos travel tips: Best Ancient Buddhist temple in Vientiane

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  • Опубліковано 21 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 15

  • @chanthasendarath1906
    @chanthasendarath1906 4 місяці тому +1

    Laos 👍🙏❤

    • @VicStefanu
      @VicStefanu  4 місяці тому +1

      Thanks for watching! 😊😊😊

  • @geneballay9590
    @geneballay9590 8 років тому +1

    Another Grrrrreat video. Thank you for all the work

    • @VicStefanu
      @VicStefanu  8 років тому

      +Gene Ballay Thank you for viewing my videos!!

  • @mcfrdmn
    @mcfrdmn 8 років тому +2

    Lovely video of the ancient Buddhist temple of Wat Si Muang in VIENTIANE capital of LAOS. The inside of this Buddhist temple is simply immaculate, and those statues of
    Buddha have been very carefully carved and painted. Given the hot and humid climate of Laos, I was truly surprised that they only have a floor fan to cool the rear room where
    prayers and blessings to Buddha were taking place. It appears that the monks and priests were expecting cash offerings from all those visitors who went to the temple to
    be blessed by the priest and monks, since everything was carefully set out for the
    visitors to give the priests their money in return for the priestly blessings. I would have
    thought that the rear room especially would have been airconditioned.
    I am quite surprised that the monks and priests allowed you to video tape in their
    temple, and especially in the rear room housing the altars. From what I had understood
    these monks and priests were very private people who kept to themselves, and usually
    would not permit the filming on the grounds of their temples and shrines.
    The sculptures inside the temple were magnificently carved, and carefully painted and
    crafted.
    As a matter of curiosity, did the monks and priests require you to tithe to their temple in order to get their permission to film inside of their temple.
    From what I could see, the monks and priests would need continual donations from
    all visitors in order to pay for the upkeep of this historic temple.

    • @VicStefanu
      @VicStefanu  8 років тому

      +Michael Friedman Hi Michael, you are right, the monks expect a small donation for their blessings.. No air-conditioning anywhere and if you were to go in the middle of the day, you would have to deal with temperatures in the high 30sC (90sF).. A lot of people were videotaping and taking photographs, so I was allowed to do so as well (as long as I paid an admission ticket of $2, for tourists only)..

  • @kovithPathoumphanh
    @kovithPathoumphanh Рік тому +1

    Sa took Sa took Sa took 🙏🙏🙏❤️♥️♥️

    • @VicStefanu
      @VicStefanu  11 місяців тому +1

      Hello, thank you for watching my videos!! 😊😊

  • @johnnytravel-theworld5016
    @johnnytravel-theworld5016 8 років тому +1

    How many countries have you been to??

  • @chouxsojunetie4065
    @chouxsojunetie4065 2 роки тому +1

    this one looks like kin kakuji temple in japan. the sizing scale is little different. it has less wonder on laos’ question of future development.

    • @VicStefanu
      @VicStefanu  2 роки тому +1

      Hello, thank you for your comments and for watching my videos!! 👍👍👍

  • @meandmymouth
    @meandmymouth 8 років тому

    Thanks Vic for another great vid. I'm not a religious person but I do have some cheap Buddhist sculptures in my home which I bought from places like TK Max purely for their decorative value. As far as I can understand the Buddhist faith seems to divide into two streams "Those who think" and "Those who do" . The monks and priests seem to spend most of their time in prayer and quiet contemplation whilst those who create those wonderful temples and statues you showed us in your vid must have spent countless hours in hard and meticulous physical work. This seems to me to be a justified balance and symmetry between two opposing modes. As a bit of a quotation collecting junkie it fits perfectly with the ascribed quote from the particle physicist Niels Bohr who is supposed to have said "The opposite is also true " :-)

    • @VicStefanu
      @VicStefanu  8 років тому

      +meandmymouth I know what you mean (about the opposites).. It is totally fascinating, when travelling around SE Asia, to visit these monasteries and temples and to see how the monks live, how they pray, etc... an incredible experience indeed and I am so glad I have had the opportunity to videotape them not only in Laos, but in Cambodia, Thailand, etc......

  • @lallyoisin
    @lallyoisin 3 роки тому

    Dharmachakra on the ceiling. Was it a hindu temple before buddhist?
    Along with Cambodia the most bombed place ever!
    Quick change of religion and history is wiped
    The needle returns to the start of the song..
    And we all sing along like before!

    • @VicStefanu
      @VicStefanu  3 роки тому +1

      Thanks for visiting! 👍👍👍 It is possible that the earliest temples started as Hindu temples..