
After fighting over this Buddhist statue, Japan temple helps Korean counterpart in making replicas with 3D data
According to the Korea Herald, the Kannon Temple in Japan handed over 3D data of the Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva statue to Buseoksa Temple after previously fighting a legal battle to reclaim the statue.
Thieves had stolen the statue from Kannon Temple on Japan's Tsushima Island in 2012 and taken it to South Korea.
However, South Korean authorities had arrested the thieves and confiscated the statue, only for the local Buseoksa Temple to file a lawsuit claiming the statue had previously been stolen by Japanese pirates in years past.
In 2023, South Korea's Supreme Court ruled in favour of Kannon Temple meaning the statue must be returned to them, which happened on May 12 this year.
Kannon Temple's chief priest Setsuryo Tanaka had visited the temple yesterday and handed over a USB drive with the 3D scan data, said Buseoksa chief monk Wonwoo.
Buseoksa had previously requested a scan be made while the statue was still in South Korea, only to be rebuffed by Japan.
'After the statue was returned to Japan, it stayed at the Kannonji Temple for a day before being moved to a museum. Feeling a sense of loss, the temple began to understand how deeply Koreans must have felt when the statue was taken from them. Moved by this empathy, they decided to share the 3D data with us," Wonwoo said in remarks to Korea Herald.
What next? Buseoksa plans to create three copies of the statue, with one to be covered in gold leaf and kept in the temple while two more will be placed on display elsewhere.
Weighing 38.6 kilograms, the Seated Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva is made of bronze and measures 50.5 centimetres in height.
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Malay Mail
07-07-2025
- Malay Mail
After fighting over this Buddhist statue, Japan temple helps Korean counterpart in making replicas with 3D data
TOKYO, July 7 — South Korea and Japan's ties have a complicated history but a dispute over a 14th-century Buddhist statue only added to the pre-existing friction. According to the Korea Herald, the Kannon Temple in Japan handed over 3D data of the Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva statue to Buseoksa Temple after previously fighting a legal battle to reclaim the statue. Thieves had stolen the statue from Kannon Temple on Japan's Tsushima Island in 2012 and taken it to South Korea. However, South Korean authorities had arrested the thieves and confiscated the statue, only for the local Buseoksa Temple to file a lawsuit claiming the statue had previously been stolen by Japanese pirates in years past. In 2023, South Korea's Supreme Court ruled in favour of Kannon Temple meaning the statue must be returned to them, which happened on May 12 this year. Kannon Temple's chief priest Setsuryo Tanaka had visited the temple yesterday and handed over a USB drive with the 3D scan data, said Buseoksa chief monk Wonwoo. Buseoksa had previously requested a scan be made while the statue was still in South Korea, only to be rebuffed by Japan. 'After the statue was returned to Japan, it stayed at the Kannonji Temple for a day before being moved to a museum. Feeling a sense of loss, the temple began to understand how deeply Koreans must have felt when the statue was taken from them. Moved by this empathy, they decided to share the 3D data with us," Wonwoo said in remarks to Korea Herald. What next? Buseoksa plans to create three copies of the statue, with one to be covered in gold leaf and kept in the temple while two more will be placed on display elsewhere. Weighing 38.6 kilograms, the Seated Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva is made of bronze and measures 50.5 centimetres in height.


Malay Mail
06-07-2025
- Malay Mail
Hiroshima's young artists bring atomic bomb survivors' stories to life on canvas
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Malay Mail
03-07-2025
- Malay Mail
Japan briefly orders evacuation as 1,000 quakes shake Tokara Islands since June
TOKYO, July 3 — Japanese authorities urged the 89 residents of a small southern island to evacuate after a strong earthquake today, the latest of more than 1,000 recent jolts to hit the area. Residents were urged to evacuate to 'a school playground in Akuseki Island,' a municipal official told AFP. Akuseki is part of the Tokara island chain south of Kyushu region, which has been rattled by 1,031 quakes since June 21. No major damage has been reported. After all residents were confirmed safe, the evacuation instruction was later lifted. Today, a 5.5 magnitude quake struck near Akuseki. Yesterday, a jolt of the same size was also recorded. Seven of the 12 remote Tokara Islands are inhabited, with around 700 residents in total. There was no tsunami risk from today's quake, according to Ayataka Ebita, director of the earthquake and tsunami observation division of the Japan Meteorological Agency. 'In areas where the tremors were strong, there is an increased risk of collapsed houses and landslides,' he told reporters. 'Please be aware of earthquakes of similar magnitude for the foreseeable future,' he said. A similar period of intense seismic activity in the Tokara area occurred in September 2023, when 346 earthquakes were recorded, according to the JMA. Japan is one of the world's most seismically active countries, sitting on top of four major tectonic plates along the western edge of the Pacific 'Ring of Fire'. The archipelago, home to around 125 million people, typically experiences around 1,500 jolts every year and accounts for about 18 per cent of the world's earthquakes. In 2011, a magnitude-9.0 quake triggered a tsunami that left 18,500 people dead or missing and caused a devastating meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant. Quakes are extremely hard to predict, but in January a government panel marginally increased the probability of a major jolt in the Nankai Trough off Japan in the next 30 years to 75–82 per cent. The government then released a new estimate in March saying that such a 'megaquake' and subsequent tsunami could cause as many as 298,000 deaths and damages of up to US$2 trillion. This week, the government released a report saying much more needed to be done to prepare for such a megaquake. Some foreign tourists have held off coming to Japan due to unfounded fears fanned by social media that a major quake is imminent. Causing particular concern is a manga comic reissued in 2021 which predicted a major disaster on July 5, 2025. 'We are aware that such tales are circulating, but that is a hoax,' Ebita at the JMA said. 'With today's science and technology, it is not possible to predict earthquakes.' — AFP