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Obituary | Hsing Yun, Taiwan’s ‘political monk’ and founder of Fo Guang Shan, dies aged 95
- Hsing Yun was a firm advocate of peaceful reunification and a guest of presidents on both sides of the Taiwan Strait
- He worked hard to avoid conflict with mainland authorities but was blacklisted in the early 1990s
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Lawrence Chungin Taipei
Taiwan has remembered one of its most influential and revered Buddhist monks as a man who promoted international harmony and backed peaceful reunification across the Taiwan Strait.
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Master Hsing Yun died peacefully on Sunday at the Fo Guang Shan monastery he founded in Kaohsiung. He was 95.
The monastery said there would be no individual Buddhist rituals for him because he wanted to leave the world in a simple way, but a tribute would be held at the temple on February 13.
Hsing Yun’s health had declined in recent years after he suffered strokes in 2011 and again in 2016. He was admitted to a hospital before the Lunar New Year last month and doctors described his condition as unstable.
Born Lee Kuo-shen to a poor family in the Chinese province of Jiangsu in 1927, Hsing Yun rose to be regarded in Taiwan and mainland China as influential in both Buddhism and politics.
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