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A
half-day tour to the Kelaniya Temple. See
the chair on which the Buddha reputedly at
when he preached for peace.
Drive
west from Colombo fort and turn right after
crossing the Kelaniya Bridge. Then turn
right soon after Peliyagoda to the road
which leads to the Kelaniya
Rajamaha Vihare temple, a
distance of about 7 miles.
This
dagoba is unusual. It is not round like
those found in most parts of the island, but
shaped like a heap of paddy. The history of
the temple dates back to over 2,500 years.
It is believed that Buddha visited here and
preached from a jewelled chair to warring
factions on the futillity of fighting. The
original dagoba was said to have enshrined
the chair but was later destroyed by South
Indian invaders.
The
reclining Buddha and the Buddha in
meditative pose are two important statues
here, but it is possible to spend hours just
looking at the extraoridinary frescoes
depicting the life of the Buddha and
important events in the island's history.
There
is the story of King Kelanitissa who boiled
a Buddhist monk alive in oil because he
suspected him of trying to pass a love
letter to the Queen. The angry gods raised
tidal waves and the King was told that the
only way to appease the gods was to
sacrifice his daughter to the sea. the King
obeyed the wishes of the wise ones; the seas
calmed and the daughter who was swept out to
sea on a boat landed at Kirinda. King
Kavantissa of the south married her and she
became the mother of perhaps the best known
of the island's kings, Dutugemunnu.
The
temple is a hive of activity on the full
moon of January, when hundreds of elephants
and thousands of dancers parade the strets
during the Duruthu Perehera festival.
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