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http://www.hsilai.org/


I took out the line about the temple being opposed by white people and white people moving away. I'm not saying it's untrue, but I'd like to see some sort of source or at least a first-hand account. Did white people move away because of the temple? That's what the previous redaction sounds like? - Nat Krause 05:40, 27 May 2004 (UTC)[reply]

  • Yes, they did! I've found a newspaper article that confirms this. Read on.

http://www.sgvtribune.com/Stories/0,1413,205%257E31703%257E2321511,00.html?search=filter


Don't delete other people's work so fast. There were people (especially the white folk) who felt it didn't belong there and it was a decade battle. It was in the Los Angeles Times. So there's your source. Whites began moving or dying out by the 1990s and there is a growing presence of Asians and Latinos in the area.

A July 25, 1993 Los Angeles Times article titled "Ex-Foes Warm Up to Temple Religion: Buddhist edifice, the largest in the Western Hemisphere, has proved to be a good neighbor in a once-hostile community" by Philip P. Pan.

Restored the information.

The problem is not the factuality of the information; it is its presentation. "Whites" is not a worthwhile cultural distinction. Using it is analogous to referring to Asians and Latinos as yellows and tans.
In addition, the demographics of Hacienda Heights belong on that community's page, not here.
Perhaps someone more knowledgeable about the topic, in the process of cleaning up and expanding the article could move this information further down; while the political difficulties are important in the history of the temple, they certainly aren't the most important thing, as the current structure implies.
03201221 16:40, 2004 Oct 11 (UTC)


Not The Largest

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The largest Buddhist temple in the Western Hemisphere. The largest Buddhist in the Western Hemisphere is City of Ten Thousand Buddhas, and I will correct the info.Zachorious

  • Yes, I can verify what Zachorious said - the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas is the largest. 80 acres of developed land with over ninety buildings is bigger than 15 acres, and if one counts the undeveloped property as well, then the 488 acres of the CTTB is most definitely bigger than Hsi Lai's 15 acres. Also, according to Hsi Lai's website - Hsi Lai Temple covers 102,432 square feet [1]. Just one of CTTB's buildings is already 90,000 square feet, and there's 89 more to count. This matter should not even be disputed or be a controversy - it's quite clear, in fact. By the way, I wonder which temple Loocifah was talking about? Kungming2 03:01, 7 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The fact of the matter is that I have no idea what "largest temple" is supposed to mean. Normally, in English, a "temple" is one building; so, one would think that the largest temple in the U.S. would be one very large building. However, both COTTB and Hsi Lai are complexes with multiple buildings. It's meaningless to talk about which one of them is a bigger temple. I suppose "monastery" has a bit more leeway, but it ultimately runs into the same problems. Let's not have anything in the article claiming that Hsi Lai is or isn't the biggest something; we can just say that it's "big" or "one of the biggest". That way, we won't need an editorial from 219.95.43.222 explaining why it's not important, either. - Nat Krause(Talk!) 20:04, 6 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

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