|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
WORLD AROUND US
Angkor Wat and More: Cambodia’s Architectural Wonders - P2/2 (In Cambodian)
|
|
|
|
|
Today’s
The World Around Us
will be presented in
Khmer and English,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian, Italian,
Japanese, khmer, Korean,
Malay, Mongolian, Persian,
Portuguese, Russian,
Spanish and Thai.
Greetings,
joyful viewers!
Welcome to
The World Around Us.
Today, let us go to
the ancient Kingdom
of Cambodia.
In today’s program,
we will visit the beautiful
temple complex
called Angkor Wat.
There are astonishingly
more than one thousand
temples of Angkor,
the once capital of
the Khmer Empire.
Among them,
Angkor Wat is the
magnificent centerpiece
and one of the largest
Hindu monuments
in the world.
Most recognizable are
its five towers 65 meters
high like giant lotus buds.
In fact, Angkor Wat
is a great symbol of
Cambodia and is shown
on the country’s flag.
Countless visitors from
all over the world visit
Angkor Wat each year.
Let’s join our tour guide
who kindly takes us
through this vast site.
Welcome to the
Kingdom of Cambodia,
the kingdom of wonder.
Here,
ladies and gentlemen,
we are in front of
Angkor Wat
on the western entries.
We see several hundreds
of people getting here
for viewing the sunrise.
Angkor Wat it has been
one of the marvels
in the world, inscribed
by the United Nations
Educational, Scientific
and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO)
in December 1992 to be
one of the world heritage
(sites).
It has been the finest of
the religious monuments
of the Hindu ones
which strongly we (were)
influenced from India
that taught from
the early centuries.
Angkor Wat
was constructed by
King Suryavarman II
in the early 12th century
and continued
for four centuries.
It was dedicated to
the Hindu god Vishnu.
Later, however,
the Hindu temple became
a Buddhist temple as
Buddhism became more
widespread in Cambodia
in the 14th century.
Angkor Thom, meaning
the “Great City,”
is a royal city,
the last capital of
the Khmer Empire.
The Buddhist King
Jayavarman VII ordered
a large construction
project for Angkor Thom.
He added a moat
and outer wall.
And of course, the king
built some of Angkor’s
greatest temples,
including
his state temple, Bayon,
in the city’s center.
There are five gates
to the city, one for
each cardinal point, and
the victory gate leading
to the Royal Palace area.
Each gate is crowned
with four giant faces.
The South Gate is often
the first stop on a tour.
The South Gate
illustrates the Hindu
creation myth
about the churning of
the cosmic sea.
At the time, 13 precious
things were lost,
one of which was
the elixir of immortality.
To find it, the gods
and demons had to stir
the cosmic sea waters
to regenerate this elixir.
A giant serpent named
Vasuki helped them
by offering himself as
a rope, wrapping himself
around Mount Mandara,
which is shown
as a tower.
Vasuki was thus pulled
back and forth, churning
the Ocean of Immortality
with the tower
as a mixing stick
for a thousand years.
Here we are
on the south gates of
the great capital city
of Angkor Thom, which
was built under the reign
of the famous powerful
Buddhist king
Jayavarman VII.
King Jayavarman VII
was the Buddhist one, but
had to combine Hinduism
and Buddhism together
because most of the king
who crowned earlier than
him practiced Hinduism.
Let me draw
your attention to the
statue in the rows there.
Where, first,
you see the statue,
like tug of war, called
the “Churning of
the Ocean of Milk,”
to generate elixir of life.
And 54 demons
on the left-hand side
and 54 gods,
good looking faced,
on that side as well,
holding the body of
the serpent Vasuki to
generate elixir of life.
Each row is 54
which symbolizes
imperial states under
the reign of the King
Jayavarman VII.
On the other hand,
the combination of
54 and 54 become 108,
the most splendid
Hindu number.
Let me talk about
the Buddhist faces.
There, further, you see
the gate of four faces
which symbolize the faces
of Bodhisattva
Avalokitesvara.
Bodhisattva means
the God who was in
the process of becoming
the Buddha in the futures,
hopefully the king
Jayavarman VII
will become Bodhisattva
Avalokitesvara.
That’s why the face also
symbolizes the face
of Buddhist King
Jayavarman VII, and
also the four virtues:
loving of kindness,
equanimity, sympathy
and compassion,
The lotus opening
symbolizes the great
knowledge of Buddha.
This too shows you
the religious combination
between Hinduism and
Buddhism under the reign
of Buddhist King
Jayavarman VII.
Now, let’s go inside
the great Angkor Wat.
The exterior walls of
the lower level of
Angkor Wat display
extraordinary bas-reliefs.
They depict stories
from Hindu mythology
and the history of
the reign of Khmer King
Suryavarman II.
If you talk about
the detailed beautiful
bas-relief, Angkor Wat
has been the finest and
the top architectural
building
of the Khmer Empire
in Southeast Asia
from 9 to 13th centuries.
For example,
you look at this size, the
square standing pillars
with detailed carvings of
beautiful ones including
the bottom one with
the Hindu meditation.
The Hindu meditation
whose position is
very quite different
comparatively
to the Buddhist one.
You see the Hindu with
the standing crossed legs
joining the two hands
at the chest, and the man
who makes meditation
with the long beard and
different head dresses.
But with this (Buddhist)
one, you will see
the different one
with lying cross-legged
joining with two hands,
right on the left hand,
and no beard.
There’s the difference
between these two
Hindu and Buddhist
meditation positions.
When we return,
we will continue our tour
of Angkor Wat
in Cambodia.
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master
Television.
Thank you for joining us
again on today’s
The World Around Us.
We now continue
our visit to
the magnificent temple,
Angkor Wat, which
reveals the rich spiritual
heritage of Cambodia.
We are on the galleries
of bas-reliefs and
the west section of
this northwest corner.
On the back here,
is where you see
Prince Rama,
main character of
“Ramayana” (legend),
and the 7th reincarnation
of the god Vishnu
who appears on
the monkey commander
in chief Hanuman
to rescue his wife from
demon King Ravana, who
captured her for years.
This temple of
Angkor Wat was
built and dedicated
to the god Vishnu.
That’s why
the entire bas-relief
sculpted directly on site
was describing the
glorious reincarnations
of the god Vishnu.
For example,
Prince Rama, who was
the 7th reincarnation
of the god Vishnu.
When the bas-relief it was
sculptured completely,
it was later applied with
the red paint to make
clearer the bas-relief
and protect it from
natural erosion as well.
So the bas-reliefs entirely
are describing the Hindu
legendaries, episodes,
tales, and myths and
partly with history
under the reign of the
King Suryavarman II,
founder of Angkor Wat,
as well.
Now, let’s look at
the classic Hindu myth,
the “Churning of
the Ocean of Milk,”
this time depicted
on the eastern gallery.
Here we are still on
the gallery of bas-relief,
eastern section of
the southeast corner.
Behind me there is where
you see detailed,
beautiful bas-relief
describing the Hinduist
mythology called tale,
called the Churning of
the Ocean of Milk,
where you see 92 demons
with evil looking faces,
holding the body of
the serpent Vasuki,
the five-headed one.
And the other side
there is where 88 gods
holding the body of
the serpent on the tail.
The demons’ side
is anchored by
the 21-headed
demon king Ravana.
On the right, the gods
with almond-shaped eyes
are pulling with the help
of the monkey god
Hanuman as the anchor.
Also shown
on this bas-relief
is Lord Vishnu with
the smaller god Indra
above him and
his reincarnated form
as a turtle below him.
In addition, there are
Apsara dancers
are celestial dancers who
appeared through
the churning of
the cosmic sea.
The bas-relief also has
many fish and
other marine animals
being affected
by the moving waters.
Hindus, as do Buddhists,
believe in the law
of karma, or cause
and retribution.
According to
one’s actions, one will
experience beneficial
effects or harmful effects
in the cycle of rebirth.
It is possible for a human
to exit the cycle of rebirth,
or achieve moksha
(liberation), by
attaining self-knowledge
or enlightenment.
Lord Yama is the lord
of death in Hinduism.
In the bas-reliefs of
Angkor Wat, he is sitting
on his water buffalo,
laying judgment on the
mortals in the afterlife
according to their deeds.
We are
on the southern section
of the southeast corner.
Look at the back
over here.
Let me show,
ladies and gentlemen, on
moral principles
in the belief of karma.
The centers and the top
register which are describing
the processions
in heavenly condition
to the 37 heavens.
The lower register, which
is partly like shiny, is
describing the procession
of persecution of Yama
who caught those people
with rope
tying the necks and hand,
to the 32 hells.
This shows you
the moral principles
in the belief of karma.
“An eye for an eye,”
or “What you sow,
you reap,” describing
the belief in karma.
You see the center and
the tops describing
this procession on to
the 37 heavens for people
who did the best things,
the good things,
in the previous life, then,
they reincarnated
in the heavens.
Lower registers,
where you see people
badly treated, because
in previous lives
they did the bad thing,
not the good one.
Because these people
in previous life were
killing a lot of animals,
so the moral principles
in belief of karma of
Vishnuism and Hinduism
one would like to
advise and tell people
to do the best thing.
In moral principles of
Vishnuism or Hinduism,
which tell and show
the people not to kill,
and tell people to do
all the good things.
Today, Angkor Wat
remains one of Cambodia’s
most famous places,
with its exquisite
architectural details
and breathtaking stone
carvings throughout.
However, our journey in
Angkor has only begun.
Please join us next
Sunday, September 26
on The World Around Us
as we explore more
of Angkor Wat and other
temples of this special
Cambodian region.
It was a pleasure having
your company today on
The World Around Us.
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master
Television
for Words of Wisdom,
up next
after Noteworthy News.
May your life be blessed
with joy and harmony.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Download by Subtitle
|
|
Arabic , Aulac , Bulgarian , Chinese , Croatian , Czech-Slovak , Dari , Dutch , English , French , German , Gujarati , Hebrew , Hindi , Hungarian , Indonesian , Italian , Japanese , Korean , Malay , Mongol , Mongolian , Persian , Polish , Portuguese , Punjabi , Romanian , Russian , Sinhalese , Slovenian , Spanish , Thai , Turkish , Urdu , Zulu ,
Bulgarian ,
Croatian ,
Dutch , Estonian , Greek , Gujarati ,
Indonesian ,
Mongolian , Nepalese ,
Norwegian , Polish , Punjabi ,
Sinhalese ,
Swedish , Slovenian , Tagalog , Tamil , Zulu
|
|
Scrolls Download |
|
MP3 Download |
|
|
|
|
MP4 download for iPhone(iPod ) |
|
|
Download Non Subtitle Videos
|
|
|
Download by Program
|
|
|
|
|
|
Download by Date
|
Sun |
Mon |
Tue |
Wed |
Thu |
Fri |
Sat |
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
14
|
15
|
16
|
17
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
28
|
29
|
30
|
|
|
|
|