
A white mist shrouds the plain and the first birdcalls across the valleys announce the imminent arrival of another dawn. Slowly the mist dissipates in the rising sun to reveal the spires and Buddhas that meditate in bliss and gradually the forms coalesce to unveil a temple that many who have seen it, consider to be the finest example of Buddhist architecture ever raised to the sky by man.
In  the period                  600 AD to 800 AD there was a golden age of temple  construction                  throughout India, Ceylon and South East Asia. It was a  time when                  Hindu and Buddhist kingdoms flourished and men raised  magnificent                  monuments to heaven in praise of their gods with a burst  of frenetic                  activity of cultural expression and devotion. After  their periods                  of glory they sank into oblivion, either as a result of  military                  conquest or natural disasters and their monuments were  reclaimed                  by the jungle and lost to mankind for almost a thousand  years.
One  of the                  most spectacular of these is the Buddhist temple of  Borobudur                  that lies in Eastern Java on the Kedu Plain. It is  surrounded                  by an idyllic landscape of incomparable beauty of  rice-terraced                  hills and overlooked by four volcanoes. The industrious  subjects                  of the Sailendra dynasty built it over a period of 80  years in                  the ninth century who transformed a volcanic plug of  basalt into                  a stepped pyramid with a base measuring 120 metres  square and                  a height of 35 metres.
It                  was built to resemble a microcosm of the universe and  its purpose                  was to provide a visual image of the teachings of the  Buddha and                  show, in a practical manner, the steps through life that  each                  person must follow to achieve enlightenment. The pilgrim  to this                  shrine would first have been led around the base and  shown the                  friezes, which illustrate the consequences of living in  the World                  of Desire. In this realm ruled by Greed, Envy, and  Ignorance,                  man is a slave to earthly desires and suffers from the  illusions                  that are caused by these unfulfilled yearnings, a state  regarded                  as hell by Buddhists. After completing this circuit, the  pilgrim                  was then led in a clockwise fashion through five levels  in a gradual                  ascension of the pyramid. Here he was shown how to  conquer desire                  and attachment by viewing 1300 panelled friezes that  illustrate                  the life of the Buddha and his previous incarnations.  These levels                  were called the World of Form and correspond to the  earthly realm                  in Buddhist symbology. The passages of both of these  realms followed                  the square shape of the pyramid but above these two lay  the World                  of Formlessness where the right-angled, heavily  decorated passages                  gave way to a round unadorned summit where meditating  Buddhas                  and saints sit in supreme bliss contemplating a view of  exquisite                  beauty. In the centre a bell shaped tower, or stupa,  points to                  heaven, a blissful realm beyond form and concept, known  as Nirvana.
Encompassing                  the totality of existence with its representations of  heaven,                  earth, and hell in this metaphor of stone, the monument  was abandoned                  after a severe earthquake and a large eruption of the  volcano                  Merapi in 1006 AD until it was rediscovered by the West  during                  colonial times. One of the miracles, perhaps equalling  the miracle                  of its construction and craftsmanship, is that the  monument still                  exists and can be seen to this day. This area of Java is  one of                  the most earthquake prone regions in the world as well  as one                  of the most volcanic. From the top of the temple, the  volcano                  Merapi is easily visible, still smoking to this day,  having erupted                  on more than a few occasions during the last millennia.

Reliefs depicting the life of the Buddha cover the upper half of the main wall all around the first gallery of the monument, a total of 120 panels. These reliefs were carved to illustrate a text entitled the Lalitavistara, "The Unfolding of the Play." The above relief shows Sakyamuni having left the palace and dismissed his horse and groom, stands at the left beneath a parasol, bidding farewell to the supernatural beings who accompanied him.

The  Dutch                  carried out some piecemeal reconstruction during  colonial times                  but it was left to the Indonesian government to make a  complete                  restoration with help from the United Nations in the  seventies                  and eighties. This huge task has now been completed so  that the                  temple is now in better shape than it has been since the  major                  eruption of Merapi in 1006 AD. This architectural jewel  is now                  conserved for the benefit of future generations and  provides a                  wealth of information on the way of life 1200 years ago  as well                  as preserving its spiritual message. The panels show a  sophisticated                  and elegant society and are a pictorial history of the  architecture,                  means of transport, dress, and customs of a race of  people whose                  culture rose and fell a thousand years ago and who left  this astounding                  monument as a testament to their skill and devotion.
Borobudur                   can truly be called one of the wonders of the world, one  of those                  rare places where the compassionate, aesthetic beauty of  mankind's                  nature can be glimpsed, a place where that centre of  peace and                  stillness within us all can be felt, and a symbol of the  imagination                  and industriousness of the human race.
 
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