The head of the
Shaolin
Monastery, birthplace of the Chinese art of Kung Fu, is suing an internet
user for suggesting that its monks were beaten in combat by a Japanese ninja.
An internet user called 'Five minutes every day' made the accusation on the
Iron Blood Bulletin Board Community and kicked up an enormous row.
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Japan is the traditional enemy of China and the suggestion that its martial
art could be beaten by the Japanese system has caused outrage.
"The so-called defeat is purely fabricated, and we demand the internet user
to apologise to the whole nation for the wrongs he or she did,"
The
Beijing News said, citing a notice announced by a lawyer for the Shaolin
monks.
The posting claimed that a Japanese ninja studied for four years and asked
for a contest at the Shaolin Monastery. The posting went on to say that the
ninja beat many of the monks, showing that they were all show and no substance.
However, it appears the poster was satirising the monastery, and in
particular its head, who has a chauffeur driven car despite being a strict
Buddhist. The poster has since apologised for the comments.
"What I wrote was fiction. I apologise to Shaolin Temple and all my readers,
" the bulletin board visitor wrote.
"I hope that the Shaolin masters will exercise their Buddhist compassion and
virtue, and forgive me. Thank you very much."
The Shaolin fighting system has been practised for over 1,500 years after
being conceived by an Indian monk called
Bodhidharma
after a nine-year meditation.
The practice was spread by wandering monks in the 18th century after the
temple's destruction.
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