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Thursday, June 24, 2010

First music video shoot by DSLR Camera in Nepal.



First music video shoot by DSLR Camera in Nepal.
Title: Maan ko Byatha
Band : Krodh Band
Production : Revolution Media
Camera : Nikon D90
www.rvlnmedia.com

Monday, June 21, 2010

Nepali youth wins Democracy Video Challenge




KATHMANDU, JUN 21 - Anup Poudel of Nepal won the worldwide Democracy Video Challenge organised by the US Government on Monday.

Earlier Poudel, who hails from Mahadevsthan VDC-2 of Kavre district, along with along with another Nepali finalist Shree Gurung of Shankhusabha were nominated among the 18 finalists. Around 1,200 youths from 89 different countries had participated in the competition.

Poudel had taken a scientific approach in his video, where liquids of colours blue, yellow, green and red respectively symbolizing freedom, unity, peace and love are mixed together to obtain a mixture—black—that symbolizes power.

Src: ekantipur.com

Friday, June 18, 2010

Chinese archaeologists claim relics found in China temple to be Budhha's body parts


Chinese archaeologists and Buddhist monks have found precious relics believed to be part of the skull of Gautama Buddha in a temple in China, state-owned news agency RSS reported Friday.

The relics have been found during excavation at Qixia Temple in Jiangsu province of China, around 1,500 km away from Beijing, RSS reported citing Chinese media. Chinese state news agency Xinhua quoting Master Chuan Yin, the president of the Buddhist Association of China, said the relics kept in a miniature gold coffin included the upper part of the skull of Lord Buddha.

The excavation was carried out amid a worshipping ceremony held in the temple, Xinhua said, adding that the bone, irregular and light brown,looked like a small rock. "It is full of cell-like cavities, just like a honeycomb," Xinhua quoted Hua Guorong, deputy head of Nanjing City Museum as saying.

"Our findings confirm with the descriptions of the parietal bone in historical records," said Master Xue Cheng, the vice president of the association, adding that the bone is very sacred for Buddhists.

Besides Buddha´s remains, 10 pieces of memorabilia were found in another gold and silver mini-coffin. All the relics had been enshrined at the temple by 108 eminent Buddhist monks from the Chinese mainland, Macao and Taiwan. The relics would be open to the faithful at the temple for one month, Xinhua quoted Hua as further saying.

The Buddha's parietal bone, allegedly recovered from his cremation ash, had been stored in a miniature pagoda named the Pagoda of King Asoka unearthed two years ago in an underground shrine built in 1011 under the former Changgan Temple of Nanjing. The palace was found when archaeologists began excavating the ruins of the Grand Bao´en Temple of Nanjing built during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644 AD).

Source: nepalnews.com 


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