jueves, 11 de marzo de 2010

Mysticism Udumbara flower was seen in China once again. This

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A microscopic image of the tiny flowers Udumbara growing on a pine needle. (The Epoch Times)

strange phenomenon was surprisingly reported in Chinese state media and was then banned.

According to Buddhist legend, the Udumbara flowers once every three thousand years, and is believed to announce the arrival of a great sage or an enlightened being.

In the past, Chinese state media have denied the existence of the Udumbara, stating that the phenomenon was in fact insect eggs.

On February 27, China News published an article entitled "Find in Lushan, Jiangxi to the legendary Udumbara blooming every 3,000 years." The article described the flower as "celestial and beaten. We found eighteen of the tiny flowers, each only 0.8 mm high. "The neighbors were thrilled by the discovery. The abbot of a temple would take a picture and then worship it, "said the article.

The article described how the flower had been found. "A lay Buddhist touched them and thought they were insect eggs. The next day, to his surprise, the flowers that had crushed the day before had been straightened and 18 had flourished, exuding a delicate fragrance. "
Xinhua published an article on the flower Udumbara that appeared in Jiangxi province in China. The article can still be found through a Google search, but the item has been removed. (Screenshot)

The next day, the Chinese edition of The Epoch Times reported that the press in Beijing, including China News, unexpectedly had reported on the event, even describing the Udumbara as "celestial and beaten. On March 1, Chinese official media, Xinhua, China News and the People's Daily-off all items in their websites.

The article in China News spread quickly through the Internet, and published in tens of thousands of other sites. According to searches on Google and Baidu, the largest search engine in China, the number of publications increased exponentially after the Beijing media censor their own articles.

Udumbara The flower resembles a bell and the stem looks like a silk thread. Flowers can arise anywhere in leaves of other plants, stainless steel, wooden planks, plastic, fruit, granite, glass, aluminum doors, paper, electric lamps, etc..

Recently there has been the Udumbara in several places in the world, including South Korea, Thailand and the UAE.

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