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Sutras, serenity and senior citizens(3)

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2016-08-15 10:02China Daily Editor: Feng Shuang
A resident collects a portion of fruit after lunch at the home. PHOTOS BY GAO ERQIANG / CHINA DAILY

A resident collects a portion of fruit after lunch at the home. PHOTOS BY GAO ERQIANG / CHINA DAILY

Long waiting list

Jin Hongzhan, the home's vice-president, said residents paid a flat fee of 500 yuan ($75) a month until July, when Master Mingxue decided to abolish the charge and fund the home directly through donations to the temple.

Unsurprisingly, there is a long waiting list, but that doesn't discourage new applicants. "In July alone, we received 70 applications," Jin said.

While a small number of nursing homes run by Buddhist temples welcome elderly non-believers, Jin said the Lingyanshan home remains exclusive to those with faith, and prospective residents have to pass religious knowledge tests to gain admittance.

"It has never been an ordinary nursing home. It is fundamentally a place to study and practice Budd-hism," he said. "Non-religious people would not fit in here. It would be impossible to have some residents chanting the sutras while others were doing a square dance."

He recalled that when the home opened, the management organized a group of local volunteers to clean the rooms. The idea was abandoned, though, because the elderly residents felt that as beings seeking merit, they should always attend to their own duties.

According to Chen Zongrong, vice-director of the State Administration for Religious Affairs, only about one-third of the homes run by religious institutions have registered with the Ministry of Civil Affairs, which oversees the sector, and many of them are small and lack professional management.

In 2014, the administration convened a national conference on the issue, but no detailed regulations or policies have yet been issued.

Jin said that, depending on their size, some officially recognized homes are eligible for government subsidies, but the application process is long and tortuous, and many religious institutions fear they would have to spend time and energy dealing with a range of government departments if they register.

We are different from other nursing homes, so the standards should be different. As long as we are doing OK financially, we would rather keep the home our own," he said.

  

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