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March 12, 2007, 12:13AM
Ants test nonviolence of Buddhist monks
© 2007 The Associated Press
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Buddhist monks, who are bound by faith to nonviolence, are grappling with how to rid a temple of a severe ant infestation without killing the insects.
Stinging red ants have plagued the Hong Hock See Temple in northern Penang state for a year, causing one worshipper to be bitten so badly last month that he had to receive hospital treatment, said Elma Lin, a temple volunteer worker.
A temple disciple tried using a vacuum cleaner to gather up the ants before freeing them in a nearby forest, but the method failed to purge the insects, Lin said.
"We haven't found a solution so far," Lin said. "Nothing has worked."
The temple's chief monk, Boon Keng, was quoted by The Star newspaper as saying that the monks had to "respect other living things" in the temple.
"When an ant drops on you, you must not flick it away or blow on it," he told the newspaper. "If you do, it will bite to hold on. You just have to shake it off."
The newspaper published a photograph of Boon Keng standing beside a sign at the temple that read: "Beware poisonous ants. Do not sit under the tree."
The decades-old temple has more than 10 monks living there and hundreds of devotees, Lin said.
SOURCE
www.chron.com/disp/story....4621159.html
Ants test nonviolence of Buddhist monks
© 2007 The Associated Press
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Buddhist monks, who are bound by faith to nonviolence, are grappling with how to rid a temple of a severe ant infestation without killing the insects.
Stinging red ants have plagued the Hong Hock See Temple in northern Penang state for a year, causing one worshipper to be bitten so badly last month that he had to receive hospital treatment, said Elma Lin, a temple volunteer worker.
A temple disciple tried using a vacuum cleaner to gather up the ants before freeing them in a nearby forest, but the method failed to purge the insects, Lin said.
"We haven't found a solution so far," Lin said. "Nothing has worked."
The temple's chief monk, Boon Keng, was quoted by The Star newspaper as saying that the monks had to "respect other living things" in the temple.
"When an ant drops on you, you must not flick it away or blow on it," he told the newspaper. "If you do, it will bite to hold on. You just have to shake it off."
The newspaper published a photograph of Boon Keng standing beside a sign at the temple that read: "Beware poisonous ants. Do not sit under the tree."
The decades-old temple has more than 10 monks living there and hundreds of devotees, Lin said.
SOURCE
www.chron.com/disp/story....4621159.html
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Re: Ants vs Buddhists
Thu, March 15, 2007 - 12:07 AMI know they dont want to kill them but there has to be some way to at least keep them away
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Re: Ants vs Buddhists
Wed, August 1, 2007 - 3:13 PMThem would be Solenopsis invicta -- aka the Red Imported Fire Ant -- aka the Fire Ant. They invaded China sometime during the past 5 years, probably from an export vessel from the Gulf states of the USA. The Chinese government covered up the infestation until it was too late to eradicate. These ants are a scourge upon the humans and ecosystems of regions they invade. Maybe the monks will succeed where chemicals have failed!
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Re: Ants vs Buddhists
Sat, August 25, 2007 - 11:37 PMmaybe if they close the church up, eventually the ants will run out of food and go away. -
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Re: Ants vs Buddhists
Mon, August 27, 2007 - 7:06 AMIf they are fire ants, thes guys have a rough road ahead of them. Two little unpleasant factoids about fire ants they need to know:
1. They spread like...well...wildfire and
2. They can kill you.
If they are unwilling to kill them, they are going to have a lot of problems.
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