China’s tourists cover famous Buddhist pagoda in graffiti
Love messages scribbled all over walls and paintings of the attraction in Shandong
A pagoda built to replace an historic 1,300 year-old building in northern China has been left covered in visitors’ graffiti since reopening to the public about a decade ago, mainland media reports.
Even the Buddhist paintings covering the walls inside Haifeng Pagoda, in Dajue Temple, in Shandong province have not escaped the attention of visitors’ handwriting, the news portal Qq.com reported.
Tourists have written all over the artwork while leaving messages to their relatives or lovers.
The original 13-storey pagoda stood 36 metres high when it was first built about 1,300 years ago during the Tang dynasty (618-907) – a period when Buddhism had spread across the country.