BEIJING: Many religious venues across China have reopened or are going to reopen this month after being temporarily shut down during the Chinese New Year (CNY) holiday for COVID-19 prevention and control purposes, venue staffers told the Global Times on Tuesday.
Mount Wutai, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in North China’s Shanxi Province, also dubbed one of China’s four sacred Buddhist mountains, reopened its religious venues to the public on Tuesday, said a staffer from the scenic spot’s management committee.
“Now people are available to participate in religious activities here, such as burning incense and praying to Buddha at the temples [on the mountain],” the staffer surnamed Chang told the Global Times.
Visitors must book tickets in advance and wear face masks, Chang said. They must also show their health codes and travel histories, and have their body temperature checked when entering religious venues inside the spot, he added.
Mount Wutai has reopened because the domestic epidemic situation has largely improved, said Chang. Previously, the spot had been closed for weeks from January 10 to avoid possible COVID-19 transmission amid the CNY holiday, which was between February 11 and 17 this year.
Shaolin Temple in Central China’s Henan Province, a world-famous Buddhist Kung Fu monastery, reopened its religious venues to the public on February 26, the temple staff told the Global Times, saying that its tourist reception limit is 75 percent of its daily maximum amount. In Beijing, where the annual two sessions will be held this week, churches are scheduled to reopen in the second half of March if the local epidemic situation remains stable, according to the city’s church personnel. All [Catholic] churches in Beijing will reopen around March 21, a staffer with a Catholic church in suburban Tongzhou district told the Global Times on Tuesday. “We will make the ‘do’s’ and ‘do not’s’ public for visitors according to the epidemic situation at the time,” he said.
– The Daily Mail-Global Times News exchange item