
![]() |
| Monks pray at the Guangji temple in Beijing on Friday for the dead and survivors of the powerful earthquake that struck southern Taiwan. The prayers were offered on the fifth day of Spring Festival. The event, which was held by the Buddhist Association of China, attracted hundreds of people. Wang Zhuangfei / China Daily |
Candles were lit and prayers said on the Chinese mainland on Friday for victims of last weekend's earthquake in Taiwan and their families.
More than 100 Buddhists gathered at the Guangji temple in Beijing, which was originally built in the Jin Dynasty (1115-1234), to mourn the victims and pray for their relatives.
Master Xuecheng, head of the Buddhist Association of China, said people from both sides of the Taiwan Straits share the same religious culture and traditions.
"We always appreciate the help from Taiwan when the mainland is hit by major disasters, such as the Wenchuan earthquake in Sichuan province in 2008," he said.
"I hope people from both sides can again support each other and weather the disaster." He said the association has collected more than 500,000 yuan ($77,000) in donations.
Nelson Chuang, deputy director of Beijing's Taiwan Company Association, attended the prayers and said he comes from the disaster area.
"I am lucky that nobody from my family was hurt. I am praying for other people in my hometown," he said. "I am very grateful that people on the mainland also care about Taiwan. We are a family even though there is a Strait between us."
Prayer meetings were also held at Beijing's Baiyun temple, a well-known Taoist temple, and several Mazu temples in Fujian province, which shares most traditions with Taiwan.
Mainland netizens also voiced their sympathy and prayers on the Internet.
Toutiao Xinwen, a micro-blog account with more than 40 million followers, posted "Pray for Taiwan" and a picture of candlelight tributes from last Saturday when the quake struck southern Taiwan. The post received more than 4,000 "likes" in an hour.
The death toll from the quake stood at 98 as of Friday night, with about 26 people still missing.
The collapse of the 16-story Wei Guan Building in Tainan, the building most seriously affected by the quake, accounted for 96 of the deaths, according to authorities in Taiwan.
Rescuers said the chances of finding survivors from the wrecked building are now slim, but the search will continue.
The quake, which the China Earthquake Administration said had a magnitude of 6.7, hit the city of Kaohsiung at 3:57 am last Saturday, just two days before Spring Festival. Local monitoring authorities put the scale of the quake at 6.4.
Leading political figures, including Taiwan leader Ma Ying-jeou and the island's leader-elect Tsai Ing-wen visited Tainan to attend mourning ceremonies on Friday.
Have you ever taken these beautiful subways in China?
Chinese beauties, foreign models meet in Chengdu
Awesome! Aerial pictures taken on J-11 fighter
A foreign girl explains what China should be proud of
Chinese navy's air-cushioned landing craft in pictures
Chinese pole dancing master opens class in Tianjin
Splendid Sichuan after snow
College girl of Vancouver crowned Miss Chinese Int'l 2016
Pentagonal Mart becomes the largest vacant building in Shanghai
Top 20 hottest women in the world in 2014
Top 10 hardest languages to learn
10 Chinese female stars with most beautiful faces
China’s Top 10 Unique Bridges, Highways and Roads
After spate of espionage allegations, US law firm opens first China office
Author Feng Tang attacks decision to pull book from shelves
Going ape for New Year
Black lungsDay|Week