The 'skeleton' in the meditation inside the statue of a Buddhist monk! The skeleton is about 100years old.

The mystery surrounding the statue of a Buddhist monk at the Drentes Museum in the Netherlands  continues today.  There is nothing less controversy surrounding this statue.  There has been controversy around China and the Netherlands for almost two and a half decades.  It is alleged that a Dutch antique collector stole the statue from a Buddhist monastery in China and moved to the Netherlands.  And a few hands turn it into the Drentes Museum in the Netherlands.




 There was some speculation about the reason for the debate.  Let us know this time about the mystery that surrounds the statue of the Buddhist monk.  At that time, an argument or claim was added in the middle of the debate.  This idol is actually a Buddhist monk's 'mummy'.  The body of a Buddhist monk is inside the metal wrap of this statue!  It is scanned to find out how true this principle or claim is.  And the doctors and researchers were surprised to scan.  Inside the statue is a meditating 'Narkankal'.  As it turns out, the statue is actually a mummy inside a metal wrap.


But whose mommy?  It is known that this is the mother of a Buddhist monk named Liuquan Zhang.  Researchers find that the monk's body has no organs.  Instead, there is a Tibetan cloth written inside the body.  Researchers are still unsure how the body of this monk was mummified.  This mummies are mentioned by the Buddhist monk Liuquan in the book 'Living Buddha' by a writer named Jeremiah Kane.  Researchers say that Liuquan Zhang died about 1,000 years ago.


The book, Living Buddha, by Jeremiah Kane, focuses on the method of mummifying Buddhist monks in ancient times.  According to that book, the monks who wanted to keep their bodies mummy followed a very difficult diet.  The method of mummifying Buddhist monks was very slow and long-term.  The willing monks ate nuts, tree bark instead of rice, wheat, soybean ethnic foods in their diet.  As a result, their body fat would melt or dry and the body would become dry due to its moisture content.  After their death, they eat various herbs while they are alive so that the bacteria do not grow.  She also consumes a special kind of tea made from poisonous herbs.  The book 'Living Buddha' claims that the monks' bodies were so poisoned by drinking this tea that even after death, no bacteria could be born in the body, bacteria or magnets of that nation.  As a result, it would have been possible to prevent digestion of the body.

During the process of mummifying willing monks, they lived in a tunnel-like room under the ground.  He used to meditate inside that room.  According to the book 'Living Buddha', this time the monks breathed through a pipe made of bamboo.  This time they stayed in that room with only one hour.  By ringing the bell, the monks signaled their survival.  On the day no bells were heard from inside the room, the monk was assumed to have died that day.  Three years later, other monks brought him out of the room and brought him to the temple to pay homage.  Then if it was found that the monk's body was not fit for mummification, he would have been buried.  Buddhist monks thought that the mummified monks were not dead.  They have immortalized themselves in meditation for ages.

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