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Shaolin Monastery
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===Republic of China=== {{Unreferenced section|date=February 2023}} [[File:Shaolin-temple-1-01.jpg|thumb|19thβ20th-century photo of Shaolin Monastery]] In the early days of the [[Republic of China (1912β1949)|Republic of China]], the Shaolin Temple was repeatedly hit by wars. In 1912, monk Yunsong Henglin from the Dengfeng County Monks Association was elected by the local government as the head of the Shaolin Militia (Shaolin Guarding Corps). He organized the guards and trained them in combat skills to maintain local order. In the autumn of 1920, famine and drought hit Henan province, which led to thieves surging throughout the area and endangering the local community. Henglin led the militia to fight the bandits on different occasions, thus enabling dozens of villages in the temple's surroundings to live and work in peace. In the late 1920s, Shaolin monks became embroiled in the warlords' feuds that swept the plains of northern China. They sided with General Fan Zhongxiu (1888β1930), who had studied martial arts at Shaolin Temple as a child, against [[Shi Yousan]] (1891β1940). Fan was defeated and, in the spring of 1928, Yousan's troops entered Dengfeng and Shaolin Temple, which served as Fan Zongxiu's headquarters. On 15 March, [[Feng Yuxiang]]'s subordinate Shi Yousan set fire to the monastery, destroying some of its ancient towers and halls. The flames partially damaged the "Shaolin Monastery Stele" (which recorded the politically astute choice made by other Shaolin clerics fifteen hundred years earlier), the Dharma Hall, the Heavenly King Hall, Mahavira Hall, Bell Tower, Drum Tower, Sixth Ancestor Hall, Chan Hall, and other buildings, causing the death of a number of monks. A large number of cultural relics and 5,480 volumes of Buddhist scriptures were destroyed in the fire.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Why the Shaolin Temple was Burned in 1928 |url=https://www.chandao.co.uk/why-the-shaolin-temple-was-burned-in-1928.html |access-date=11 November 2024 |website=Ch'an Dao Martial Arts Association (η¦ ιζ¦ζ―εδΌ)}}</ref> Japan's activities in Manchuria in the early 1930s made the National Government very worried. The military then launched a strong patriotic movement to defend the country and resist the enemy. The Nanjing Central Martial Arts Center and Wushu Institute, together with other martial arts institutions, were established around the country as part of this movement. The government also organized martial arts events such as "Martial arts returning to Shaolin". This particular event served to encourage people to remember the importance of patriotism by celebrating the contribution of Shaolin martial arts to the country's defense from foreign invasion at numerous occasions throughout history.
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