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Ching Hai was born to a Vietnamese mother and an ethnic Chinese father, [15] on 12 May 1950 in a small village in the Quảng Ngãi Province in Vietnam. [16] At the age of 18, she moved to England to study and later to France and then Germany, where she worked for the Red Cross. [17]
Supreme Master Television is a US-based satellite and internet television channel owned by the Supreme Master Ching Hai International Association, broadcasting from Los Angeles. [1] The linear channel started on September 7, 2006, [ 2 ] with an interregnum between January 2, 2012 and October 1, 2017.
Đặng Nhật Minh (鄧日明, b. Huế , Vietnam , 1938) is one of Vietnam 's foremost film directors. He began making documentary films around 1965 and is the first Vietnamese person to be awarded the Nikkei Asia Prize for Culture, in 1999. [ 1 ]
Supreme Master Ching Hai in Sydney, Australia in 1993.. In 1996, following the first Taiwanese presidential election, the government of Taiwan suppressed religious groups that did not support president Lee Teng-Hui during the election, including Guanyin Famen, through asset seizures and media manipulation.
American chela of Paul Twitchell. Successor of Darwin Gross. The Mahanta, the 973rd Living ECK Master. Baba Gurinder Singh: Nephew and successor of Maharaj Charan Singh. He tours India and the world to spread the teachings of Sant Mat. Ching Hai: Vietnamese teacher of the Quan Yin Method. Founder of the Supreme Master Ching Hai International ...
Nhất Linh, 1946. Nguyễn Tường Tam (Vietnamese pronunciation: [ŋwiən˦ˀ˥ tɨəŋ˨˩ taːm˧˧]; chữ Hán: 阮祥三 or 阮祥叄; Cẩm Giàng, Hải Dương 25 July 1906 – Saigon, 7 July 1963) better known by his pen-name Nhất Linh ([ɲət̚˧˦ lïŋ˧˧], 一灵, "One Spirit") was a Vietnamese writer, editor and publisher in colonial Hanoi. [1]
The Ho Chi Minh City Museum of History is located at 2 Nguyễn Bỉnh Khiêm, Ben Nghe Ward, District 1, in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Formerly known as the Musée Blanchard de la Brosse , and The National Museum of Vietnam in Saigon , it received its current name in 1979.
The Four Heavenly Ministers (Chinese: 四御; pinyin: Sì yù), also translated as the Four Sovereigns, are four of the highest sky deities of Daoism and subordinate only to the Three Pure Ones (Chinese: 三清; pinyin: Sān qīng).