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The Dutch private collector who now owns the 1,000-year-old Buddha1 statue with a mummified monk2 inside is willing to return the relic3 to China, if the statue is proven to be stolen from China, according to Amsterdam-based newspaper NRC Handelsblad.
阿姆斯特丹《新鹿特丹商业》报道,荷兰私人收藏家拥有的这尊肉身坐佛是一个有1000年历史的佛像,且佛像中包含一位僧人的肉身。收藏家表示,如果事实证明这尊佛像确为中国被盗文物,他愿意物归原主。
According to the report, the current owner, who works as an architect in Amsterdam, purchased the statue for 40,000 guilders ($19,786) in 1995, the same year a Buddha statue was reported stolen from China.
Jin Ruiguo, an official with the State Administration of Cultural Heritage (SACH), said in a statement that based on photos, local archives and witness statements, SACH can confirm that this Buddha statue was stolen from a temple in Yangchun village in east China's Fujian province in 1995.
The collector said the statue is indeed similar to the one in photos of the Buddha stolen from China. However, the Chinese reports say the Buddha was stolen in October, 1995 by the lunar calendar (which corresponds to the period from end of November to mid4 December, 1995 by the solar calendar), but the collector can prove that the statue was already in the Netherlands in mid 1995, hence it is uncertain whether the two Buddha statues are the same one.
The owner is willing to invest more, including in DNA5 testing technologies, to further verify the identity of the Buddha. The SACH is also gathering6 more evidence and working with other departments to secure the statue's return, Jin said.
The statue attracted attention after a CT scan last year found it contained a mummy of a 12th century Buddhist7 monk. The monk sits on a pillow that is around 300 years older.
Chinese characters are written on the side of the pillow, which say the monk's name was Zhang Liuquan.
The Buddha statue was included in a "Mummy World" exhibition at the Hungarian Natural History Museum, which opened in October last year. It was originally scheduled to be on display until May 17.
The Hungarian Natural History Museum borrowed the statue from the Drents Museumin Assen, the Netherlands. On March 20, the Dutch owner withdrew the statue from the exhibition in order to "calmly and critically evaluate the unexpected situation," said a statement sent to Xinhua by the owner's spokesman.
According to Yangchun archives, a monk, living in the village in the Song Dynasty (960-1279), helped cure people with his knowledge of Chinese herbal medicine. When he died, his body was mummified and local people made a statue to hold his body.
The collector was once offered 10 million euro for the statue, but declined to sell it despite the impressive sum. If the statue is indeed the one stolen from China, the collector is willing to return the statue, but wishes that it would return to the village where it was originally worshipped, instead of to showcases at museums.
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