Colombo | The rare exposition of the sacred tooth relic of Lord Buddha has been concluded in Sri Lanka's central town of Kandy, according to an official statement.
The exposition began on April 18 and concluded on Sunday.
The chief monks, in a joint statement, said the exposition was the largest gathering in a single place in the entire history of the island.
The tooth relic holds special spiritual, historical and cultural significance for the 74 per cent Sinhala Buddhist majority in the island nation of 21 million people.
Hundreds of thousands of Buddhist devotees attended the 10-day exposition, the first since 2009.
The organisers had planned the event for nearly 2 million devotees, however, the officials believed only a less than half of that number attended as the authorities stopped the entry when it seemed they were going out of control in providing basic sanitary facilities for such a large turnout.
"We are so pleased that it has come to an end. But we are left with the bigger task of removing various temporary structures put up in the town," Indika Kumari, the Municipal Commissioner of Kandy, told reporters.
She said the cleaning operations commenced last night itself.
“We are currently in the process of segmenting the garbage. Non-perishable garbage is estimated to be about 10 tonnes. We believe that 300 tonnes of rubbish have been piled up," Kumari said.
The exposition came at the request of President Anura Kumara Dissanayake. The Opposition charged that it was a political move by Dissanayake to gain support from the Buddhist majority in the local council election scheduled for May 6.
According to historical records, the tooth relic, which came to Kandy in 1590, came to symbolise Buddhist holiness, becoming Sri Lanka's most treasured possession and the seal of sovereignty.
It is said that no one was ever allowed to view the actual tooth relic. What could be seen behind a gilt railing and a silver table at the Temple of the Tooth is a gold-plated reliquary- the outermost of seven caskets.
For most of its history, the inner sanctum housing the caskets was only accessible to the King and certain powerful Buddhist monks. In modern days, visitors are allowed to view the reliquary from a distance.
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