The Bǎilín Institute (Bǎilín jiàolǐ yuàn 柏林教理院) was a short-lived Buddhist seminary associated with the World Buddhist Studies Center 世界佛學苑.
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A Buddhist seminary 佛學院 first established in the spring of 1930 by Táiyuán 台源, the abbot of Bǎilín Temple 柏林寺. In the summer of that same year, Tàixū 太虛 paid a visit, and lent his support to the endeavor. The head of the Institute was one of Tàixū's old friends, Chángxǐng 常惺. The Institute was formally established in September of 1930, when Tàixū asked his disciple Fǎfǎng 法舫 to come to Běijīng from Wǔchāng to help make the Bǎilín Institute a branch of the World Buddhist Studies Center 世界佛學苑, which was based at the Wǔchāng Buddhist Seminary 武昌佛學院. The two locations were organized so that students at the Bǎilín Institute focused on Japanese language, while the students in Wǔchāng focused on English. Financial assistance and early guidance was provided by Hú Zǐhù 胡子笏.
The Buddhist Critic 佛教評論 was likely published in association with this school.
After the incursion of Japanese forces into northern China following the Mukden Incident of September 18, 1931 [1], funds for the Center dried up. As a result, the Bǎilín Institute closed and Fǎfǎng returned to the World Buddhist Center in Wǔchāng.
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