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HISTORY of our CHURCH
A historical landmark in San Francisco's Chinatown,
the Buddha's Universal Church is the largest Buddhist church in the United
States and home to the largest congregation in the City. Dedicated in 1963, the
Church was made concrete, steel, marble and wood and then filled with images of
the Buddha formed in gold leaf and mosaic tiles. An altar resembling the ship of
the Dharma - or the teachings of the Buddha - is flanked by teak paneled walls
representing the ship's sails. Our bamboo chapel and rooftop garden and terrace
can be found on the upper levels. Below is a modern kitchen with industrial
appliances, a recording studio and a mirrored room for dance and choir
rehearsals. Ours is a modern church practicing ancient teachings.
Once an old nightclub building, this spectacular
five-story building has become a symbol of religious freedom and devotion. After
buying the building in November of 1951 with the help of a bank loan, the
members of the Church were told by a building inspector that the badly damaged
building was beyond the repair of a $500 remodeling job. The building had been
hastily constructed immediately after the 1906 earthquake that ravaged San
Francisco, and with only one solid wall holding up the building, it needed to be
demolished and completely rebuilt for general assembly purposes. With only
$10,000 left in the bank, the Church simply did not have enough. And so, the
members of the Church began the monumental feat of building the Church
themselves.
In early 1952, the congregation made up of 300 people decided that the Church
must be rebuilt and started to tear down the building brick by brick. Funds were
short but manpower was strong. To support the cause, members contributed 10 to
20 percent of their monthly incomes and pledged 30 to 80 hours of labor for as
long as it took to complete the project.
As members and friends of the Church assembled to begin the demolition, a letter
arrived from the bank stating that their $30,000 loan was being recalled; the
bank explained that "the collateral upon which we had made the loan is rapidly
disappearing . . . we regret to inform you we must call the loan immediately."
Because the mortgage had to be repaid immediately, the future of the Church that
spring was not bright: it was $20,000 in debt; it lacked building materials; its
workers were untrained volunteers; and its sole possession was a muddy sinkhole
on Washington Street.
From Cookies to Concrete
Raising money to repay the bank loan and to buy building
materials became the main goal of the Church. In order to continue the
rebuilding process, members contributed what they could from their own savings,
and some even procured personal loans from other banks. Every evening and every
weekend the building site was taken over by members and friends of the Church to
keep the construction moving. When they faced shortages of funds, the building
stopped and they took to the street - the congregation baked, wrapped and sold
cookies on street corners to buy enough materials to keep the project rolling.
In 1958, the Church held a bazaar inside its unfinished building to celebrate
the Chinese New Year and raise more funds. Thirty booths, featuring games,
prizes and food, were set up, with the proceeds going directly into the Church's
treasury. The work continued and what started out as a dilapidated concrete
building was slowly being transformed into a church. After 11 years and four
months of steady labor, the "church builders" had erected the only Buddhist
church ever to have been built voluntarily by members of different ethnicity's
and faiths.
Celebrating the Builders and the Bakers

The dedication of hundreds of people throughout the Bay Area to rebuild the
Church is a remarkable story. Generous friends of the Church spent countless
hours working next to members of the congregation, offering their diverse skills
and expertise. The Church that stands is a testament to the American spirit of
cooperation and goodwill.
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