Maitreya Great Tao
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Wang Hao-te (1921–1999) was the founder of the Great Way of Maitreya (), which is based in Hsinchu, Taiwan. According to a survey done in 2004, this religion has 1,000,000 members and 2,000 temples all over the world. Wang was born in 1921, the 28th day of the 7th lunar month (August 31, 1921) in a small village called Zhang Gu in Shandong province, China. He went to Taiwan when he was 17 years old during the Second World War, and he was introduced to Yiguandao in 1948 by chance. He was a hardworking, well loved and down-to-earth talented young man and he was the only person appointed to take care of Sun Su Zhen, or "Shi Mu" 師母, the great mistress of Yiguandao, for 11 years until her death on 4 April 1975. In 1987, Wang set up the Providence Maitreya Buddha Institute () in Hsinchu, Taiwan. Wang died of CO2 poisoning on Christmas Day in 1999 during his mission to Chiang Mai, Thailand.


See also

* Yiguandao *
Zhang Tian Ran Zhang Tianran () (8 August 1889 – 29 September 1947) was the eighteenth patriarch as well as the founder of the I-Kuan Tao (Yiguandao) religious sect. He is usually referred to as the ''Father of I-Kuan Tao'', or as ''Shi Zun'' (), meaning th ...
*
Sun Su Zhen Sun Su Chen (孫素真) (16 October 1895 - 23 February 1975) was the 18th matriarch of Yiguandao. She was the successor of Zhang Tianran, Yiguandao's contemporary founder. Sun was also known as ''Ming Shan'' (明善) or ''Hui Ming'' (慧明), her re ...


Sources

*Clart, Philip. 2000. Opening the Wilderness for the Way of Heaven: A Chinese New Religion in the Greater Vancouver Area. Journal of Chinese Religions 28: 127-144 *Soo, Khin Wah. 1997. A Study of the Yiguan Dao (Unity Sect) and its Development in Peninsular Malaysia. Ph.D. dissertation, University of British Columbia.
台灣地區宗教簡介: 彌勒大道 ''Introduction to religions in the Taiwan territory: Maitreya Great Tao''
Department of Civil Affairs, Ministry of Interior, Republic of China. 2001. Accessed February 7, 2006.


External links


Maitreya Great Tao website

The Life of Wang Hao Te according to his follower
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wang, Hao-te 1921 births 1999 deaths Chinese religious leaders Founders of new religious movements People from Shandong Yiguandao