In his capacity as a senior monastic, Kok Kwong established monasteries and was appointed abbot and director to many temples in Hong Kong. In 1945, Kok Kwong, together with other senior clerics, founded the Hong Kong Buddhist Association. Kok Kwong would later become the association's permanent president in 1966. As president, he oversaw the establishment of several educational institutions, such as the Chung-Hwa Institute of Buddhist Studies in 1945, the Wong Fung Ling College and the Wong Cheuk Um Primary School in 1956, and the Kok Kwong Secondary School in 1979. Hospitals, cemeteries, and the providing of social services were also established under Kok Kwong's leadership. In Kok Kwong's later years, he along with eight venerables of various traditions proposed the
World Buddhist Forum in mainland China in 2004, a suggestion that won support from Buddhist circles in countries like
Japan and the
Republic of Korea. He also spearheaded two tours of relics of the Buddha in 1999 and in 2003.
Politics Kok Kwong's influence also spread toward the political sphere of Hong Kong, where he was appointed to positions as an adviser to the government following the
handover of Hong Kong to the People's Republic of China. Kok Kwong was one of the earliest defenders of the
Hong Kong government; for instance in a 2004 interview with the
South China Morning Post, he urged Hong Kong's Buddhists to be content with the government and not to attend protests. Kok Kwong also attracted criticism for his close association with billionaire
Li Ka-shing and the building of
Tsz Shan Monastery, which was sponsored mostly by the Li family. In 2013, Kok Kwong was awarded the
Grand Bauhinia Medal for his many years of public service. ==Death==