On the exact spot where one can today find the Tiejia Taoist Ecology Temple once stood the old Tiejiashu Temple, hidden amongst the foliage of age-old trees. The Tiejiashu Temple was built at the time of the Han Dynasty (206 BC–220) and remained there until the Cultural Revolution. It was one of the oldest temples dedicated to the gods of
Mount Taibai and the first temple on the route taken by pilgrims along the south side of the mountain. In the Tiejiashu Temple, the pilgrims were given water and could rest in preparation for the climb to the summit. Every year, between 9 June and 9 July of the Chinese lunar calendar, all temples on Mount Taibai gathered for the big temple feast at the old Tiejiashu Temple. There was a lively market, rituals were performed and many pilgrims started the trail to
Ba Xian Tai (Terrace of Immortalisation), the top of
Mount Taibai. This summit was the place where
Jiang Ziya, the wise minister of the
Zhou Dynasty who had helped overthrow the corrupt
Shang Dynasty (second millennium BC), had made immortal all those who had come to his aid. Like many
temples in China, the Tiejiashu Temple was destroyed during the
Cultural Revolution. According to residents from the Mount Taibai area, there was a Taoist monk around the middle of the twentieth century whose name, ironically, was Mao. He was living in the old Tiejiashu Temple when the Cultural Revolution broke out. The residents tried to defend the temples and mountain from attacks by the
Red Guard but the old temple was destroyed and the monk was forced to leave. After the
Cultural Revolution, in the 1980s, opportunities to restore Taoist temples grew slowly but steadily. First, local residents built a few simple rooms where the three gods of
Mount Taibai could reside. Then, in the 1990s, a request to reopen the temple was submitted to the local government body responsible for monitoring religious activity. Permission was granted and, under the leadership of the
Louguan Tai Temple, where
Lao Zi is said to have written the
Tao Te Ching, the rooms regained their use as a place of quiet rest and contemplation. In the autumn of 2002, four extra rooms were built. Now the three gods of
Mount Taibai each had their own room, with the remaining rooms available for the monk of the
Louguan Tai Temple, who was going to live there, and his guests. Slowly but surely, the old Tiejiashu Temple came back to life, just like many other
temples in China. Following many years of ravage and ruin,
Taoism seemed just as robust and indomitable as the
Sacred Mountains themselves. == The Iron Armour Tree ==