Cao Dai Starting point for the cao dai religion. Includes a FAQ and full history. Caodai Mailing List Maintained by the same folks who brought you caodai.org. http://www.ebroadcast.com.au/dir/Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/Cao_Dai/
ADAM2.ORG - Category: Cao Dai Starting point for the cao dai religion. Includes a FAQ and full history. URLwww.caodai.org/ Maintained by the same folks who brought you caodai.org. http://www.adam2.org/dir/Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/Cao_Dai/index.cgi
Lavinya.Net Web Directory » Society » Religion And Spirituality Below are some useful links about cao dai on Religion and Spirituality.Lavinya.Net Web Directory » Society » Religion and Spirituality » cao dai http://www.lavinya.net/ara/Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/Cao_Dai/
Cu Chi & Cao Dai Temple Cu Chi cao dai. Children in front of one of many memorials to a battle in theAmerican cao dai priest preparing for daily worship in the gaudily and http://www.clubmobile.org/trips/Cu_Chi_Cao_Dai.html
Extractions: Jim Gasperini home Incidents of Travel Southern Vietnam Tra Vinh ... Mekong Children in front of one of many memorials to a battle in the American War. Most Vietnamese behave very graciously toward Americans, preferring to build the future rather than well on the past. Over 60% of the population was born after the end of the war, and in popular memory it is rapidly becoming just one of the many times the Vietnamese have had to repel "invaders." Official histories deny the concept that the conflict was a civil war, dismissing the South Vienamese government as an American puppet. Decorated dashboard of a van passing through Tra Vinh province, Mekong delta. Typical stretch of National Road 22, northwest of Ho Chi Minh City, taken from the back of a tourist bus. The guide had just informed us that near this spot the famous photograph was taken during the American war, of a terrified young girl burned by napalm dropped by an American bomber. Cu Chi, northwest of Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon). Guide demonstrates the use of secret entrances to tunnels used during the war by Viet Cong guerrillas.
Alumbo! Cao Dai Community CaoDai is an indigenous Vietnamese religion with a strong following in Franceand the United States. It is a religion of unity, combining teachings and http://www.alumbo.com/directory176.html
Extractions: CaoDai is an indigenous Vietnamese religion with a strong following in France and the United States. It is a religion of unity, combining teachings and beliefs of Taoism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Islam, Christianity, Spritism, and Geniism. Topics include religious tolerance, eastern religion and religious freedom. Also covered are cao dai, viet nam religion and alternative religion. Other areas are new religious movements, vietnamese religion and more. This community is currently unmoderated . Want to become its Community Leader
The Entire Directory Only In Religion_and_Spirituality/Cao_Dai Top cao dai NonProfit Organization - Starting point for the cao dai religion. cao dai - Small section of a larger religion project by Laura Clark and http://www.sitesatlas.com/cgi-bin/pod/pod.cgi?dir=/Society/Religion_and_Spiritua
Itzalist - CAO DAI RING This !tzalist ring is open to all cao dai related sites. Including all membersof the cao dai religion and sites with information about their beliefs. http://n.webring.com/hub?ring=tzalistcaodairin
TrekEarth | The Faithful At Cao Dai Photo This photo from the TrekEarth travel gallery is titled The Faithful at cao dai Photo . http://www.trekearth.com/gallery/Asia/Vietnam/photo144907.htm
Extractions: Panoramas Welcome Gallery Uncritiqued Photo Information Darren Melrose Darren Genre: People Medium: Color Date Taken: Categories: Daily Life Ceremony Camera: Pentax *ist D Sigma 70-200 f2.8EX Exposure: f/4 seconds More Photo Info: [ view Photo Version: Original Version, Workshop Theme(s): Cao Dai Great Temple in Tay Ninh view contributor(s) Date Submitted: Viewed: Points: Note Guidelines Photographer's Note Another shot from the fabulous Cao Dai Temple. Cao Daiism is a mix of six different religions (Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism,
TrekEarth | Prayer At Cao Dai Photo This photo from the TrekEarth travel gallery is titled Prayer at cao dai Photo . http://www.trekearth.com/gallery/Asia/Vietnam/photo164658.htm
Extractions: Panoramas Welcome Gallery Uncritiqued Photo Information Darren Melrose Darren Genre: People Medium: Color Date Taken: Categories: Daily Life Ceremony Architecture Event ... Decisive Moment Camera: Pentax *ist D Sigma 70-200 f2.8EX Exposure: f/4 seconds More Photo Info: [ view Photo Version: Original Version Date Submitted: Viewed: Points: Note Guidelines Photographer's Note A worshipper offers prayer at the colorful and amazing Cao Dai Temple outside of Saigon. The pillar you see in the background is one of many which add so much color and interest in this amazing temple.
Extractions: Search: search the entire directory search this category only Top Society See also: Regional: Asia: Vietnam: Society and Culture: Religion Society: Ethnicity: Asian: Asian-American: Vietnamese American: Religion Cao Dai Non-Profit Organization - Starting point for the Cao Dai religion. Includes a FAQ and full history.
Cao Dai - Spiritism And The Esoteric (CESNUR) A Study of cao dai (CESNUR 99 Conference) Institutionalising Spiritism andThe Esoteric The Case of the cao dai. Chris Hartney , Doctoral candidate, http://www.cesnur.org/testi/bryn/br_hartney.htm
Extractions: The centre of the Caodaist word is the Great Divine Temple in Tay Ninh. The apex of this building is undoubtedly the Great Eye that stares from the celestial globe above the altar, but from an earthly perspective the religion could not function without the "Cung Dao." This is the space directly in front of the great altar and it is within this space that official seance communication takes place. The rosette on the ceiling of this space symbolises the many different instruments of divine communication that have connected heaven and earth, some for many millennia. It is almost a representation of the genealogy of the various spiritualist traditions, both East and West, that have contributed to the spiritualist development of the Caodaist religion. I would like to speak a little about these instruments, the messages they delivered and the way in which they came to be the almost-centre of a vast institution that has spread throughout the world. Ngo Minh Chieu was already well-versed in the Eastern traditions of Taoist and shamanistic medium techniques when he received the first revelations from Cao Dai. These included attendance at seances where the trance-like state of the medium would allow for the channeling of gods, and also the use of young children, prized for their innocence and purity, who would transmit messages by writing with sticks in sand or on paper. Victor Oliver, quoting Pham Xuan Tin, also describes the first Caodaist's familiarity with the "co but"...
Vietnam - Package Tour : 02. Caodai Temple & Cuchi Tunnel a million followers, with a square kilometre around the temple at Tay Ninhowned by the cao dai The head quarter of cao dai sect is located in Tay Ninh. http://www.traveltovietnam.com/Booking/Package/Detail.asp?PackageID=129&DepartFr
Cao Dai - MavicaNET URL http//www.laze.net/culture/caodai.html. cao dai was officially foundedthrough a medium session 1926 by Ngo Van Chieu (aka Ngo Minh Chieu), http://www.mavicanet.com/directory/eng/4911.html
Extractions: Belarusian Bulgarian Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hungarian Icelandic Irish Italian Latvian Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian (cyr.) Serbian (lat.) Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Ukrainian Culture Religion Modern Religious Movements and Organizations Life Style ... List of Religious Movements Cao Dai Sister categories ... Adidam, The Way of the Heart Agnosticism Anabaptists Anglican Catholic Church Anthroposophy Armenian Church Asatru Atheism Baptists Bon-Po Brahmanism Buddhism Calvary Chapel Cathars Catholic Church Celtic Christianity Charismatic Movement Christadelphians Christian Reconstructionism Christianity Church of Christ Church of the Nazarene Church of the New Jerusalem: S... Confucianism Coptic Church Deism Divine Light Mission/ Elan Vit... Eckankar Ethical Culture Fourth Way Freemasonry Gnosticism Hare Krishna Hermeticism Hinduism Huguenots Humanism Islam Jainism Jesuites Judaism Lutheran Martinism Methodism Mission of Maitreya New Age Orthodox Church Pagan Pantheism Pentecostalism Presbyterian Present-Day Myths Protestant Churches Protestant Theology Rastafarianism Reformed Church, Calvinists
Beliefnet.com cao dai. view by date, view by topic, view by author, view by replies. A syncretisticreligion based in What is cao dai? Beliefnet, 2, 7/18/2004 208 PM http://www.beliefnet.com/boards/discussion_list.asp?boardID=55906
Extractions: Main Terra emerges from a camouflaged tunnel entry We had a very interesting visit to the infamous Cu Chi Tunnel complex west of Saigon. The tunnels sit at the southern end of the former Ho Chi Minh trail and were used primarily by the Viet Cong during the war. Much tighter than the Vinh Moc tunnels we visited in the DMZ, the Cu Chi tunnels require a certain amount of tolerance for dark, enclosed, stuffy spaces. Most of the girls braved the underground passageways, re-emerging with smiles of relief on their faces. In addition to the tunnels, we saw a wide variety of booby traps and improvised explosive devices that were used against American GI's during the war. It was difficult to imagine how terrifying it must have been patrolling this heavily booby-trapped jungle, knowing that there were miles of tunnels hidden beneath you filled with enemy soldiers. From Cu Chi we headed further west to within 30 or so miles of the Cambodian border. We arrived at the Holy See of the Cao Dai religion, an indigenous faith that was founded in 1926 and quickly grew to have more than 1 million followers. We arrived just before the noon mass and were allowed to approach the wildly colorful altar that includes statues of Buddha, Jesus, and Lao Tze. In addition to these figures, Cao Dai's believers worship an eclectic, international pantheon of saints, including Victor Hugo, William Shakespeare, and Sun Yat-sen. Once the mass started we moved upstairs to the balcony and watched the priests file in wearing yellow, blue, and red robes, followed by the lay worhippers dressed in white robes. We watched the mesmerizing chanting service for a while before starting the long drive back to Saigon for our farewell dinner at Buffalo Boy restaurant.