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{{Mahāyāna Buddhism}}
The color scheme of this page is based on the prominence of golden light in Mahāyāna Buddhism as typified by the Golden Light Sutra. The colors of gold were sampled from a painting of Sukhāvatī, and specifically from the Avalokiteśvara figure's radiant aura of golden light.
The color scheme uses four custom hues:background:#fbfac4
) background:#fff692
) background:#debc32
) #00ccff
) for unlinked text Wikipedia's policy on verifiability states:
The main article and set of related citations for this template's content is Mahāyāna Buddhism. Questions about the reliability or accuracy of this template's concepts should be addressed on that article's talk page. Questions about this template's organization should be addressed on this template's talk page.
Part of a series on |
Mahāyāna Buddhism |
---|
![]() |
The template opposite presents links to major Wikipedia articles on Mahāyāna Buddhism.
This template can be invoked as follows:
{{Mahāyāna Buddhism}}
The color scheme of this page is based on the prominence of golden light in Mahāyāna Buddhism as typified by the Golden Light Sutra. The colors of gold were sampled from a painting of Sukhāvatī, and specifically from the Avalokiteśvara figure's radiant aura of golden light.
The color scheme uses four custom hues:background:#fbfac4
) background:#fff692
) background:#debc32
) #00ccff
) for unlinked text Wikipedia's policy on verifiability states:
The main article and set of related citations for this template's content is Mahāyāna Buddhism. Questions about the reliability or accuracy of this template's concepts should be addressed on that article's talk page. Questions about this template's organization should be addressed on this template's talk page.