The Bodhi Tree in Kumbum Monastery. According to legend, when Master Tsongkhapa, the founder of the Gelug Sect of Tibetan Buddhism, was born, his mother Fansa Ache shed three drops of blood when she cut off the umbilical cord. Later, a Bodhi tree grew here. Later, Master Tsongkhapa moved to Tibet, and his mother often missed her son. Master Tsongkhapa wrote a letter and told his mother to build a pagoda next to the bodhi tree. Seeing the pagoda is like seeing a person. Later generations built a large gold-tiled hall to protect the tower and trees. This is the reason why there is a pagoda first and then a temple in Kumbum Monastery, and also the reason why the trunk of the tree is wrapped in the silver pagoda. Bodhi flowers bloom, and the world is filled with the smiles of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas. The holy place is beautifully decorated. There is one hall in the temple that is the most stunning, and that is the famous hall of Kumbum Monastery - the Hall of Prayer for Longevity (Flower Temple). Look at the bodhi trees on the wall in full bloom, one by one, or half with a hint of dew. , or the charming grace of blooming wantonly, lowering the eyebrows shyly, or nodding and smiling, blending a different kind of Zen into the solemn and solemn place surrounded by mulberry smoke.