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Monks' gambling prompts South Korean temple to change financial management

By K.J. Kwon, CNN
June 8, 2012 -- Updated 1148 GMT (1948 HKT)
File photo of the head of the Jogye Order of Korean Buddhism, Ja Seung, delivering a speech on October 27, 2011.
File photo of the head of the Jogye Order of Korean Buddhism, Ja Seung, delivering a speech on October 27, 2011.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Experts will now handle finances at Jogye Order temple, the order's chief says
  • The order will "focus on asceticism and missionary work," he said
  • Video from a hidden camera showed monks gambling, smoking and drinking last month
  • Information about the incident has been given to the country's prosecutor's office

(CNN) -- The chief of South Korea's biggest Buddhist order says he will hand over a temple's financial management to experts after monks were caught gambling illegally.

Ja Seung said Thursday that the Jogye Order will "focus on asceticism and missionary work."

Footage from a hidden camera, showing monks gambling, smoking and drinking last month, sparked nationwide criticism. It is not known who shot the video.

The monks spent 13 hours taking part in the high-stakes gambling, according to local media. The Jogye Order refused to comment on the details, saying that all information has been handed over for investigation by the country's prosecutor's office.

"Now the society has reached the stage in which monks cannot both focus on asceticism and management. ... The lack of systematic expertise in managing the temple has caused side effects -- factional fighting and conflicts -- for decades," Seung said in an official news release.

Buddhism has traditionally been one of South Korea's main religions, with followers making up about 20% of its population, the Jogye Order said.

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