Un venditore di miele in bottiglia sul lato di un vicolo che conduce alla casa del leader religioso islamico indonesiano e fondatore del Daarut Tauhiid, KH Abdullah Gymnastiar, popolarmente noto come AA Gym, a Gegerkalong, Bandung, Giava Occidentale, Indonesia. Attraverso il loro ramo di gestione Manajemen Qolbu (mq), Abdullah Gymnastiar e Daarut Tauhiid sono riusciti a intensificare il turismo religioso e le attività economiche nell'area di Gegerkalong nella città di Bandung.
3409 x 2270 px | 28,9 x 19,2 cm | 11,4 x 7,6 inches | 300dpi
Data acquisizione:
agosto 2005
Ubicazione:
Gegerkalong, Sukasari, Bandung, West Java, Indonesia
Altre informazioni:
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A vendor of bottled honey on the side of an alley leading to the house of Indonesian Islamic religious leader and founder of Daarut Tauhiid, KH Abdullah Gymnastiar—popularly known as Aa Gym—in Gegerkalong, Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. Through their management branch Manajemen Qolbu (MQ), Abdullah Gymnastiar and Daarut Tauhiid have succeeded in escalating religious tourism and economic activities in Gegerkalong area in Bandung City.._Hundreds to thousands of spiritual tourists came everyday to Gegerkalong area in Bandung, West Java, Indonesia; for religious tour in and around the pondok pesantren (Islamic boarding schools) Daarut Tauhiid and other Islamic facilities under Manajemen Qolbu—a brand of Islamic social activities named after the philosophy of Islamic spiritual life that Gymnastiar, the founder of Daarut Tauhiid, have been teaching. The tour, sometimes including a visit to the house of the religious leader, Abdullah Gymnastiar._"The religious tourism is less affected by economic issues because the reason for travelling is very strong and it plays a very important role in their (the pilgrims) lives so money does not play a very vital role to stop from visiting a destination, " according to Juli Gevorgian (Yerevan State University) in her paper published on Academia._Southeast Asia is home to numerous religious attractions associated with world religions, such as Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam and Christianity. It is a diverse area fused together by Buddhist, Hindu, Islamic and Christian religions, which in turn reflect Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Dutch, British, French and American cultural influences, wrote Jaeyeon Choe and Michael O'Regan (Institute for Tourism Studies, Macao, China) in their paper entitled "Religious Tourism Experiences in South East Asia, " which was published in a 2015 book entitled Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage Management: An International Perspective; published by CABI Publishing._Photographed on film.
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