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    Hare Krishna Student Center

    4.7 (7 reviews)
    Closed 11:00 am - 4:00 pm

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    Tu Vin A Nan - Tu Viện A Nan, Gainesville

    Tu Vin A Nan

    5.0(7 reviews)
    2.5 mi

    "Peace comes from within. Do not seek it without." -Buddha…read more Having just driven from Starke where I saw the first Atheist Monument in the USA, it was interesting to come to Gainesville and tour this wonderful peaceful retreat. It's quiet, it's beautiful and it's a serene atmosphere that is perfect for meditating or just clearing one's mind of the daily struggles. The temple grounds feature majestic Buddhist sculptures, including a 33-foot-long reclining Buddha, a 28-foot-tall seated Buddha, and a 45-foot-tall Avalokitesvara, a bodhisattva who embodies compassion. The statue depicting a young Buddha atop a solid granite globe was installed in 2019. All were hand-crafted in Vietnam and carefully installed here in Florida. It is free to visit. The paved walkways are handicapped accessible. There are benches throughout to provide the opportunity for peaceful reflection. Do be aware of the wildlife. [Review 353 of 2025 - 2005 in Florida - 23915 overall]

    Running around town with my mom recently, we decided to explore some parks in town that we had…read morenever been to. I came across Tu Vien a Nan in my exploration of Google Maps, and figured that was something that might be interesting, so off we went! The grounds are well kept and the statuary is impressive. Numerous very large statues devoted to the Buddhist faith have been erected in the park, with a number of different areas designed for peaceful meditation and prayer. Just walking around the grounds is a pleasant experience, and we thoroughly enjoyed ourselves for the hour or so that we were there. I highly recommend going here for an hour or so of peace.

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    Tu Vin A Nan - Tu Viện A Nan, Gainesville

    Tu Viện A Nan, Gainesville

    Tu Vin A Nan - Tu Viện A Nan, Gainesville

    Tu Viện A Nan, Gainesville

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    Tu Viện A Nan, Gainesville

    Lynching in America Historical Marker - Lynching in America Historical Marker, Gainesville

    Lynching in America Historical Marker

    3.0(1 review)
    1.0 mi

    Like the Stolpersteine I have seen across Europe when on vacation, these blue "Lynching in America"…read moreare jarring when you're on vacation. It's a reminder that no matter how much fun you're having, there were dark times in our history and they should be remembered. This marker is on the grounds of the Alachua County Courthouse and the front reads, "After the Civil War, constitutional rights were granted to Black people ensuring equal protection and voting. Many white leaders responded to the emancipation of Black people by violently seeking to maintain racial, economic, and social control over Black residents. By ceding political control back to Confederate veterans, federal officials allowed white southerners opposed to racial equality to re-establish white supremacy through intimidation and violence. Thousands of Black men, women, and children were lynched during Reconstruction, with dozens of large-scale massacres of Black communities between 1865 and 1876. This terror persisted after Reconstruction, largely with impunity. Lynchings of Black people included burnings and mutilation, sometimes in front of crowds numbering in the thousands. Lynch mobs would often seize their victims from jails, courtrooms, or from police, without fear of any legal repercussions. Many names of those whose lives were claimed by these acts of racially motivated violence were not recorded and will never be known, but at least 6,500 racial terror lynchings were documented in the United States between 1865 and 1950. Florida had one of the highest per capita lynching rates in the nation with at least 343 documented victims lynched and at least 12 Black people lynched in Gainesville. This marker honors the victims of this tragic racial terror violence in our community." And the reverse, "The era of Reconstruction following the Civil War opened with great promise in Gainesville but soon gave way to racial terror, unparalleled violence, and racial oppression. White mobs lynched at least eight Black people during this period: Harry Franklin 1868; Mr. Stephens 1868; an Unnamed Person 1870; Christopher Cummings 1870; Henry Washington 1871; Alexander Morris 1871; Sandy Hacock 1871 and Eli in 1874. After Emancipation, Black people made up a majority of the population in Gainesville and opened businesses, churches, and organized political engagement. They advocated for public education, land ownership, and the right to vote. White people hoping to maintain the racial hierarchy that existed during enslavement attacked and lynched Black people for asserting their rights, leaving plantations, participating in politics, working toward economic independence, violating white social customs, being accused of crimes, or for sheer racial terror that was random and arbitrary. In 1874, a white mob set fire to the local jail to lynch a black man named Eli by burning him to death. This type of violence was accommodated by courts, law enforcement, and white officials who removed African Americans from juries, seized Black-owned land, and suppressed Black voting rights, while ignoring or even supporting white mobs who terrorized Black communities. Racial violence continued to terrorize the Black community for decades. The marker was erected in 2021 by Alachua County Community Remembrance Project - Equal Justice Initiative. Dark times, indeed. [Review 358 of 2025 - 2010 in Florida - 23920 overall]

    Hare Krishna Student Center - religiousorgs - Updated May 2026

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