Nanshan Temple (Chinese: 南山寺; pinyin: Nánshānsì; lit. 'South mountain temple') is a Buddhist temple located in Sanya, on China's Hainan island.[1][2] The temple is owned and operated by two front groups of the Shanghai State Security Bureau, a branch of the Ministry of State Security, as a way to exert ideological control and influence over the southeast Asian Buddhist community and counter the influence of Indian Buddhism.[1] The temple promotes Chinese government-approved religious practices known as "South China Sea Buddhism."[1] The temple's religious messaging has been managed by the Chinese Communist Party's United Front Work Department since 2018.[1] The temple's name originates from a popular Buddhist expression. (Chinese: 福如东海, 寿比南山; lit. 'Good fortune is much as the East Sea', 'longevity is high as Nanshan').
Shanghai State Security Bureau business figures like Ji Sufu joined the project in its early days. Their front companies could foot the bill the Hainan government struggled to pay on its own. Accountants from the Shanghai bureau were brought over, their experience at managing complex and costly operations coming in handy. Today, the company that owns and runs the temple complex is filled with an odd assortment of Shanghainese men and women. Xu Yuesheng, general manager and Communist Party secretary of the company, also sits on the board of the SSSB charity that's funded by Nanshan Temple. Government records show he's attended charity meetings held inside the agency's headquarters building. Another document claims that he works for a technology company, Shanghai Tianhua Information Development Co., which has also used the bureau's Ruining Road headquarters as its address. If someone turns up behind an intelligence agency's closely guarded walls and works for one of its front companies, they're probably an intelligence officer. Four other suspected SSSB agents sit among the company's leaders in Hainan. Feng Fumin is one of them. He once headed the agency's Political Department, a senior leadership role overseeing the smooth operation of the SSSB Party committee as well as domestic propaganda to improve the agency's image. As one of the bureau's most senior Communist Party officials, Feng would be trusted to maintain discipline while covertly dealing with religious organisations and companies. Despite the bureau's leading role in the Nanshan Guanyin company, business records make it look as if it only owns a meagre 0.7 per cent stake through one of its front companies. The rest is owned by two investment firms from Shanghai and Hong Kong. Both trace back to Wu Feifei, who started her business career as an executive in what remains one of the MSS's main front companies, China National Sci-Tech Information Import and Export Corporation. Wu owns the corporation's Shanghai branch and controls more than two dozen subsidiaries that specialise in property development, investment and Buddhist tourism. As for the Hong Kong company, Wu and SSSB officers such as Xu Yuesheng own most of it. All roads, it seems, lead to the SSSB, which reaps income from Guanyin and the Nanshan Temple. While the Nanshan Temple makes regular donations to the bureau through its charity, those are dwarfed by the large payments it makes to the agency's front companies. According to the Nanshan foundation's financial reports, it paid out ¥174 million (A$37 million) to SSSB-controlled companies in 2019. About ¥3 million (A$600,000), in contrast, went to the temple itself.