Thousands of faithful in Myanmar have donated 1,750 pounds (800 kilograms) of their hair in a money-raising campaign to repair the route to a Buddhist pagoda, reports said Sunday. About 30,000 women and more than 100 long-haired men from the central city of Mandalay and nearby towns have donated the hair, Kumudra magazine quoted a Buddhist monk as saying. Some of the locks measured 120 centimeters (4 feet), said Shin Wayama Nanda, the chief abbot of Mandalay's Naga monastery. The campaign will use proceeds from the sale of hair to repair sections of a road and build bridges leading to the popular site which is said to contain the remains of one of Buddha's disciples. The hair will be used in wigs or dolls, or it can be sold to traders from China for similar purposes. “With the money acquired from the sale of hair, sections of the 25-kilometer (15-mile) road (will be repaired) and 15 small and medium-length bridges will be built,” Shin Wayama Nanda said.