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Hsuan Hua

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Hsuan Hua
Hsuan Hua in Ukiah, California
TitleChan Master, Founder and abbot of the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas, President of the Dharma Realm Buddhist Association, Rector of the Dharma Realm Buddhist University, the ninth patriarch of guiyang school.
Personal
Born
Bai Yushu

(1918-04-26)April 26, 1918
Jilin, China
DiedJune 7, 1995(1995-06-07) (aged 77)
ReligionChan Buddhism
SchoolGuyiang School
Lineage9th generation
Dharma namesAn Tzu
Tu Lun
Senior posting
TeacherHsu Yun
Students
Hsuan Hua meditating in the lotus position. Hong Kong, 1953.

Hsuan Hua (Chinese: 宣化; pinyin: Xuānhuà; lit. 'proclaim and transform'; April 26, 1918 – June 7, 1995), also known as An Tzu, Tu Lun and Master Hua by his Western disciples, was a Chinese monk of Chan Buddhism and a contributing figure in bringing Chinese Buddhism to the United States in the late 20th century.

Hsuan Hua founded several institutions in the US. The Dharma Realm Buddhist Association (DRBA) is a Buddhist organization with chapters in North America, Australia and Asia. The City of Ten Thousand Buddhas (CTTB) in Ukiah, California, is one of the first Chan Buddhist monasteries in America. Hsuan Hua founded Dharma Realm Buddhist University at CTTB. The Buddhist Text Translation Society works on the phonetics and translation of Buddhist scriptures from Chinese into English, Vietnamese, Spanish, and many other languages.[1]

Early life

Hsuan Hua, born on the sixteenth day of the third lunar month in the year of Wuwu (Horse), April 26, 1918. Named Bai Yushu (白玉書) alos known as Bai Yuxi (白玉溪) in Shuangcheng County of Jilin (now Wuchang, Harbin, Heilongjiang).[2][3]After his birth, he cried for three days out of pity for beings in the saha world. Following a similar story of Gautama Siddhartha's Four Sights (the sight of a oldman, sick man, a corpse and an ascetic) which lead him to his realization. At age eleven Hsuan Hua saw a dead infant in the wild and he too contemplated about the nature of the Impermanence and Saṃsāra (cycle of birth and dead ) of the baby. That's when he resolved to leave home and cultivate the way, but didn't at the request of his mother.His mother was a vegetarian and held to the practice of reciting the name of Amitabha Buddha throughout her life. As a child, followed his mother’s example.[3][4]

At the age of twelve, he began bowing every day to repent his faults to his parents as an act of filial piety. Later he felt it was not enough to bow to them, so he gradually increased his bows to his teachers, the Emperor, the heavens, the earth until he was bowing to all living beings, hoping to bring peace to the world. He bowed every morning and evening, each time making more than 830 bows, which took five hours a day.[3] His cultivation is in reference to the Great Learning (simplified Chinese: 大学; traditional Chinese: 大學; pinyin: DàXué), one of the Four Books of Confucianism, where one and align his affairs and relationships into order and harmony by first cultivativating oneself, then extending it to others. He request, to his parents, to leave so that he could find a teacher to help him on his spiritual path. After some time, with his parents’ permission he set forth and traveled in search of a true spiritual teacher. At fifteen Hsuan Hu took refuge with the Three Jewels under Venerable High Master Changzhi of Sanyuan Monastery in Harbin. He drew near the Abbot, Venerable High Master Changren.[2] [4].

Education

After finding a spiritual teacher, Hsuan Hua enrolled into a private village school from the twelfth day of the third lunar month to the thirteenth day of the eighth lunar month in the year of Ren Shen (Monkey), April, 16 to September, 13 1932. Where he had his first experience of formal education.[2] Studied with single-minded concentration, he was able to memorized after reading it once using his photographic memory. At the age of sixteen he had already started to lecture on the Buddhist sutras to the fellow villagers who were mainly illiterate. Being well versed in the Sixth Patriarch's Dharma Jewel Platform Sutra, the Vajra Sutra, the Amitabha Sutra, and other Buddhist texts. [2][4] As a student and a practitioner, he was apart of many charity organizations such as the Buddhist Association, the Moral Society of Manchuria , the Charity Society. Organizations that help encourage people to quit smoking and drinking, and others unskillful means. To help teach people to refraining from all evil and practicing all good. [3] After 2 more years of study he had already mastered the core texts of Confucianism, Four Books, the Five Classics, other various chinese schools of thought, studied traditional Chinese medicine, astrology, divination, physiognomy, and the scriptures of the great religions.[3][4] At the age eighteen Hsuan Hu with first hand experience, understood the hardships that came with not having a complete education. He decided to established a free school teaching thirty impoverished children and adults, being the only teacher and faculty member. By that point he had already quit school in order to take care of his ill mother.[3][4]

Monastic Life

At 19 years of age, Hua became a monastic, under the Dharma name An Tzu.[citation needed] (安慈)

Bringing Chinese Buddhism to the United States

In 1959, Hsuan Hua sought to bring Chinese Buddhism to the West.[5] He instructed his disciples in America to establish a Buddhist association, initially known as The Buddhist Lecture Hall, which was renamed the Sino-American Buddhist Association before taking its present name: the Dharma Realm Buddhist Association.[citation needed]

Hsuan Hua traveled to Australia in 1961 and taught there for one year, returning to Hong Kong in 1962. That same year, at the invitation of American Buddhists, he traveled to the United States; his intent was to "come to America to create Patriarchs, to create Buddhas, to create Bodhisattvas".[6]

San Francisco

Hsuan Hua resided in San Francisco, where he built a lecture hall. Hsuan Hua began to attract young Americans who were interested in meditation. He conducted daily meditation sessions and frequent Sutra lectures.[citation needed]

At that time, the Cuban Missile Crisis occurred between the United States and the Soviet Union, and Hsuan Hua embarked on a fasting period for thirty-five days to pray for an end to the hostilities and for world peace. In 1967, Hsuan Hua moved the Buddhist Lecture Hall back to Chinatown, locating it in the Tianhou Temple.[citation needed]

First American Sangha

In 1968, Hsuan Hua held a Shurangama Study and Practice Summer Session. Over thirty students from the University of Washington in Seattle came to study the Buddha's teachings. After the session was concluded, five young Americans (Bhikṣu Heng Chyan, Heng Jing, and Heng Shou, and Bhikṣuṇīs Heng Yin and Heng Ch'ih) requested permission to take full ordination.[7]

Hsuan Hua lectured on the entire Śūraṅgama Sūtra in 1968 while he was in the United States. These lectures were recorded in an eight-part series of books containing the sutra and a traditionally rigorous form of commentary that addresses each passage. It was again lectured by the original translator monks and nuns of the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas at Dharma Realm Buddhist University in the summer of 2003.[citation needed]

Vision of American Buddhism

With the founding of his American Sangha, Hsuan Hua embarked on his personal vision for Buddhism in the United States:

  • Bringing the true and proper teachings of the Buddha to the West and establishing a proper monastic community of the fully ordained Sangha there[citation needed]
  • Organizing and supporting the translation of the entire Buddhist canon into English and other Western languages[8][9]
  • Promoting wholesome education through the establishment of schools and universities[citation needed]

Hosting ordination ceremonies

Because of the increasing numbers of people who wished to become monks and nuns under Hsuan Hua's guidance, in 1972 he decided to hold ordination ceremonies at Gold Mountain Dhyana Monastery. Two monks and one nun received ordination. Subsequent ordination platforms have been held at the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas in 1976, 1979, 1982, 1989, 1991, and 1992, and progressively larger numbers of people have received full ordination. Over two hundred people from countries all over the world were ordained under him.[citation needed]

Theravada and Mahayana traditions

Having traveled to Thailand and Burma in his youth to investigate the Southern Tradition of Buddhism, Hsuan Hua wanted to bridge what he perceived as a rift between the Northern (Mahayana) and Southern (Theravada) traditions. In an address to Ajahn Sumedho and the monastic community at Amaravati Buddhist Monastery on October 6, 1990, Hsuan Hua stated:[10]

In Buddhism, we should unite the Southern and Northern traditions. From now on, we won't refer to Mahayana or Theravada. Mahayana is the "Northern Tradition" and Theravada is the "Southern Tradition." [...] Both the Southern and the Northern Traditions' members are disciples of the Buddha, we are the Buddha's descendants. As such, we should do what Buddhists ought to do. [...] No matter the Southern or the Northern Tradition, both share the common purpose of helping living beings bring forth the Bodhi-mind, to put an end to birth and death, and to leave suffering and attain bliss.

On the occasion of the opening ceremony for the Dharma Realm Buddhist University, Hsuan Hua presented K. Sri Dhammananda of the Theravada tradition with an honorary Ph.D. He also donated a major piece of the land that would become Abhayagiri Buddhist Monastery, a Theravada Buddhist monastery in the Thai Forest tradition of Ajahn Chah, located in Redwood Valley, California.[citation needed]

Hsuan Hua would also invite Bhikkhus from both traditions to jointly conduct the High Ordination.[11]

Chinese and American Buddhism

From July 18 to the 24th of 1987, Hsuan Hua hosted the Water, Land, and Air Repentance Dharma Assembly, a centuries-old ritual often seen as the "king of dharma services" in Chinese Buddhism, at the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas and invited over seventy Buddhists from mainland China to attend. This was the first time the service was known to have been held in North America.[12]

On November 6, 1990, Hsuan Hua sent his disciples to Beijing to bring the Dragon Treasury (Chinese: 龍藏; pinyin: lóngzáng) edition of the Chinese Buddhist canon back to CTTB, furthering his goal of bringing Buddhism to the US.[citation needed]

Death

On June 7, 1995, while visiting Long Beach Sagely Monastery, Hsuan Hua died in his sleep.[13] He had been ill for some time prior to his death at the age of 77.[13] His parting words were

"I came from empty space, and I will also return to empty space,"

— Master Hua

Funeral

Hsuan Hua's funeral lasted from June 8 to July 29. On June 17, Hsuan Hua's body was placed in a refrigerated casket and taken from southern to northern California, returning to the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas to lie in repose. All major services during the funeral were presided over by Ming Yang, abbot of Longhua Temple in Shanghai and a longtime friend of Hsuan Hua's.[citation needed]

On July 28, monks from both Theravada and Mahayana traditions hosted a memorial ceremony and cremation. More than two thousand followers from the United States, Canada, and various Asian and European countries, came to CTTB to take part in the funeral service. Letters of condolences from dignitaries including former President George H. W. Bush were read during the service.[citation needed]

A day after the cremation, July 29, Hsuan Hua's ashes were scattered, at his request, in the open air above the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas from a hot air balloon by his first two disciples, Heng Sure and Heng Chau. After the funeral, memorial services commemorating Hsuan Hua's life were held in various parts of the world, including Taiwan, China, and Canada. His śarīra (relics) were then distributed to many of his temples, disciples, and followers.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ "About DRBA". Dharma Realm Buddhist Association. Retrieved 2024-04-21.
  2. ^ a b c d "City of 10,000 Buddhas - Year by Year Record of Master Hua". www.cttbusa.org. Retrieved 2024-04-21.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "宣化老和尚追思纪念专集(二) - 宣公上人行仪". www.drbachinese.org. Retrieved 2024-04-21.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Our Founder". Buddhist Text Translation Society. Retrieved 2024-04-21.
  5. ^ Epstein, Ronald (1995). "The Venerable Master Hsuan Hua Brings the Dharma to the West." In Memory of the Venerable Master Hsuan Hua, Volume One. Burlingame, CA:Buddhist Text Translation Society, pp. 59-68. Reprinted in The Flower Adornment Sutra, Chapter One, Part One “The Wondrous Adornment of the Rulers of the Worlds; A Commentary by Venerable Master Hsuan Hua. Burlingame, CA: Buddhist Text Translation Society, 2004, pp. 274-286.
  6. ^ Prebish, Charles (1995). "Ethics and Integration in American Buddhism". Journal of Buddhist Ethics, Vol. 2, 1995.
  7. ^ The First American Sangha
  8. ^ Epstein, Ronald (1969). “The Heart Sūtra and the Commentary of Tripiṭaka Master Hsüan Hua.” Master’ Thesis, University of Washington.
  9. ^ Epstein, Ronald (1975). “The Śūraṅgama-sūtra with Tripiṭaka Master Hsüan-hua’s Commentary An Elementary Explanation of Its General Meaning: A Preliminary Study and Partial Translation.” Ph.D. Dissertation. University of California at Berkeley.
  10. ^ Hsuan Hua. The Shurangama Sutra with Commentary, Volume 7. 2003. p. 261
  11. ^ A Shared Dedication to the Dhamma Vinaya | Rev. Heng Sure, retrieved 2024-01-31
  12. ^ "Water, Land, Air Ceremony - Through the Years: The First Water, Land, Air Ceremony in the West". www.advite.com. Retrieved 2024-04-18.
  13. ^ a b "Our Founder Venerable Master Hsuan Hua". Redwood Vihara. Retrieved 2024-04-18.