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March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
Bodhidharma

Wikipedia

 
Image:BodhidharmaYoshitoshi1887.jpg|thumb|250px|Bodhidharma, woodblock print by Yoshitoshi, 1887.
Bodhidharma (Sanskrit: बोधिधमृ;
Chinese language|Chinese 菩提達摩,
pinyin P?t?d?m? or simply D?m?; Wade-Giles
Tamo; Japanese language|Japanese ダルマ,
Daruma), also known as the Tripitaka Dharma Master,
was a semi-legendary Buddhist monk, who lived from
approximately 440 - 528.
Bodhidharma is traditionally held to be the founder of the Chan school of Buddhism (known in Japan and the West as Zen),
and the Shaolin school of Chinese martial arts.



The origins of Bodhidharma are unclear. He is first mentioned in
The Record of the Buddhist Monasteries of Lo-yang, a 547
Chinese text by Yang Xuanzhi which describes the great eminence
of the Luoyang's religious works. Yang mentions Bodhidharma
twice in passing, identifying him as a Central Asian monk whom he met at the monastery of Yung-ning. Yang recalls:

Seeing the golden disks at the top of the monastery's stupa reflecting in the sun, the rays of light illuminating the surface of the clouds, the jewel-bells on the stupa blowing in the wind, the echoes reverberating beyond the heavens, Bodhidharma sang its praises. He exclaimed: "Truly this is the work of spirits." He said: "I am 150 years old, and I have passed through numerous countries. There is virtually no country I have not visited. But even in India there is nothing comparable to the pure beauty of this monastery. Even the distant Buddha realms lack this." He chanted homage and placed his palms together in salutation for days on end.

...

Hsiu-Fan Monastery had a statue of a fierce thunderbolt bearer guarding the gate. Pigeons and doves would neither fly through the gate nor roost upon it. Bodhidharma said: "That catches its true character!"


Yung-ning was short-lived, suffering from natural and military
disasters ten years after its construction in 516. This indicates
that Bodhidharma was in Luoyang between 516 and 526.

Image:Bodhidarma.jpg|thumb|left|This Japanese scroll calligraphy of Bodhidharma reads ?Zen points directly to the human heart, see into your nature and become Buddha?. It was created by Hakuin Ekaku (1685 to 1768)
According to a later text, the Xu Gao Sen Zhuan
(Continued Biographies of Eminent Monks), written in 645 by
Dao Xuan, Bodhidharma was born in what is now Kerala in
southern India around 440 during the Pallava dynasty's
rule. He is said to have been born as a clan prince in the poor
hunter class and was well versed in martial arts (a form still
surviving as Kalaripayattu). According to Dao Xuan, he
travelled from India to China by the sea route, arriving at
Canton, China|Canton and then crossing the Yangtze River,
heading north.

Dao Xuan's description is largely copied from earlier works,
T'an Lin's Biography and Bodhidharma's Two Entrances,
which form the first two sections of the
Long Scroll of the Treatise on the Two Entrances and Four Practices,
collected and reproduced in 1935 by Japanese Zen
layman Suzuki Daisetsu after the discovery of tens of
thousands of manuscripts in a hidden chamber of the Tun-huang
caves in northwest China. Dao Xuang includes Yang Xuanzhi's
statement of Bodhidharma's age, and explicitly declares Bodhidharma's
arrival in China by sea, a detail not found in the Biography.
(T'an Lin simply stated Bodhidharma had "crossed distant mountains
and seas".)

By whatever route, Bodhidharma travelled to teach in China in about
475, where he found would-be Buddhists preoccupied with
scholasticism and attempting to earn favorable karma through good
works. He travelled to various Chinese monasteries, teaching and
giving sermons.

His death
Bodhidharma died around 528, at which time he would have been
about 90 years old (according to Dao Xuan) or between 152 and 162
(according to Yang Xuanzhi). Legend claims that he was buried at a
Shaolin temple on Mount Hsiung-erh, west of Luoyang, and that a monk named Song Yun met him traveling "back to the west" on the following day, holding one sandal. Bodhidharma's stupa was then opened, and only one sandal was found inside.

However, Dao Xuan states that Bodhidharma died at Lo River Beach and his
body concealed in a cave along the river by his disciple Hui-k'o
— an unusual funeral for Buddhist masters, who normally
received elaborate ceremonies. An explanation for this may be found
in the political climate of the time: in 528, the victors of a
particular battle carried out a purge of their surviving opponents,
and executed them at Lo River Beach. A later report in
Taishou shinshuu daizoukyou states that a Buddhist monk was
among the victims.



Image:CentralAsianBuddhistMonks.JPG|thumb|220px|Blue-eyed Central Asian Buddhist monk, possibly Bodhidharma, forming the "Vitarka" mudra (Symbol of teaching/ discussion of the dharma), in the direction of an East-Asian monk. Eastern Tarim Basin, China, 9th-10th century.
Tradition holds that Bodhidharma's chosen sutra was the
Lankavatara Sutra, a development of the Yogacara or
"Mind-only" school of Buddhism established by the Gandharan
half-brothers Asanga and Vasubandhu. He is described as a
"master of the Lankavatara Sutra", and an early history of Zen in
China is titled "Record of the Masters and Disciples of the
Lankavatara Sutra" (Chin. Leng-ch'ieh shih-tzu chi). It is also
sometimes said that Bodhidharma himself was the one who brought the
Lankavatara to Chinese Buddhism.

Bodhidharma's approach tended to reject devotional rituals, doctrinal
debates and verbal formalizations, in favour of an intuitive grasp of
the "Buddha mind" within everyone, through meditation. In contrast
with other Buddhist schools such as Pure Land, Bodhidarma
emphasized personal enlightenment, rather than the promise
of heaven.

Bodhidharma also considered spiritual, intellectual and physical
excellence as an indivisible whole necessary to attain enlightenment.
He is famous for having established a training regimen for the monks
of the Shaolin|Shaolin Monastery as a way to reinforce the
efficiency of meditation. Bodhidharma developed a system of 18 dynamic
tension exercises. These exercise were formalized into the Yi Jin Jing
of 550, which became the basis of the famous style of kung fu later known as Shaolinquan, and an important influence on the subsequent practise of martial arts in East Asia generally.
Bodhidharma is also associated in legend with the use of tea to maintain wakefulness in meditation (the origin of Chado), and
favoured paradoxes, conundrums and provocation as a way to
break intellectual rigidity (a method which led to the development
of koan).

Bodhidharma's mind-and-body approach to enlightenment ultimately
proved highly attractive to the Samurai class in Japan, who made
Zen their way of life, following their encounter with the
martial-arts-oriented Zen Rinzai School introduced to Japan by
Eisai in the 12th century.



Throughout Buddhist art, Bodhidharma is depicted as a rather
ill-tempered, profusely bearded and wide-eyed barbarian. He is
described as "The Blue-Eyed Barbarian" in Chinese texts.

Chan texts also present Bodhidharma as the 28th Chan Patriarch, in an
uninterrupted line starting with the Gautama Buddha|Buddha,
through direct and non-verbal transmission.




Emperor Wu
According to tradition, Bodhidharma was invited to an audience with
Emperor Wu Di of the Liang dynasty (Southern dynasties)
in 520. When the Emperor asked him how much merit he had
accumulated through building temples and endowing monasteries,
Bodhidharma replied, "None at all."

Perplexed, the Emperor then asked, "Well, what is the fundamental
teaching of Buddhism?"

"Vast emptiness," was the bewildering reply.

"Listen," said the Emperor, now losing all patience,
"just who do you think you are?"

"I have no idea," Bodhidharma replied.

With this, Bodhidharma was banished from the Court, and is said to
have sat in meditation for the next seven years "listening to the
ants scream".

Nine years of wall-examining
Bodhidharma traveled to the recently constructed Shaolin temple in
the north of China, where the monks refused him admission.
Bodhidharma sat meditating facing a wall for the next 9 years,
supposedly burning holes into the wall by staring at it. Only then
did the monks of the Shaolin Temple respect Bodhidharma and allow him
inside. There, he found the monks so out of shape from a life of study
spent copying scrolls that he introduced a regimen of martial
exercises, which became the foundation of many later schools of
kung fu.

Bringing tea to China
A story credits Bodhidharma with bringing tea to China.
Supposedly, he cut off his eyelids while meditating, to keep from
falling asleep. Tea bushes sprung from the spot where his eyelids
hit the ground.

Daruma dolls
It is also reported that after years of meditation, Bodhidharma lost
the usage of his legs. This legend is still alive in Japan, where
legless Daruma dolls represent Bodhidharma, and are used to
make wishes.

Bodhidharma and Hui-ko
Bodhidharma was the first Zen patriarch of China. All later
Chinese and Japanese Zen masters trace their master-disciple lineage
to him. Hui-ko, who was to become the second patriach, was first
ignored when he tried to approach him, and left outside in the snow,
until he cut his own arm and offered it to the Master (a legend which
is likely apocryphal; according to Dao Xuan his arm was cut off by
wandering bandits). Bodhidharma later transmitted to him the insignia
of the patriarchs: the robe, the Buddha's begging bowl, and a copy of
the Lankavatara Sutra.



Although Bodhidharma is commonly said to have had two primary
disciples (the monks Tao-yu and Hui-ko), a common voice in the
"Records" of the Long Scroll is that of a Yuan, possibly identified
with the nun Dharani who was said to have received Bodhidharma's flesh
— his bones having been received by Tao-yu, and his marrow
received by Hui-ko. An list of Bodhidharma's early students follows.

  • Bodhidharma

  • * Tao-yu

  • * Yuan (Yuan-chi?)

  • ** Tao-chih

  • * Hui-ko

  • ** Hui-man

  • ** Layman Hsiang

  • ** Hua-kung

  • ** Yen-kung

  • ** T'an-lin

  • ** Dhana Master Na

  • ** Dhyana Master Ho

  • *** Hsuan-ching

  • **** Hsuan-chueh

  • *** Ching-ai

  • **** T'an-yen

  • **** Tao-an

  • **** Tao-p'an

  • **** Chih-tsang

  • **** Seng-chao

  • **** P'u-an

  • ***** Ching-yuan




  • The Bloodstream Sermon

  • The Breakthrough Sermon

  • The Outline of Practice

  • Two Entrances

  • The Wake-Up Sermon




  • Buddhism in China

  • culture hero

  • list of Buddhist topics




  • http://tekct.hit.bg/judo/Zen-And-The-Martial-Arts.pdf Zen and the Martial Arts by Ming Zheng Shakya (PDF)

  • http://www.onmarkproductions.com/html/daruma.shtml Bodhidharma




  • Bodhidharma, T'an-lin, Layman Hsiang, et al.; Jeffrey R. Broughton, translator; The Bodhidharma Anthology: The Earliest Records of Zen. University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles. (1999) ISBN 0520219724

  • Tom Lowenstein, The Vision of the Buddha. Duncan Baird Publishers, London. ISBN 1903296919

  • Red Pine, translator; The Zen Teaching of Bodhidharma. North Point Press, New York. (1987)

  • Alan Watts, The Way of Zen. ISBN 0375705104

  • Paul Williams, Mahayana Buddhism: The Doctrinal Foundations. ISBN 0415025370


Buddhism2

Category:Zen masters

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ru:Бодхидхарма

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bodhidharma".


Last Modified:   2005-04-13


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