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'''Dazu Huike''' (487-593) <ref>Dumoulin gives the dates as 484-590. Heinrich Dumoulin,  "Early Chinese Zen Reexamined: A Supplement to Zen Buddhism: A History", ''Japanese Journal of Religious Studies'', 1993: 20 (1): 31–53 p 94</ref> ({{lang-zh|大祖慧可}}; Chinese for short:慧可; pinyin: Huìkě; Wade-Giles: Hui-k’o; Japanese: Eka) is considered the Second Patriarch of Chinese [[Ch'an]] [[Buddhism]] and the Twenty-Ninth after [[Gautama Buddha]]. He received the symbolic robe and bowl of [[dharma]] succession from [[Bodhidharma]], the First Patriarch of Ch’an. Little factual information is available about the lives of Bodhidharma and Huike; accounts of them in historical texts are semi-legendary. Huike is known for cutting off his left arm and presenting it to Bodhidharma to demonstrate his sincerity after Bodhidharma initially rejected him as a student. Four springs (called 'Spring Zhuoxi) in front of the Second Ancestor's Monastery built for Huike at the [[Shaolin Temple]] in Henan are said to have been created by Bodhidharma so that Huike could easily fetch water with only one arm.  
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'''Dazu Huike''' (487-593) ({{lang-zh|大祖慧可}}; Chinese for short:慧可; pinyin: Huìkě; Wade-Giles: Hui-k’o; Japanese: Eka) is considered the Second Patriarch of Chinese [[Ch'an]] [[Buddhism]] and the twenty-ninth after [[Gautama Buddha]]. He received the symbolic robe and bowl of [[dharma]] succession from [[Bodhidharma]], the First Patriarch of Ch’an. Little factual information is available about the lives of Bodhidharma and Huike; accounts of them in historical texts are semi-legendary. Huike is known for cutting off his left arm and presenting it to Bodhidharma to demonstrate his sincerity after Bodhidharma initially rejected him as a student. Four springs (called Spring Zhuoxi) in front of the Second Ancestor's Monastery built for Huike at the [[Shaolin Temple]] in Henan are said to have been created by Bodhidharma so that Huike could easily fetch water with only one arm.  
 
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One of the most important characteristics of the early Ch'an of Bodhidharma and Huike was the concept of sudden [[Bodhi|enlightenment]] rather than the Indian yogic [[meditation]] which advocated concentration and gradual self-perfection as the means to enlightenment. Ch’an emphasized that Buddha Nature was within, and that each person must realize this individually through meditation rather than through studying the [[sutra]]s, performing ceremonies, doing good deeds or worshiping the [[Buddha]]s. Both Huike and Bodhidharma are said to have based their teachings on the [[Lankavatara Sutra]], which urges ‘self-enlightenment’, the “forgetting of words and thoughts.” <ref>Dumoulin p 95</ref> There is little doubt that Huike practiced and promoted meditation as the method to reach a true understanding of Buddhism, and that he taught that meditation should be free of any [[dualism]] or attachment.  
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One of the most important characteristics of the early Ch'an of Bodhidharma and Huike was the concept of sudden [[Bodhi|enlightenment]] rather than the Indian yogic [[meditation]] which advocated concentration and gradual self-perfection as the means to enlightenment. Ch’an emphasized that Buddha Nature was within, and that each person must realize this individually through meditation rather than through studying the [[sutra]]s, performing ceremonies, doing good deeds or worshiping the [[Buddha]]s. Both Huike and Bodhidharma are said to have based their teachings on the [[Lankavatara Sutra]], which urges "self-enlightenment," the “forgetting of words and thoughts.” There is little doubt that Huike practiced and promoted meditation as the method to reach a true understanding of Buddhism, and that he taught that meditation should be free of any [[dualism]] or attachment.  
  
 
==Life==
 
==Life==
Dazu Huike (487-593) was the second of the almost-legendary early Ch'an patriarchs in [[China]]. Little historical data is available about their lives, and traditional biographies, developed over the centuries, are representations of Ch'an [[mythology]] rather than factual histories. <ref>: “…what counts in the Chan transmissions scheme are not the “facts” of what happened…but rather how these figures were perceived in terms of Chan mythology. …what the texts say happened almost certainly did not occur” (original emphasis) (McRae,John R (2003) ''Seeing Through Zen: Encounter, Transformation, and Genealogy in Chinese Chan Buddhism'', University of California Press ISBN0-520-23798-6 p 5)</ref>. The earliest extant biography of the Ch'an patriarchs is the ''[[Biographies of Eminent Monks]]'' (519) (Chinese:高僧, Wade-Giles: ''Kao-seng chuan'') and its sequel, ''Further Biographies of Eminent Monks'' (''Xù gāosēng zhuàn'', Chinese:隋高僧傳 Wade-Giles: ''Hsu kao-seng chuan''; Japanese: ''Zoku kosoden'') (645) by [[Daoxuan]] (道宣; 596-667). <ref> Philip Yampolsky, ''Ch’an, a Historical Sketch in Buddhist Spirituality in Later China, Korea, Japan and the Modern World,'' Takeuchi Yoshinori (ed); SCM Press. 1999. ISBN 0-334-02779-9 p 5</ref> The biography given here is the traditional Chan biography repeated in numerous sources over the centuries, including the ''Transmission of the Lamp'' (''[[Denkoroku]]'') , by [[Keizan]] Jokin Zenji (1268-1325), a [[koan]] collection of 53 [[enlightenment]] stories based on the traditional legendary accounts of the [[Zen]] transmission between successive masters and disciples in the [[Soto Zen]] [[Buddhist]] lineage from [[Shakyamuni]] [[Buddhahood|Buddha]] to Japanese Zen Master [[Ejo]], who first brought the Soto Zen teaching from China to Japan.  
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Dazu Huike (487-593)<ref>Heinrich Dumoulin, "Early Chinese Zen Reexamined: A Supplement to Zen Buddhism: A History," ''Japanese Journal of Religious Studies'' 20 (1993) (1): 31–53.</ref> was the second of the almost-legendary early Ch'an patriarchs in [[China]]. Little historical data is available about their lives, and traditional biographies, developed over the centuries, are representations of Ch'an [[mythology]] rather than factual histories.<ref>John R. McRae, ''Seeing Through Zen: Encounter, Transformation, and Genealogy in Chinese Chan Buddhism'' (University of California Press, 2003, ISBN 0-520-23798-6), 5.</ref> The earliest extant biography of the Ch'an patriarchs is the ''[[Biographies of Eminent Monks]]'' (519) (Chinese:高僧, Wade-Giles: ''Kao-seng chuan'') and its sequel, ''Further Biographies of Eminent Monks'' (''Xù gāosēng zhuàn'', Chinese:隋高僧傳 Wade-Giles: ''Hsu kao-seng chuan''; Japanese: ''Zoku kosoden'') (645) by [[Daoxuan]] (道宣; 596-667).<ref>Philip Yampolsky, ''Ch’an, a Historical Sketch in Buddhist Spirituality in Later China, Korea, Japan and the Modern World,'' edited by Takeuchi Yoshinori (SCM Press, 1999, ISBN 0-334-02779-9), 5.</ref> The biography given here is the traditional Chan biography repeated in numerous sources over the centuries, including the ''Transmission of the Lamp'' ''([[Denkoroku]])'', by [[Keizan]] Jokin Zenji (1268-1325), a [[koan]] collection of 53 [[enlightenment]] stories based on the traditional legendary accounts of the [[Zen]] transmission between successive masters and disciples in the [[Soto Zen]] [[Buddhist]] lineage from [[Shakyamuni]] [[Buddhahood|Buddha]] to Japanese Zen Master [[Ejo]], who first brought the Soto Zen teaching from China to Japan.  
  
 
According to the ''Hsu kao-seng chuan'', Huike was born in Hu-lao (Ssu-shui hsien, [[Henan]]) and his secular name was Shen-kuang (Japanese: Shinko). A scholar of both Buddhist scriptures and classical Chinese texts, including [[Daoism|Daoist]] works, Huike was considered enlightened but was criticized for not having a teacher. He met his teacher [[Bodhidharma]], the First Patriarch of Chán at the [[Shaolin Monastery]] in 528 when he was about forty years old. Bodhidharma, a South Indian monk, is traditionally credited as the transmitter of Zen to China.  
 
According to the ''Hsu kao-seng chuan'', Huike was born in Hu-lao (Ssu-shui hsien, [[Henan]]) and his secular name was Shen-kuang (Japanese: Shinko). A scholar of both Buddhist scriptures and classical Chinese texts, including [[Daoism|Daoist]] works, Huike was considered enlightened but was criticized for not having a teacher. He met his teacher [[Bodhidharma]], the First Patriarch of Chán at the [[Shaolin Monastery]] in 528 when he was about forty years old. Bodhidharma, a South Indian monk, is traditionally credited as the transmitter of Zen to China.  
  
Legend says that when Huike initially asked Bodhidharma to teach him, Bodhidharma turned him away. Huike stood in the snow outside Bodhidharma’s cave all night until the snow reached his waist. In the morning Bodhidharma asked him why he was there. Huike replied that he wanted a teacher to "open the gate of the elixir or universal compassion to liberate all beings." Bodhidharma again refused, saying, “how can you hope for true religion with little virtue, little wisdom, a shallow heart, and an arrogant mind? It would just be a waste of effort.” <ref name="Cleary, p 126"> Thomas Cleary. ''Transmission of Light: Zen in the Art of Enlightenment by Zen Master Keizan'', North Point Press. 1999. ISBN 0-86547-433-8 , p 126</ref>
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Legend says that when Huike initially asked Bodhidharma to teach him, Bodhidharma turned him away. Huike stood in the snow outside Bodhidharma’s cave all night until the snow reached his waist. In the morning Bodhidharma asked him why he was there. Huike replied that he wanted a teacher to "open the gate of the elixir or universal compassion to liberate all beings." Bodhidharma again refused, saying, “how can you hope for true religion with little virtue, little wisdom, a shallow heart, and an arrogant mind? It would just be a waste of effort.”<ref name="Cleary, p 126">Thomas Cleary, ''Transmission of Light: Zen in the Art of Enlightenment by Zen Master Keizan'' (North Point Press, 1999, ISBN 0-86547-433-8), 126.</ref>
Finally, to prove his resolve, Huike cut off his left arm and presented it to the First Patriarch as a token of his sincerity. Bodhidharma accepted him as a student and changed his name from Shenguang to Huike (“Wisdom and Capacity”). <ref>In the ''Further Biographies of Eminent Monks''(Wade-Giles: Hsu kao-seng chuan; Japanese: Zokuk kosoden), Daoxuan (?-667) writes that Huike had his arm cut off by bandits. (John McRae. The Northern School and the Formation of Early Ch’an Buddhism, University of Hawaii Press, 1986. ISBN 0-8248-1056-2p 24; Dumoulin, Heinrich, ''Zen Buddhism: a history, India and China'', Macmillan Publishing, 1994,1998. ISBN 0-02-897109-4 ,p 88)</ref> Huike studied with Bodhidharma for six years (some sources say four years, five years, or nine years).
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Finally, to prove his resolve, Huike cut off his left arm and presented it to the First Patriarch as a token of his sincerity. Bodhidharma accepted him as a student and changed his name from Shenguang to Huike (“Wisdom and Capacity”).<ref>John McRae, ''Further Biographies of Eminent Monks'' (University of Hawaii Press, 1986, ISBN 0-8248-1056-2p 24; Dumoulin, Heinrich, ''Zen Buddhism: a history, India and China'', Macmillan Publishing, 1994,1998. ISBN 0-02-897109-4), 88.</ref> Huike studied with Bodhidharma for six years (some sources say four years, five years, or nine years).
  
Bodhidharma passed on the symbolic robe and bowl of dharma succession to Huike and, some texts claim, a copy of the [[Lankavatara Sutra]].<ref> Bernard Faure. ''Bodhidharma as Textual and Religious Paradigm in History of Religions,'' Vol. 25, No. 3. (Feb., 1986), pp. 187-198</ref> Bodhidharma then either returned to [[India]] or died. In ''Further Biographies of Eminent Monks,'' Daoxuan writes that Bodhidharma died at the banks of the Luo River, where he was interred by his disciple Huike, possibly in a cave.  
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Bodhidharma passed on the symbolic robe and bowl of dharma succession to Huike and, some texts claim, a copy of the [[Lankavatara Sutra]].<ref>Bernard Faure, ''Bodhidharma as Textual and Religious Paradigm in History of Religions'' 25 (3) (Feb., 1986): 187-198.</ref> Bodhidharma then either returned to [[India]] or died. In ''Further Biographies of Eminent Monks,'' Daoxuan writes that Bodhidharma died at the banks of the Luo River, where he was interred by his disciple Huike, possibly in a cave.  
  
Huike went to Yedu (Wade-Giles: Yeh-tu) (modern [[Henan]]) around 534 <ref>John McRae, ''The Northern School and the Formation of Early Ch’an Buddhism'', University of Hawaii Press, 1986. ISBN 0-8248-1056-2, p22</ref> and, except for a period of political turmoil and Buddhist persecution in 574, lived in the area of Yedu and Wei (modern [[Hebei]]) for the rest of his life. During the time of upheaval Huike sought refuge in the mountains near the [[Yangtze River]] and met [[Sengcan]] who became his successor and the Third Chinese Patriarch of Ch'an. In 579, Huike returned to Yedu and expounded the [[dharma]], drawing large numbers to listen to his teachings and arousing the hostility of other Buddhist teachers. One of them, Tao-heng, paid money to have Huike killed but Huike converted his would-be assassin.<ref>Ibid.</ref>
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Huike went to Yedu (Wade-Giles: Yeh-tu) (modern [[Henan]]) around 534<ref>John McRae, ''The Northern School and the Formation of Early Ch’an Buddhism'' (University of Hawaii Press, 1986, ISBN 0-8248-1056-2), 22.</ref> and, except for a period of political turmoil and Buddhist persecution in 574, lived in the area of Yedu and Wei (modern [[Hebei]]) for the rest of his life. During the time of upheaval Huike sought refuge in the mountains near the [[Yangtze River]] and met [[Sengcan]] who became his successor and the Third Chinese Patriarch of Ch'an. In 579, Huike returned to Yedu and expounded the [[dharma]], drawing large numbers to listen to his teachings and arousing the hostility of other Buddhist teachers. One of them, Tao-heng, paid money to have Huike killed but Huike converted his would-be assassin.<ref>Ibid.</ref>
  
The ''Wudeng Huiyan'' ''(Compendium of Five Lamps)'' compiled by Dachuan Lingyin [[Puji]] (1179-1253) claims that Huike lived to the age of 107. He was buried approximately forty kilometers east northeast of Anyang City in Hebei Province. <ref>Ferguson, Andy. ''Zen’s Chinese Heritage: the masters and their teachings,'' Wisdom Publications, 2000. ISBN 0-86171-163-7, p 492 n 17</ref> Later, the Tang Dynasty emperor [[Dezong of Tang|Dezong]] gave Huike the honorific name Dazu (“Great Ancestor”) Some traditions relate that Huike was executed after influential Buddhist priests complained about his teachings. <ref>Micahel H. Kohned. The Shambhala Dictionary of Buddhism and Zen. Shambhala, 1991ISBN 0-87773-520-4, p 94</ref> According to one story, instead of blood, a white milky substance flowed from his neck after he was decapitated.
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The ''Wudeng Huiyan'' ''(Compendium of Five Lamps)'' compiled by Dachuan Lingyin [[Puji]] (1179-1253) claims that Huike lived to the age of 107. He was buried approximately forty kilometers east northeast of Anyang City in Hebei Province.<ref>Andy Ferguson, ''Zen’s Chinese Heritage: The Masters and Their Teachings'' (Wisdom Publications, 2000, ISBN 0-86171-163-7), 492.</ref> Later, the Tang Dynasty emperor [[Dezong of Tang|Dezong]] gave Huike the honorific name Dazu (“Great Ancestor”) Some traditions relate that Huike was executed after influential Buddhist priests complained about his teachings.<ref>Micahel H. Kohn (ed.), ''The Shambhala Dictionary of Buddhism and Zen'' (Shambhala, 1991, ISBN 0-87773-520-4), 94.</ref> According to one story, instead of blood, a white milky substance flowed from his neck after he was decapitated.
  
The Second Ancestor's Monastery at the [[Shaolin Temple]] on Mount Song (Song Shan) in [[Henan]] was built for Huike. In front of the monastery are four springs called 'Spring Zhuoxi,' said to have been created by Bodhidharma so that Huike could easily fetch water with only one arm; each spring has its own distinctive flavor.
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The Second Ancestor's Monastery at the [[Shaolin Temple]] on Mount Song (Song Shan) in [[Henan]] was built for Huike. In front of the monastery are four springs called "Spring Zhuoxi," said to have been created by Bodhidharma so that Huike could easily fetch water with only one arm; each spring has its own distinctive flavor.
  
 
==Teachings==
 
==Teachings==
The traditional accounts of Huike and his teacher Bodhidharma are typically expressions of the principles of [[Ch’an]] [[Buddhism]]. One of the most important characteristics of the early Ch'an of Bodhidharma and Huike was the concept of sudden approach to [[Bodhi|enlightenment]] rather than the Indian yogic meditation which advocated concentration and gradual self-perfection. <ref>McRae p 115</ref> Ch’an de-emphasizes [[Theory|theoretical]] [[knowledge]] and the study of [[religious text]]s in favor of [[Experience|experiential]] [[Prajñā|wisdom]], particularly as realized in [[meditation]] and [[Noble Eightfold Path|dharma practice]].
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The traditional accounts of Huike and his teacher Bodhidharma are typically expressions of the principles of [[Ch’an]] [[Buddhism]]. One of the most important characteristics of the early Ch'an of Bodhidharma and Huike was the concept of sudden approach to [[Bodhi|enlightenment]] rather than the Indian yogic meditation which advocated concentration and gradual self-perfection.<ref>McRae, 115.</ref> Ch’an de-emphasizes [[Theory|theoretical]] [[knowledge]] and the study of [[religious text]]s in favor of [[Experience|experiential]] [[Prajñā|wisdom]], particularly as realized in [[meditation]] and [[Noble Eightfold Path|dharma practice]].
  
 
This exchange, a classic expression of the principles of Ch’an, is said to have taken place between Bodhidharma and Huike:
 
This exchange, a classic expression of the principles of Ch’an, is said to have taken place between Bodhidharma and Huike:
:Huike said to Bodhidharma, “My mind is anxious. Please pacify it.” Bodhidharma replied, “Bring me your mind, and I will pacify it.”  Huike said, “Although I’ve sought it, I cannot find it.” “There,” Bodhidharma replied, “I have pacified your mind.” <ref>Andy Ferguson, Andy. Zen’s Chinese Heritage: the masters and their teachings, Wisdom Publications, 2000. ISBN 0-86171-163-7, p 20</ref>  
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<blockquote>Huike said to Bodhidharma, “My mind is anxious. Please pacify it.” Bodhidharma replied, “Bring me your mind, and I will pacify it.”  Huike said, “Although I’ve sought it, I cannot find it.” “There,” Bodhidharma replied, “I have pacified your mind.”<ref>Andy Ferguson, ''Zen’s Chinese Heritage: The Masters and Their Teachings'' (Wisdom Publications, 2000, ISBN 0-86171-163-7), 20.</ref>  
  
According to the ''Denkoroku,'' when Huike and Bodhidharma were climbing up Few Houses Peak, Bodhidharma asked, “Where are we going?” Huike replied, “Please go right ahead---that’s it.” Bodhidharma retorted, “If you go right ahead, you cannot move a step.” Upon hearing these words, Huike was enlightened. <ref name="Cleary, p 126"/>
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According to the ''Denkoroku,'' when Huike and Bodhidharma were climbing up Few Houses Peak, Bodhidharma asked, “Where are we going?” Huike replied, “Please go right ahead—that’s it.” Bodhidharma retorted, “If you go right ahead, you cannot move a step.” Upon hearing these words, Huike was enlightened.<ref name="Cleary, p 126"/>
  
 
According to legend, when Bodhidharma wished to return to India, he called together his disciples and the following exchange took placed:
 
According to legend, when Bodhidharma wished to return to India, he called together his disciples and the following exchange took placed:
  
 
:Bodhidharma asked, “Can each of you say something to demonstrate your understanding?”
 
:Bodhidharma asked, “Can each of you say something to demonstrate your understanding?”
 
 
:Dao Fu stepped forward and said, “It is not bound by words and phrases, nor is it separate from words and phrases. This is the function of the Tao.”
 
:Dao Fu stepped forward and said, “It is not bound by words and phrases, nor is it separate from words and phrases. This is the function of the Tao.”
 
 
:Bodhidharma: “You have attained my skin.”
 
:Bodhidharma: “You have attained my skin.”
 
 
:The nun Zong Chi stepped up and said, “It is like a glorious glimpse of the realm of Akshobhya Buddha . Seen once, it need not be seen again.”
 
:The nun Zong Chi stepped up and said, “It is like a glorious glimpse of the realm of Akshobhya Buddha . Seen once, it need not be seen again.”
 
 
:Bodhidharma; “You have attained my flesh.”
 
:Bodhidharma; “You have attained my flesh.”
 
 
:Dao Yu said, “The four elements are all empty. The five skandhas are without actual existence. Not a single dharma can be grasped.”
 
:Dao Yu said, “The four elements are all empty. The five skandhas are without actual existence. Not a single dharma can be grasped.”
 
 
:Bodhidharma: “You have attained my bones.”
 
:Bodhidharma: “You have attained my bones.”
 
 
:Finally, Huike came forth, bowed deeply in silence and stood up straight.
 
:Finally, Huike came forth, bowed deeply in silence and stood up straight.
 
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:Bodhidharma said, “You have attained my marrow.”<ref>Ferguson, 16-17.</ref>
:Bodhidharma said, “You have attained my marrow.” <ref>Ferguson, pp 16-17</ref>
 
 
 
  
 
===[[Lankavatara Sutra|Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra]]===
 
===[[Lankavatara Sutra|Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra]]===
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There is some evidence that both Huike and [[Bodhidharma]] based their teachings on the [[Lankavatara Sutra]], although this cannot be firmly established by modern scholars. In a late recension of his biography of Huike, Daoxuan includes the sūtra as a basic and important element of the teachings passed down by Bodhidharma:<blockquote>In the beginning Dhyana Master Bodhidharma took the four-roll ''Laṅkā Sūtra,'' handed it over to Huike, and said: "When I examine the land of China, it is clear that there is only this sutra. If you rely on it to practice, you will be able to cross over the world."<ref>Jeffrey L. Broughton, ''The Bodhidharma Anthology: The Earliest Records of Zen'' (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999, ISBN 0-520-21972-4), 62.</ref></blockquote>
  
There is some evidence that both Huike and [[Bodhidharma]] based their teachings on the [[Lankavatara Sutra]] although this cannot be firmly established by modern scholars. In a late recension of his biography of Huike, Daoxuan includes the sūtra as a basic and important element of the teachings passed down by Bodhidharma:<blockquote>In the beginning Dhyana Master Bodhidharma took the four-roll ''Laṅkā Sūtra'', handed it over to Huike, and said: "When I examine the land of China, it is clear that there is only this sutra. If you rely on it to practice, you will be able to cross over the world."<ref> Jeffrey L. Broughton, ''The Bodhidharma Anthology: The Earliest Records of Zen'', Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999. ISBN 0-520-21972-4, p=62</ref></blockquote>
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The ''[[Lankavatara Sutra|Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra]]'' is among the first and most important texts in the [[Yogacara|Yogācāra]], or "[[Consciousness-only]]," school of Mahāyāna Buddhism.<ref>Florin Giripescu Sutton, ''Existence and Enlightenment in the Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra: A Study in the Ontology and Epistemology of the Yogācāra School of Mahāyāna Buddhism'' (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1991, ISBN 0-7914-0172-3).</ref> It is a "difficult and obscure" text<ref>D. T. Suzuki (ed.), [http://lirs.ru/do/lanka_eng/lanka-nondiacritical.htm Preface,] The Lankavatara Sutra: A Mahayana Text. Retrieved December 8, 2008.</ref> emphasizing "the inner [[Bodhi|enlightenment]] that does away with all duality and is raised above all distinctions".<ref>Michael H. Kohn (ed.), ''The Shambhala Dictionary of Buddhism and Zen'' (Boston, 1991), 125.</ref>   
 
 
The ''[[Lankavatara Sutra|Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra]]'' is among the first and most important texts in the [[Yogacara|Yogācāra]], or "[[Consciousness-only]]," school of Mahāyāna Buddhism.<ref>Florin Giripescu Sutton, ''Existence and Enlightenment in the Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra: A Study in the Ontology and Epistemology of the Yogācāra School of Mahāyāna Buddhism'', Albany: State University of New York Press, 1991. ISBN 0-7914-0172-3.</ref> It is a "difficult and obscure" text<ref>D. T. Suzuki, ed. (1932), The Lankavatara Sutra: A Mahayana Text, http://lirs.ru/do/lanka_eng/lanka-nondiacritical.htm. [http://lirs.ru/do/lanka_eng/lanka-nondiacritical.htm Preface] Retrieved December 8, 2008.</ref> emphasizing "the inner [[Bodhi|enlightenment]] that does away with all duality and is raised above all distinctions".<ref> Michael H. Kohn, ed., ''The Shambhala Dictionary of Buddhism and Zen'', Boston, 1991. p 125</ref>   
 
  
The sutra urges ‘self-enlightenment’, the “forgetting of words and thoughts.” <ref>Dumoulin p 95</ref> There is little doubt that Huike practiced and promoted [[meditation]] as the method to reach a true understanding of [[Buddhism]]. In his ''Further Biographies of Eminent Monks'' (Chinese: 高僧傳 Wade-Giles: ''Hsu kao-seng chuan''; Japanese: ''Zokuk kosoden''), Daoxuan listed Huike and his circle of disciples as masters of meditation ([[dhyana]] masters; Wade-Giles: ''ch’an-shih''; Japanese: ''zenji''), highlighting the importance of meditation practice in the early years of Ch'an development. The form taken by Huike and Bodhidharma’s meditation, which Daoxuan labeled ''ju shih an-hsin wei pi-kuan'' (“wall gazing” or “wall contemplation”), is unclear.
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The sutra urges "self-enlightenment," the “forgetting of words and thoughts.”<ref>Dumoulin, 95.</ref> There is little doubt that Huike practiced and promoted [[meditation]] as the method to reach a true understanding of [[Buddhism]]. In his ''Further Biographies of Eminent Monks'' (Chinese: 高僧傳 Wade-Giles: ''Hsu kao-seng chuan;'' Japanese: ''Zokuk kosoden''), Daoxuan listed Huike and his circle of disciples as masters of meditation ([[dhyana]] masters; Wade-Giles: ''ch’an-shih;'' Japanese: ''zenji''), highlighting the importance of meditation practice in the early years of Ch'an development. The form taken by Huike and Bodhidharma’s meditation, which Daoxuan labeled ''ju shih an-hsin wei pi-kuan'' (“wall gazing” or “wall contemplation”), is unclear.
  
The ''Treatise on the Two Entrances and Four Practices'' (Wade-Giles: ''Erh-ju ssu-hsing lun''; Pinyin: ''Erru sixing lun''), attributed to Bodhidharma <ref>McRae says that this text is the only work that “can legitimately be attributed to Bodhidharma.” p 101</ref> refers to two "entrances," the "entrance" of principle and the "entrance" of practice. The entrance of principle is faith that the teachings are true and that everyone possesses the same “true nature” which is covered up by “false senses.” The entrance of practice refers to the four practices of the title: be undisturbed by suffering, accept one’s circumstances and be unmoved by good or bad fortune, be without attachment or desire and, finally, govern one’s actions based on understanding the emptiness or non-substantiality of all things.
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The ''Treatise on the Two Entrances and Four Practices'' (Wade-Giles: ''Erh-ju ssu-hsing lun''; Pinyin: ''Erru sixing lun''), attributed to Bodhidharma<ref>McRae, 101.</ref> refers to two "entrances," the "entrance" of principle and the "entrance" of practice. The entrance of principle is faith that the teachings are true and that everyone possesses the same “true nature” which is covered up by “false senses.” The entrance of practice refers to the four practices of the title: Be undisturbed by suffering, accept one’s circumstances and be unmoved by good or bad fortune, be without attachment or desire and, finally, govern one’s actions based on understanding the emptiness or non-substantiality of all things.
  
 
Attached to the text are some letters, one of which may have been written to Huike, and Huike's brief reply. The Bodhidharma text and Huike’s letter indicate that the earliest teachings of what was to become Ch'an emphasized that Buddha Nature was within and each person must realize this individually through meditation rather than through studying the [[sutra]]s, performing ceremonies, doing good deeds or worshiping the Buddhas. Meditation should be free of any dualism or attachment, and realization occurs suddenly. Huike wrote:
 
Attached to the text are some letters, one of which may have been written to Huike, and Huike's brief reply. The Bodhidharma text and Huike’s letter indicate that the earliest teachings of what was to become Ch'an emphasized that Buddha Nature was within and each person must realize this individually through meditation rather than through studying the [[sutra]]s, performing ceremonies, doing good deeds or worshiping the Buddhas. Meditation should be free of any dualism or attachment, and realization occurs suddenly. Huike wrote:
  
 
:Originally deluded, one calls the mani-pearl a potsherd
 
:Originally deluded, one calls the mani-pearl a potsherd
 
+
:Suddenly one is awakened—and it is [recognized] as a pearl
:Suddenly one is awakened---and it is [recognized] as a pearl
+
:Ignorance and wisdom are identical, not different.<ref>McRae, 106.</ref>
 
 
:Ignorance and wisdom are identical, not different. <ref>McRae p 106</ref>
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
{{reflist}}
+
<references/>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
*Broughton, Jeffrey L. ''The Bodhidharma Anthology: The Earliest Records of Zen'', Berkeley: University of California Press, ISBN 0-520-21972-4
+
*Broughton, Jeffrey L. ''The Bodhidharma Anthology: The Earliest Records of Zen.'' Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999. ISBN 0520219724
*Cleary, Thomas. ''Transmission of Light: Zen in the Art of Enlightenment'' by Zen Master Keizan, North Point Press. 1999. ISBN 0-86547-433-8
+
*Cleary, Thomas. ''Transmission of Light: Zen in the Art of Enlightenment.'' North Point Press, 1999. ISBN 0865474338
*Dumoulin, Heinrich, ''Zen Buddhism: a history, India and China,'' Macmillan Publishing, 1994,1998. ISBN 0-02-897109-4
+
*Dumoulin, Heinrich. "Early Chinese Zen Reexamined: A Supplement to Zen Buddhism: A History." ''Japanese Journal of Religious Studies'' 20(1) (1993): 31–53, ISSN 0304-1042. Retrieved May 22, 2020.
*Dumoulin, Heinrich, "Early Chinese Zen Reexamined: A Supplement to Zen Buddhism: A History," ''Japanese Journal of Religious Studies'', 1993:  20 (1): 31–53, ISSN 0304-1042, [http://www.nanzan-u.ac.jp/SHUBUNKEN/publications/jjrs/pdf/387.pdf.] Retrieved December 8, 2008.
+
*Dumoulin, Heinrich. ''Zen Buddhism: A History, India and China.'' Macmillan Publishing, 1998. ISBN 0028971094
*Ferguson, Andy. ''Zen’s Chinese Heritage: the masters and their teachings,'' Wisdom Publications, 2000. ISBN 0-86171-163-7
+
*Ferguson, Andy. ''Zen’s Chinese Heritage: The Masters and Their Teachings.'' Wisdom Publications, 2000. ISBN 0861711637
*Maguire, Jack, Essential Buddhism, New York: Pocket Books, 2001. ISBN 0-671-04188-6
+
*Kohn, Micahel H. (ed.). ''The Shambhala Dictionary of Buddhism and Zen''. Shambhala, 1991. ISBN 0877735204
*McRae, John. ''The Northern School and the Formation of Early Ch’an Buddhism,'' University of Hawaii Press, 1986. ISBN 0-8248-1056-2
+
*Maguire, Jack. ''Essential Buddhism.'' New York: Pocket Books, 2001. ISBN 0671041886
*Kohn, Micahel H., ed. ''The Shambhala Dictionary of Buddhism and Zen''. Shambhala, 1991. ISBN 0-87773-520-4
+
*McRae, John. ''The Northern School and the Formation of Early Ch’an Buddhism.'' University of Hawaii Press, 1986. ISBN 0824810562
*Suzuki, D.T. (1949), ''Essays in Zen Buddhism,'' New York: Grove Press, 1949. ISBN 0-8021-5118-3
+
*Suzuki, D.T. ''Essays in Zen Buddhism.'' New York: Grove Press, 1949. ISBN 0802151183
*Watts, Alan. ''The Way of Zen.'' New York: Vintage Books, 1985. ISBN 0-375-70510-4
+
*Watts, Alan. ''The Way of Zen.'' New York: Vintage Books, 1985. ISBN 0375705104
*Williams, Paul. ''Mahayana Buddhism: The Doctrinal Foundations''. ISBN 0-415-02537-0.
+
*Williams, Paul. ''Mahayana Buddhism: The Doctrinal Foundations''. ISBN 0415025370
*Yampolsky, Philip. ''Ch’an, a Historical Sketch in Buddhist Spirituality in Later China, Korea, Japan and the Modern World'', Takeuchi Yoshinori (ed); SCM Press, 1999. ISBN 0-334-02779-9  p 5
+
*Yampolsky, Philip. ''Ch’an, a Historical Sketch in Buddhist Spirituality in Later China, Korea, Japan and the Modern World.'' Edited by Takeuchi Yoshinori. SCM Press, 1999. ISBN 0334027799
*Zvelebil, Kamil V. (1987), "The Sound of the One Hand," ''Journal of the American Oriental Society'' 107 (1): 125–126,
+
*Zvelebil, Kamil V. "The Sound of the One Hand." ''Journal of the American Oriental Society'' 107(1) (1987): 125–126.
 
 
 
 
{{refend}}
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
All links retrieved December 8, 2008.
+
All links retrieved June 27, 2022.
 
*Faure, Bernard, [http://www.thezensite.com/ZenEssays/Philosophical/Bodhidharma_as_Paradigm.html Bodhidharma as Textual and Religious Paradigm] in History of Religions, Vol. 25, No. 3. (Feb., 1986)
 
*Faure, Bernard, [http://www.thezensite.com/ZenEssays/Philosophical/Bodhidharma_as_Paradigm.html Bodhidharma as Textual and Religious Paradigm] in History of Religions, Vol. 25, No. 3. (Feb., 1986)
*Suzuki, D.T., ed. (1932), [http://lirs.ru/do/lanka_eng/lanka-nondiacritical.htm The Lankavatara Sutra: A Mahayana Text, ]  
+
*Suzuki, D.T., ed. (1932), [http://lirs.ru/do/lanka_eng/lanka-nondiacritical.htm The Lankavatara Sutra: A Mahayana Text]  
  
 
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[[Category:Philosophy and religion]]
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[[Category:religion]]
[[Category:Chan Patriarchs|*2]]
 
[[Category:Northern Wei Buddhists]]
 
[[Category:Northern Qi Buddhists]]
 
[[Category:Northern Zhou Buddhists]]
 
[[Category:Sui Dynasty Buddhists]]
 
[[Category:Chinese centenarians]]
 
[[Category:Chinese Zen Buddhists]]
 
  
 
{{credits|Dazu_Huike|255895496|Bodhidharma|256218508|Denkoroku|252632616|Shaolin_Monastery|250627382|Zen|256404813|}}
 
{{credits|Dazu_Huike|255895496|Bodhidharma|256218508|Denkoroku|252632616|Shaolin_Monastery|250627382|Zen|256404813|}}

Revision as of 08:35, 15 January 2023

Dazu Huike
Huike Thinking by Chinese Song Dynasty painter Shi Ke (10th century)
Huike Thinking by Chinese Song Dynasty painter Shi Ke (10th century)
Information
Born: 487
Died: 593
Nationality: Chinese
School(s): Ch'an
Title(s): Ch'an-shih
2nd Ch'an Patriarch


Predecessor(s): Bodhidharma
Successor(s): Jianzhi Sengcan

Dazu Huike (487-593) (Chinese: 大祖慧可; Chinese for short:慧可; pinyin: Huìkě; Wade-Giles: Hui-k’o; Japanese: Eka) is considered the Second Patriarch of Chinese Ch'an Buddhism and the twenty-ninth after Gautama Buddha. He received the symbolic robe and bowl of dharma succession from Bodhidharma, the First Patriarch of Ch’an. Little factual information is available about the lives of Bodhidharma and Huike; accounts of them in historical texts are semi-legendary. Huike is known for cutting off his left arm and presenting it to Bodhidharma to demonstrate his sincerity after Bodhidharma initially rejected him as a student. Four springs (called Spring Zhuoxi) in front of the Second Ancestor's Monastery built for Huike at the Shaolin Temple in Henan are said to have been created by Bodhidharma so that Huike could easily fetch water with only one arm.

One of the most important characteristics of the early Ch'an of Bodhidharma and Huike was the concept of sudden enlightenment rather than the Indian yogic meditation which advocated concentration and gradual self-perfection as the means to enlightenment. Ch’an emphasized that Buddha Nature was within, and that each person must realize this individually through meditation rather than through studying the sutras, performing ceremonies, doing good deeds or worshiping the Buddhas. Both Huike and Bodhidharma are said to have based their teachings on the Lankavatara Sutra, which urges "self-enlightenment," the “forgetting of words and thoughts.” There is little doubt that Huike practiced and promoted meditation as the method to reach a true understanding of Buddhism, and that he taught that meditation should be free of any dualism or attachment.

Life

Dazu Huike (487-593)[1] was the second of the almost-legendary early Ch'an patriarchs in China. Little historical data is available about their lives, and traditional biographies, developed over the centuries, are representations of Ch'an mythology rather than factual histories.[2] The earliest extant biography of the Ch'an patriarchs is the Biographies of Eminent Monks (519) (Chinese:高僧, Wade-Giles: Kao-seng chuan) and its sequel, Further Biographies of Eminent Monks (Xù gāosēng zhuàn, Chinese:隋高僧傳 Wade-Giles: Hsu kao-seng chuan; Japanese: Zoku kosoden) (645) by Daoxuan (道宣; 596-667).[3] The biography given here is the traditional Chan biography repeated in numerous sources over the centuries, including the Transmission of the Lamp (Denkoroku), by Keizan Jokin Zenji (1268-1325), a koan collection of 53 enlightenment stories based on the traditional legendary accounts of the Zen transmission between successive masters and disciples in the Soto Zen Buddhist lineage from Shakyamuni Buddha to Japanese Zen Master Ejo, who first brought the Soto Zen teaching from China to Japan.

According to the Hsu kao-seng chuan, Huike was born in Hu-lao (Ssu-shui hsien, Henan) and his secular name was Shen-kuang (Japanese: Shinko). A scholar of both Buddhist scriptures and classical Chinese texts, including Daoist works, Huike was considered enlightened but was criticized for not having a teacher. He met his teacher Bodhidharma, the First Patriarch of Chán at the Shaolin Monastery in 528 when he was about forty years old. Bodhidharma, a South Indian monk, is traditionally credited as the transmitter of Zen to China.

Legend says that when Huike initially asked Bodhidharma to teach him, Bodhidharma turned him away. Huike stood in the snow outside Bodhidharma’s cave all night until the snow reached his waist. In the morning Bodhidharma asked him why he was there. Huike replied that he wanted a teacher to "open the gate of the elixir or universal compassion to liberate all beings." Bodhidharma again refused, saying, “how can you hope for true religion with little virtue, little wisdom, a shallow heart, and an arrogant mind? It would just be a waste of effort.”[4] Finally, to prove his resolve, Huike cut off his left arm and presented it to the First Patriarch as a token of his sincerity. Bodhidharma accepted him as a student and changed his name from Shenguang to Huike (“Wisdom and Capacity”).[5] Huike studied with Bodhidharma for six years (some sources say four years, five years, or nine years).

Bodhidharma passed on the symbolic robe and bowl of dharma succession to Huike and, some texts claim, a copy of the Lankavatara Sutra.[6] Bodhidharma then either returned to India or died. In Further Biographies of Eminent Monks, Daoxuan writes that Bodhidharma died at the banks of the Luo River, where he was interred by his disciple Huike, possibly in a cave.

Huike went to Yedu (Wade-Giles: Yeh-tu) (modern Henan) around 534[7] and, except for a period of political turmoil and Buddhist persecution in 574, lived in the area of Yedu and Wei (modern Hebei) for the rest of his life. During the time of upheaval Huike sought refuge in the mountains near the Yangtze River and met Sengcan who became his successor and the Third Chinese Patriarch of Ch'an. In 579, Huike returned to Yedu and expounded the dharma, drawing large numbers to listen to his teachings and arousing the hostility of other Buddhist teachers. One of them, Tao-heng, paid money to have Huike killed but Huike converted his would-be assassin.[8]

The Wudeng Huiyan (Compendium of Five Lamps) compiled by Dachuan Lingyin Puji (1179-1253) claims that Huike lived to the age of 107. He was buried approximately forty kilometers east northeast of Anyang City in Hebei Province.[9] Later, the Tang Dynasty emperor Dezong gave Huike the honorific name Dazu (“Great Ancestor”) Some traditions relate that Huike was executed after influential Buddhist priests complained about his teachings.[10] According to one story, instead of blood, a white milky substance flowed from his neck after he was decapitated.

The Second Ancestor's Monastery at the Shaolin Temple on Mount Song (Song Shan) in Henan was built for Huike. In front of the monastery are four springs called "Spring Zhuoxi," said to have been created by Bodhidharma so that Huike could easily fetch water with only one arm; each spring has its own distinctive flavor.

Teachings

The traditional accounts of Huike and his teacher Bodhidharma are typically expressions of the principles of Ch’an Buddhism. One of the most important characteristics of the early Ch'an of Bodhidharma and Huike was the concept of sudden approach to enlightenment rather than the Indian yogic meditation which advocated concentration and gradual self-perfection.[11] Ch’an de-emphasizes theoretical knowledge and the study of religious texts in favor of experiential wisdom, particularly as realized in meditation and dharma practice.

This exchange, a classic expression of the principles of Ch’an, is said to have taken place between Bodhidharma and Huike:

Huike said to Bodhidharma, “My mind is anxious. Please pacify it.” Bodhidharma replied, “Bring me your mind, and I will pacify it.” Huike said, “Although I’ve sought it, I cannot find it.” “There,” Bodhidharma replied, “I have pacified your mind.”[12]

According to the Denkoroku, when Huike and Bodhidharma were climbing up Few Houses Peak, Bodhidharma asked, “Where are we going?” Huike replied, “Please go right ahead—that’s it.” Bodhidharma retorted, “If you go right ahead, you cannot move a step.” Upon hearing these words, Huike was enlightened.[4]

According to legend, when Bodhidharma wished to return to India, he called together his disciples and the following exchange took placed:

Bodhidharma asked, “Can each of you say something to demonstrate your understanding?”
Dao Fu stepped forward and said, “It is not bound by words and phrases, nor is it separate from words and phrases. This is the function of the Tao.”
Bodhidharma: “You have attained my skin.”
The nun Zong Chi stepped up and said, “It is like a glorious glimpse of the realm of Akshobhya Buddha . Seen once, it need not be seen again.”
Bodhidharma; “You have attained my flesh.”
Dao Yu said, “The four elements are all empty. The five skandhas are without actual existence. Not a single dharma can be grasped.”
Bodhidharma: “You have attained my bones.”
Finally, Huike came forth, bowed deeply in silence and stood up straight.
Bodhidharma said, “You have attained my marrow.”[13]

Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra

There is some evidence that both Huike and Bodhidharma based their teachings on the Lankavatara Sutra, although this cannot be firmly established by modern scholars. In a late recension of his biography of Huike, Daoxuan includes the sūtra as a basic and important element of the teachings passed down by Bodhidharma:

In the beginning Dhyana Master Bodhidharma took the four-roll Laṅkā Sūtra, handed it over to Huike, and said: "When I examine the land of China, it is clear that there is only this sutra. If you rely on it to practice, you will be able to cross over the world."[14]

The Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra is among the first and most important texts in the Yogācāra, or "Consciousness-only," school of Mahāyāna Buddhism.[15] It is a "difficult and obscure" text[16] emphasizing "the inner enlightenment that does away with all duality and is raised above all distinctions".[17]

The sutra urges "self-enlightenment," the “forgetting of words and thoughts.”[18] There is little doubt that Huike practiced and promoted meditation as the method to reach a true understanding of Buddhism. In his Further Biographies of Eminent Monks (Chinese: 高僧傳 Wade-Giles: Hsu kao-seng chuan; Japanese: Zokuk kosoden), Daoxuan listed Huike and his circle of disciples as masters of meditation (dhyana masters; Wade-Giles: ch’an-shih; Japanese: zenji), highlighting the importance of meditation practice in the early years of Ch'an development. The form taken by Huike and Bodhidharma’s meditation, which Daoxuan labeled ju shih an-hsin wei pi-kuan (“wall gazing” or “wall contemplation”), is unclear.

The Treatise on the Two Entrances and Four Practices (Wade-Giles: Erh-ju ssu-hsing lun; Pinyin: Erru sixing lun), attributed to Bodhidharma[19] refers to two "entrances," the "entrance" of principle and the "entrance" of practice. The entrance of principle is faith that the teachings are true and that everyone possesses the same “true nature” which is covered up by “false senses.” The entrance of practice refers to the four practices of the title: Be undisturbed by suffering, accept one’s circumstances and be unmoved by good or bad fortune, be without attachment or desire and, finally, govern one’s actions based on understanding the emptiness or non-substantiality of all things.

Attached to the text are some letters, one of which may have been written to Huike, and Huike's brief reply. The Bodhidharma text and Huike’s letter indicate that the earliest teachings of what was to become Ch'an emphasized that Buddha Nature was within and each person must realize this individually through meditation rather than through studying the sutras, performing ceremonies, doing good deeds or worshiping the Buddhas. Meditation should be free of any dualism or attachment, and realization occurs suddenly. Huike wrote:

Originally deluded, one calls the mani-pearl a potsherd
Suddenly one is awakened—and it is [recognized] as a pearl
Ignorance and wisdom are identical, not different.[20]

Notes

  1. Heinrich Dumoulin, "Early Chinese Zen Reexamined: A Supplement to Zen Buddhism: A History," Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 20 (1993) (1): 31–53.
  2. John R. McRae, Seeing Through Zen: Encounter, Transformation, and Genealogy in Chinese Chan Buddhism (University of California Press, 2003, ISBN 0-520-23798-6), 5.
  3. Philip Yampolsky, Ch’an, a Historical Sketch in Buddhist Spirituality in Later China, Korea, Japan and the Modern World, edited by Takeuchi Yoshinori (SCM Press, 1999, ISBN 0-334-02779-9), 5.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Thomas Cleary, Transmission of Light: Zen in the Art of Enlightenment by Zen Master Keizan (North Point Press, 1999, ISBN 0-86547-433-8), 126.
  5. John McRae, Further Biographies of Eminent Monks (University of Hawaii Press, 1986, ISBN 0-8248-1056-2p 24; Dumoulin, Heinrich, Zen Buddhism: a history, India and China, Macmillan Publishing, 1994,1998. ISBN 0-02-897109-4), 88.
  6. Bernard Faure, Bodhidharma as Textual and Religious Paradigm in History of Religions 25 (3) (Feb., 1986): 187-198.
  7. John McRae, The Northern School and the Formation of Early Ch’an Buddhism (University of Hawaii Press, 1986, ISBN 0-8248-1056-2), 22.
  8. Ibid.
  9. Andy Ferguson, Zen’s Chinese Heritage: The Masters and Their Teachings (Wisdom Publications, 2000, ISBN 0-86171-163-7), 492.
  10. Micahel H. Kohn (ed.), The Shambhala Dictionary of Buddhism and Zen (Shambhala, 1991, ISBN 0-87773-520-4), 94.
  11. McRae, 115.
  12. Andy Ferguson, Zen’s Chinese Heritage: The Masters and Their Teachings (Wisdom Publications, 2000, ISBN 0-86171-163-7), 20.
  13. Ferguson, 16-17.
  14. Jeffrey L. Broughton, The Bodhidharma Anthology: The Earliest Records of Zen (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999, ISBN 0-520-21972-4), 62.
  15. Florin Giripescu Sutton, Existence and Enlightenment in the Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra: A Study in the Ontology and Epistemology of the Yogācāra School of Mahāyāna Buddhism (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1991, ISBN 0-7914-0172-3).
  16. D. T. Suzuki (ed.), Preface, The Lankavatara Sutra: A Mahayana Text. Retrieved December 8, 2008.
  17. Michael H. Kohn (ed.), The Shambhala Dictionary of Buddhism and Zen (Boston, 1991), 125.
  18. Dumoulin, 95.
  19. McRae, 101.
  20. McRae, 106.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Broughton, Jeffrey L. The Bodhidharma Anthology: The Earliest Records of Zen. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999. ISBN 0520219724
  • Cleary, Thomas. Transmission of Light: Zen in the Art of Enlightenment. North Point Press, 1999. ISBN 0865474338
  • Dumoulin, Heinrich. "Early Chinese Zen Reexamined: A Supplement to Zen Buddhism: A History." Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 20(1) (1993): 31–53, ISSN 0304-1042. Retrieved May 22, 2020.
  • Dumoulin, Heinrich. Zen Buddhism: A History, India and China. Macmillan Publishing, 1998. ISBN 0028971094
  • Ferguson, Andy. Zen’s Chinese Heritage: The Masters and Their Teachings. Wisdom Publications, 2000. ISBN 0861711637
  • Kohn, Micahel H. (ed.). The Shambhala Dictionary of Buddhism and Zen. Shambhala, 1991. ISBN 0877735204
  • Maguire, Jack. Essential Buddhism. New York: Pocket Books, 2001. ISBN 0671041886
  • McRae, John. The Northern School and the Formation of Early Ch’an Buddhism. University of Hawaii Press, 1986. ISBN 0824810562
  • Suzuki, D.T. Essays in Zen Buddhism. New York: Grove Press, 1949. ISBN 0802151183
  • Watts, Alan. The Way of Zen. New York: Vintage Books, 1985. ISBN 0375705104
  • Williams, Paul. Mahayana Buddhism: The Doctrinal Foundations. ISBN 0415025370
  • Yampolsky, Philip. Ch’an, a Historical Sketch in Buddhist Spirituality in Later China, Korea, Japan and the Modern World. Edited by Takeuchi Yoshinori. SCM Press, 1999. ISBN 0334027799
  • Zvelebil, Kamil V. "The Sound of the One Hand." Journal of the American Oriental Society 107(1) (1987): 125–126.

External links

All links retrieved June 27, 2022.

Preceded by:
Bodhidharma
Chinese Ch'an Patriarch
Succeeded by:
Sengcan

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