Kindness, Compassion, Joy, and Giving
Ensure An Enduring Peace
In l962, when the Venerable Master entered the United States for the first time, |
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In the Golden Age
of Buddhism in China, there was a network of Buddhist monasteries through
that vast land. Shakyamuni Buddha's teachings flourished and the Patriarchs
of China systematized them into schools of practice. During that long
span of Buddhism's rise and flourishing, China was rich in the Dharma
and the entire country benefited from the presence of the large community
of Buddhists who, by actively applying the principles of Buddhism to their
lives, served as a protection and support for their nation and the entire
world. In l962, when the
Venerable Master entered the United States for the first time, Buddhism's
monastic tradition was virtually unknown to Americans and there were no
Buddhist facilities appropriate for housing the Buddhist Sangha and pure
laity in the West at that time. Last year, the Master
let go, and all over the world, beings mourn. The grief, held deep inside
and carried quietly, is a common bond shared by all who knew him. And
all of us who knew him intend to spread his teachings and carry on his
work-filling those pure monastic facilities with ceaseless sounds of Dharma;
with training centers for those just beginning to study; with pure Sanghans
and laity who are dedicated to maintaining the daily schedule of study
and practice so carefully given us by the Master; with communities of
Buddhists who understand how to make offerings in a way that simultaneously
supports and protects the purity of the Sangha community; with homes for
the aged where their years are venerated and the fruits of their experiences
valued and respected; and with schools to educate the young and give them
a foundation in morality and humaneness so they can become beneficent
leaders of the future. Twenty years ago,
a group of Buddhists in Los Angeles was inspired to look for a facility
that could serve as a Way-place, so that they could invite the Master
and his Sangha to Southern California to propagate the Dharma and cultivate
the Way there. They found a place and the Master gave it the name Gold
Wheel. The Master began to travel to Gold Wheel Monastery regularly. His
tasks there were many. First, he continued his fundamental universal teaching
of getting people to recognize and confront their faults and afflictions
and then getting them to accept and use methods for changing those faults
and renouncing those afflictions. After stopping evil, he taught them
to do good. The Master tirelessly trained this growing group of laity
in the behavior appropriate for protectors of the Proper Dharma, while
at the same time ever-reminding his left-home disciples of their behavior
as members of the Orthodox Sangha. Also, he secured the boundaries and
protected the earth, for the Los Angeles area-the entire West Coast in
fact-was constantly receiving predictions of earthquakes, not to mention
all the other natural disasters and man-made calamities that occurred
non-stop. How skillful and all-encompassing the Master's expedients were
in seeing to the success of all these things! For instance, on
May 7, l977, the second Three Steps One Bow pilgrimage was launched from
that first Gold Wheel. In the great scheme of things, it was undoubtedly
no accident that the Master's Bhikshu disciples bowed once every three
steps up the West Coast-spanning the distance from Los Angeles near the
Mexican border to Mount Baker near the Canadian border. It was also surely
no coincidence that the time frame of the first bowing pilgrimage included
that gripping moment when a stray comet was discovered to be hurtling
straight for our earth, followed by the sweet relief when it missed up
by cosmic inches. When it was all over and nothing had happened, the Master
led us in Praying for Peace in Seattle. Nor could it have
been chance that the second pilgrimage began shortly after we prayed for
rain in Golden Gate Park. Those bowing monks, who headed north from Gold
Wheel's Bodhimanda, venerating the Avatamsaka Sutra with every step, passed
through drought-stricken Southern California where the earth was so barren
and brittle that the top crust would crumble underfoot to send one plunging
into empty pockets of illusory dust. As the monks repeatedly chanted "Homage
to the Great Flower Adornment Sutra," the sweet dew of Dharma, welling
forth from the Perfect Teaching, moistened the sterile valleys and brought
relief to the starving and thirsty. And every step of
the way, the laity of Los Angeles protected and supported. How many times
did they drive long, hot hours to bring offerings to the monks and to
join them in bowing? The Master guided both the monks and the protectors,
teaching them each their proper roles. The lay community grew and the
second Gold Wheel was bigger. The Master continued his work of securing
the boundaries and protecting the earth by lecturing the entire Earth
Store Sutra during his monthly visits to Los Angeles. Always careful to
conserve, the Master often chose to be driven to Los Angeles rather than
to fly there. Whoever accompanied the Master in the car had to be prepared
to 1) give impromptu lectures on any topic the Master might introduce;
2) recite from memory and explain any one or several of the infinite Buddhist
lists chosen at random by the Master; 3) recite passages of the Shurangama
Sutra or the entire Shurangama Mantra from memory; and 4) never, ever
fall asleep from the moment the car started until the moment it arrived.
After several hours of riding in the car, the Master would usually arrive
at Gold Wheel in the late evening. Clusters of disciples would be there
to greet him, no matter how late it was. Surrounded by the Los Angeles
gathering of disciples, who, so delighted to see him after a month's interval,
couldn't resist asking their questions and telling their troubles to him
right then and there, the Master would patiently listen, thoughtfully
answer, and entertain them until they were filled with the joy of Dharma-far
into the wee hours of the night. The community of
lay disciples in L.A. kept growing and the third Gold Wheel was even bigger.
While it was under renovation, Guanyin Bodhisattva appeared in the sky
one afternoon, astride that watery, fish-dragon creature of hers. The
skeptical may demand: "Who said it was Guanyin?" Well, some
of the toughest, most hard-to-fool guys in the world said so. Guo Rui
and his men-the ones who were part of the gang that shot up San Francisco
Chinatown's Golden Dragon Restaurant-said so. They were renovating Gold
Wheel on that day and when she appeared, they stood outside the monastery
staring up at her there in the clouds, with their mouths open in awe.
They saw her with their own eyes. Even Dr. Woo, driving home from a long
day of treating the sick saw "something strange" in the sky
that evening-right at the spot where she appeared. And I, who was at the
second Gold Wheel at the time, heard their eye-witness accounts moments
after she finally withdrew. When the Master sent
a huge white jade Shakyamuni Buddha to preside as host at the third Gold
Wheel, the group of male disciples who volunteered to transport the several-ton
image found their task nearly impossible. The graceful image was so heavy
they could hardly budge it. As they heaved and hoed the last few feet
and then, with a valiant final effort, set the image on its altar-at that
very instant, the heavenly dragons let loose an earth-shaking thunderclap
that shook the entire Monastery. I was there and witnessed that spectacular
certification. What a grand finale! Always, the Master
worked on to insure that peace prevailed in the South. In April of l978
the Master hosted a three-day Medicine Master Repentance Dharma Assembly-a
first in the U.S. His verse manages to capture in a few words all I have
struggled to describe above and breathes whispers of things that hadn't
even happened yet. Medicine Master's
Dharma meeting ushers in good luck. |
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