The Venerable Master, a native of Shuangcheng County of Jilin
Province, was born on the sixteenth day of the third lunar month in the year of
Wu Wu at the beginning of the century. His family
surname was Bai and his name was Yushu.
He was also called Yuxi. His father, Bai Fuhai, was diligent and
thrifty in managing the household. His mother, whose maiden name was Hu, ate only vegetarian food and recited the Buddha's name
every day throughout her life. When she was pregnant with the Master, she
prayed to the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas. The night
before his birth, in a dream she saw Amitabha Buddha
emitting brilliant light. Following that the Master was born.
As a child, the Master followed his mother's example and ate only vegetarian
food and recited the Buddha's name. The Master was quiet and untalkative by nature, but he had a righteous and heroic
spirit. At the age of eleven, upon seeing a neighbor's infant who had died, he
became aware of the great matter of birth and death and the brevity of life and
resolved to leave the home-life. At the age of twelve, he heard of how Filial
Son Wong of Shuangcheng County (later known as Great
Master Change Ren) had practiced filial piety and
attained the Way, and he vowed to follow the Filial Son's example. Repenting
for being unfilial to his parents in the past, the
Master decided to bow to his parents every morning and evening as a way of
acknowledging his faults and repaying his parents' kindness. He gradually
became renowned for his filial conduct, and people called him Filial Son Bai. At fifteen, he took refuge under the Venerable Master
Chang Zhi. That same year he began to attend school
and mastered the Four Books, the Five Classics, the texts of various Chinese
schools of thought, and the fields of medicine, divination, astrology, and
physiognomy. During his student years, he also participated in the Moral
Society and other charitable societies. He explained the Sixth Patriarch's
Sutra, the Vajra Sutra, and other Sutras
for those who were illiterate, and started a free school for those who were
poor and needy. When he was nineteen, his mother passed away, and he requested
Venerable Master Chang zhi of Sanyuan
(Three Conditions) Monastery to shave his head. He was given the Dharma name An
Tse and style name To Lun.
Dressed in the left-home robes, he built a simple hut by his mother's grave and
observed the practice of filial piety. During that period, he made eighteen
great vows, bowed to the Avatamsaka (Flower
Adornment) Sutra, performed worship and pure repentance, practiced Chan
meditation, studied the teachings, ate only one meal a day, and did not lie
down to sleep at night. As his skill grew ever more pure, he won the admiration
and respect of the villagers. His intensely sincere efforts to purify and
cultivate himself moved the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas
as well as the Dharma-protecting gods and dragons. The miraculous responses
were too many to be counted. As news of these supernatural events spread far
and wide, the Master came to be regarded as an extraordinary monk. One day as
he was sitting in meditation, he saw the Great Master, the Sixth Pariarch, come to his hut and tell
him, "In the future you will go to the West, where you will meet limitless
and boundless numbers of people. The living beings you teach and transform will
be as countless as the sands of the Ganges. That will mark the beginning
of the Buddhadharma in the West." After the
Sixth Patriarch finished speaking, he suddenly vanished. When his observance of
filial piety was completed, the Master went to Changbai Mountain
and dwelled in seclusion in the Amitabha Cave, where he practiced
austerities. Later he returned to Sanyuan Monastery,
where he was chosen to be the head of the assembly. During the period that he
lived Manchuria, the Master contemplated people's potentials and bestowed
appropriate teachings. He awakened those who were confused and saved many
people's lives. Countless dragons, snakes, foxes, ghosts, and spirits requested
to take refuge and receive the precepts from him, changing their evil and
cultivating goodness.
In 1946, because he esteemed the Elder Master Hsu Yun
as a great hero of Buddhism, the Master quickly packed his belongings and set
out on his way to pay homage to him. During his arduous journey, he stayed at
many of the renowned monasteries of mainland China.
In 1947 he reached Nanhua Monastery at Caozi of Guangzhou, where he paid homage to Elder Master
Hsu Yun and was assigned to be an instructor in the Nanhua Monastery
Vinaya Academy.
Later he was appointed as Dean of Academic Affairs. The Elder Master Hsu Yun saw that the Master was an outstanding individual in
Buddhism and transmitted the Dharma-lineage to him, giving him the Dharma name Hsuan Hua and making him the
Ninth Patriarch of the Wei Yang Sect, the forty-fifth
generation since the First Patriarch Mahakashyapa.
In 1949, the Master bid farewell to the Venerable Master Hsu Yun and went to Hong Kong to
propagate the Dharma. He gave equal importance to the five schools--Chan,
Doctrine, Vinaya, Esoteric, and Pure
Land--thus putting and end to
sectarianism. The Master also renovated old temples, printed Sutras and
constructed images. He established Western Bliss Gardens Monastery, Cixing Chan Monastery, and the Buddhist Lecture Hall. He
lived in Hong Kong for more than ten years, and at the
earnest request of living beings, he created extensive affinities in the
Dharma. He delivered a succession of lectures on the Earth Store Sutra,
the Vajra Sutra, the Amitabha Sutra, the Shurangama
Sutra, the Universal Door Chapter, and others. In addition, he held various
Dharma assemblies such as the Great Compassion Repentance, the Medicine Master
Repentance, recitation sessions, and meditation sessions. He also published the
magazine Hsin Fa
(Mind Dharma). Every day he worked and travelled
zealously for the sake of propagating the great Dharma, and as a result the Buddhadharma flourished in Hong Kong.
During that time he also made serveral visits to Thailand,
Burma, and
other countries to investigate the southern (Theravada) tradition of Buddhism.
He wished to establish communication between the Mahayana and Theravada
traditions and united the strength of Buddhism.
In 1959, the Master saw that conditions were ripe in the West, and he instructed
his disciples to establish the Sino-American Buddhist Association (later
renamed the Dharma Realm Buddhist Association) in the United
States. He travelled
to Australia in
1961 and propagated the Dharma there for one year. Since the conditions were not
yet ripe there, he returned to Hong Kong in 1962. That
same year, at the invitation of Buddhists in America,
the Master traveled alone to the United States.
He raised the banner of proper Dharma at the Buddhist Lecture Hall in San
Francisco. Because the Master started out living in a
damp and windowless basement that resembled a grave, he called himself
"The Monk in the Grave." At that time the Cuban missile crisis
occurred between the United States
and the Soviet Union, and the Master embarked on a total
fast for thirty-five days to pray for an end to the hostilities and for world
peace. By the end of his fast, the threat of war had dissolved.
In 1968, the Shurangama Study and Practice Summer
Session was held, and over thirty students from the University
of Washington in Seattle
came to study the Buddhadharma. After the session was
concluded, five young Americans requested permission to shave their heads and
leave the home-life, marking the beginning of the Sangha
in the history of American Buddhism. Since that time, the Venerable Master
devoted his utmost efforts to such tasks as propagating the Dharma, supervising
the translation of the Buddhist Canon, and developing education. He accepted
vast numbers of disciples, established monasteries, and set forth principles.
He focused the earnest sincerity of all disciples on the work of glorifying the
Proper Dharma of the Thus Come One to the ends of time and throughout empty
space and the Dharma Realm.
In terms of propagating the Dharma, the Master lectured on the Sutras and
expounded the Dharma virtually every single day for several decades, always
giving simple explanations that made profound principles easy to understand. He
also worked actively to train both his left-home and lay disciples to become
skilled in propagating the Dharma. He led many delegations to propagate the
Dharma at various universities and in many countries of the world, with the
goal of guiding living beings to reform and to discover their innate wisdom.
As for the translation of the Buddhist Canon, to date over a hundred volumes
of the Master's explanations of the scriptures have been translated into
English. No one else has overseen the translation of so many Sutras into
English. Translation into Spanish, Vietnamese, and other
languages have also been produced. His plans were to translate the
entire Buddhist Canon into the languages of every country, so that the Buddhadharma could spread throughout the world.
As for education, at the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas
he established such educational institutions as Instilling
Goodness Elementary School, Developing Virtue Secondary School, Dharma Realm
Buddhist Univeristy, and the Sangha and Laity Training Programs. Many of the affiliated monasteries also have
weekend and weekday classes based on the eight fundamental human virtues of filiality, fraternal respect, loyalty, trustworthiness,
propriety, righteousness, incorruptibility, and a sense of shame. Taking the
public-spirited, unselfish spirit of kindness, compassion, joy, and giving as
their goal, boys and girls study separately and the volunteer teachers regard
education as their personal responsibility. In this way, students develop into
capable individuals of incorruptible integrity who will be able to save the
world.
The Master taught his disciples that every day they should sit in
meditation, recite the Buddha's name, bow in repentance, investigate the
Sutras, rigorously uphold the precepts, eat only one meal a day,
and only before noon, and always wear
the precept sash. He instructed them to dwell in harmony and offer
encouragement to teach other. In this way he established a Sangha
that genuinely practices the Buddhadharma in the
West, in the hope of uplifting the orthodox teaching and causing the Proper
Dharma to long abide. The Venerable Master also opened up the City of Ten
Thousand Buddhas as an international religious center
promoting the unity of all world religions by giving everyone a chance to
learn, communicated, cooperate, pursue the truth, and work for world peace.
Throughout his life the Venerable Master was totally selfless. He vowed to
take the suffering and hardships of all living beings upon himself, and to
dedicate all his own blessings and joy to the living beings of the Dharma
Realm. He practiced what was difficult to practice and endured what was
difficult to endure, persevering in his heroic and pure resolve. He wasa candle that refuse to be blown out by the gale, an
irreducible lump of pure gold in the hot fire. The Venerable Master composed a
verse expressing his principles:
Freezing to death, we do not scheme.
Starving to death, we do not beg.
Dying of poverty, we ask for nothing.
According with conditions, we do not change.
Not changing, we accord with conditions.
We adhere firmly to our three great principles.
We renounce our lives to do the Buddha's work.
We take the responsibity to mold our own
destinies.
We rectify our lives as the Sangha's work.
Encountering specific matters, we understand the principles.
Understanding the principles, we apply them in specific matters.
We carry on the single pulse of the patriarchs' mind-transmission.
From the time he left the home-life, the Venerable Master firmly maintained
the six great principles--do not fight, do not be greedy, do not seek, do not
be selfish, do not pursue personal advantage, and do not lie--bringing benefit
to the multitudes, and acting as a model for others, he influenced countless
people to sincerely change their faults and head towards the pure and exalted Bodhi Way.
Living beings of the present have deep obstructions and scarce blessings
indeed, for a Sage of the era has abruptly manifested passing into stillness.
The living beings of the Saha world have suddenly
lost there harbor of refuge. Yet the life of the Venerable Master is actually
an enactment of the great Flower Adornment Sutra of the Dharma Realm.
Although he has manifested entry into Nirvana, he constantly turns the infinite
wheel--not leaving any traces, he came from empty space, and to empty space he
returned. His disciples can only carefully follow their teacher's instructions,
hold fast to their principles, honor the Buddha's regulations, and be ever more
vigorous in advancing upon the path to Bodhi so that
they can repay the Venerable Master's boundless and profound grace.