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Venerable Master Hsuan Hua
Venerable Master Hsuan Hua (1918 - 1995)
Hsuan Hua (
Chinese
: 宣化;
pinyin
: Xuānhuà;
lit.
: 'proclaim and transform'; April 16, 1918 – June 7, 1995), also known as An Tzu and Tu Lun, was a
monk
of
Chan Buddhism
and a contributing figure in bringing
Chinese Buddhism
to the
United States
in the 20th century
Chan 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.
the
lotus position
.
Hong Kong
, 1953.
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. Venerable Master 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.
In 1959, Hsuan Hua sought to bring Chinese Buddhism to the West. 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
.
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".
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.
Venerable 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.
On the occasion of the opening ceremony for the Dharma Realm Buddhist University, Hsuan Hua presented Venerable
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
.
Hsuan Hua would also invite
Bhikkhus
from both traditions to jointly conduct the High Ordination.
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.
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.
On June 7, 1995, Hsuan Hua died in
Los Angeles
at
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
. His sudden passing came as a shock to most of his disciples.
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