"Whether
he was sleeping or awake, the Mentor always wore a
smile," recalls Master Cheng Yen. "Even when he
was hospitalized, he responded to everyone with a warm
smile. When asked if he felt any discomfort from his
ailments, he always replied, 'No, nothing!'"
Master Yin Shun, known simply as "the Mentor"
or "Grandmaster" to millions of Tzu Chi members
around the world, passed away at the age of 100 on June 6,
2005. "It was truly extraordinary for him to remain
so unencumbered and serene even as his illness
worsened," Master Cheng Yen continued. "He
seemed to be entering a higher level of subconscious joy.
The Mentor experienced no signs of physical anguish while
passing through the tunnel between life and death. He just
slowly and quietly slipped into a deep sleep."
The Mentor was born in 1906 in Zhejiang Province,
China, where his father managed a grocery store.
Unfortunately, ailments prevented his mother from
producing an adequate supply of breast milk. As a result,
the Mentor was physically feeble throughout most of his
long life. Even during his younger years, his emaciated
features often led others to mistake him for a much older
man. While teaching and serving as a mentor at the Dharma
King Institute in Sichuan Province in 1941, a colleague
once asked, "Hey Mentor, you're about 60 years old,
aren't you?" The Mentor, only 38 at the time, replied
with a wry, embarrassed smile, "Oh, yes, I'm, uh,
getting there..." Who would have predicted that this
thin, pallid man would one day become a symbol of
longevity and erudition for Buddhists everywhere?
Buddhism was first introduced into China from India
around ad 70, during the Han Dynasty. Under the emperor's
supervision, the Buddha's teachings were translated from
Sanskrit into Chinese by erudite monks and scholars and
compiled into the Great Treasury Sutra. Unfortunately,
these scriptures were written in an arcane classical
Chinese script that made them extremely difficult for most
people to comprehend. Fortunately, Master Yin Shun's
profound understanding of classical Chinese allowed him to
comprehend the essence of the Buddha's philosophy as
conveyed in the Great Treasury Sutra. He then
systematically explained the scriptures in a 24-volume
treatise, the Wonderful Cloud Anthology. This major
scholarly achievement had a significant impact in academic
circles in Taiwan and Chinese Buddhism in general.
Traditionally, Chinese monks and nuns had long
approached the practice of Buddhism from one of two
polarized perspectives. The first was to cultivate their
own spirituality while living in the mountains, separated
from society. The second was to use the religion to earn a
living by holding Buddhist rituals, especially those for
the dead. The Mentor, however, took it upon himself to
remind Buddhists everywhere of the importance of putting
the Buddha's teachings into practice on a daily
basis--"to humanize Buddhism and bring bodhisattvas
into this world." He promoted the Middle Observation
of Buddhism, which explains that everything comes and goes
according to the convergence and divergence of conditions.
This understanding of the true nature of Buddhism has
been adopted by Master Cheng Yen and her millions of
followers throughout the world and has kindled a
revolutionary Buddhist movement in Taiwan. The Mentor's
great works have also helped motivate more Buddhist
scholars, many of whom had previously despised the
passivity and non-productivity of the
"traditional" practice of Buddhism. Through the
efforts of Master Yin Shun, Buddhism is no longer a
religion that only serves the deceased; it has become a
popular belief upheld by the elite of society.
Normally, the holy name of Amitabha, the buddha who
rules over the Western World of Ultimate Happiness, is
chanted for the deceased. However, the Mentor requested
instead that the holy name of Sakyamuni be recited after
his death. Sakyamuni is the buddha that symbolizes the
world that we live in now. In other words, the Mentor
wanted to show that he desired to be reborn into a world
full of suffering and hardship, rather than enter a world
of eternal happiness, so that he could continue promoting
the Right Thought of the Buddha in the place where it is
most needed. This dignified and unselfish request explains
why he will forever be a Mentor to us all.
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