Monday, February 13, 2023

A01269 - Hsing Yun, Monk Who Spread Buddhism in China and the World

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Hsing Yun (Chinese星雲pinyinXīng Yún; 19 August 1927 – 5 February 2023) was a Chinese Buddhist monk, teacher, and philanthropist based in Taiwan. He was the founder of the Fo Guang Shan Buddhist monastic order as well as the layperson-based Buddha's Light International Association. Hsing Yun was considered a major proponent of Humanistic Buddhism and one of the most influential teachers of modern Taiwanese Buddhism. In Taiwan, he was popularly referred to as one of the "Four Heavenly Kings" of Taiwanese Buddhism, along with his contemporaries: Master Sheng-yen of Dharma Drum Mountain, Master Cheng Yen of Tzu Chi and Master Wei Chueh of Chung Tai Shan.[1][2][3]

Hsing Yun was born Lee Kuo-shen (pinyinLǐ Guóshēn) in 1927 in Jiangdu village (modern day Yangzhou), Kiangsu (Jiangsu) Province in the Republic of China. Hsing Yun's first exposure to Buddhism came from his grandmother, a practicing Buddhist and meditator. In 1938 he entered the monastic life at the age of 12, ordaining as a novice at Qixia Temple under Zhikai, where he received the novice name Jinjue. He received the upasampadā vinaya precepts under Ruoshun at the same temple in 1941, receiving the dharma name Wuche.

Shortly after taking the full precepts, Hsing Yun was first inspired by Buddhist modernism in 1945 while studying at Jiaoshan Buddhist College. There he learned about Buddhist teacher Taixu's calls for reform in Buddhism and the Sangha. At a certain point, he adopted the name "Hsing Yun", literally meaning "nebula" in Chinese, to reflect his new philosophy.[4] He fled mainland China to Taiwan in 1949 following the communist victory in the civil war but was arrested along with several other Buddhist monastics. Hsing Yun and the others were released after 23 days, and he then spent the next several years developing a large following and founding numerous temples. In 1966, Hsing Yun bought some land in Kaohsiung and started building a large monastery. After partial completion, the temple opened in 1967 and would later become the headquarters of the Fo Guang Shan Buddhist organization.[5]

Hsing Yun's Fo Guang Shan Buddhist order is a proponent of "Humanistic" Buddhism,[6][5] and Hsing Yun himself was the abbot of the order until his resignation in 1985.[7][8] Following his resignation, Hsing Yun founded the Buddha's Light International Association (BLIA) as a layperson based Humanistic Buddhist organization.[8]

Fo Guang Shan eventually grew to become one of the most significant social actors in Taiwan; the organization has established several schools and colleges,[9] and runs orphanages, homes for the elderly, and drug rehabilitation programs in prisons. Fo Guang Shan has also been involved in some international relief efforts.[10][11]

Fo Guang Shan entered mainland China in the early 21st century, focusing more on charity and Chinese cultural revival rather than Buddhist propagation in order to avoid conflict with the Chinese government, which opposes proselytizing. Fo Guang Shan's presence in China increased under the premiership of General Secretary Xi Jinping after he started a program to revive traditional Chinese faiths.[12] According to Hsing Yun, his goal in mainland China was to work with the mainland government to rebuild China's culture following the destruction of the Cultural Revolution, rather than promote Buddhism in the mainland.[13]

The headquarters of Fo Guang Shan in Kaohsiung is currently the largest Buddhist monastery in Taiwan. On top of that, the order has a network of over 300 branches throughout Taiwan,[11] as well as several branches worldwide in at least fifty countries.[12]

In Taiwan, Hsing Yun was notable for his activity in political affairs, particularly as a supporter of the One-China policy as well as government legislation supported by the Kuomintang, and was criticized for his views by those in favor of Taiwan independence and by religious figures, as being overtly political and "considerably far afield from traditional monastic concerns".[14][15] During the 2008 presidential election, Hsing Yun publicly endorsed Kuomintang candidate Ma Ying-jeou.[16] During the second World Buddhist Forum in 2009, Hsing Yun asserted that there are "no Taiwanese" and that Taiwanese "are Chinese".[15] During the 2016 presidential election campaign, Hsing Yun caused considerable comment when he compared DPP candidate Tsai Ing-wen to the Chinese goddess Mazu, commenting that those traits would probably help Tsai be elected president, which she eventually was. To dispel rumors of party switching, Hsing Yun publicly gave his endorsement to KMT candidate Hung Hsiu-chu, who eventually withdrew from the race.[17] Despite his Kuomintang partisanship, Hsing Yun was generally known to be respected by politicians of both parties.[18]

He encouraged reconciliation between China and the Dalai Lama,[19] but tried hard to avoid causing rifts between him and his organisation and the Chinese government.[20]\

On 26 December 2011, Hsing Yun suffered a minor ischemic stroke, his second in that year.[21] In his older years Hsing Yun began suffering from numerous health issues, including diabetes and near blindness.[13]

Hsing Yun died at his residence in Fo Guang Shan monastery on the afternoon of 5 February 2023, after years of unstable health. He was 95, having spent 85 years of his life as a monastic. The announcement of his death was delayed in order for his worldwide branch temples to finish celebrating ceremonies on the Lantern Festival, the last day of the Lunar New Year celebration. Per his wishes, he requested to be returned to Fo Guang Shan where he could die peacefully. He had also requested that no extravagant funeral arrangements be made.

On the early morning of 6 February, the news of Hsing Yun’s death was announced in the Great Hero Hall by Venerable Hsin Bau. Shortly after the formal announcement, Hsing Yun’s body was placed in a seated position inside a dome-like container in the shape of the Parinirvana Stupa in Kushinagar, India. [22] His body was placed upon a dais inside the Cloud Dwelling Building where he laid in state for seven days. During this time, monastic, lay followers, and dignitaries paid their respects. [23]

Hsing Yun’s funeral was held on 12 February, with President Tsai Ing-wen and Premier Chen Chien-jen in attendance. His remains were cremated at Dasian Temple in nearby TainanBaihe District on the same day.[24]

In 2008, Hsing Yun was awarded the honorary Doctor of Humane Letters (L.H.D.) from Whittier College.[25]



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Master Hsing Yun, Monk Who Spread Buddhism in China, Dies at 95

He established a modern brand of Buddhism in Taiwan and opened temples around the world, becoming the rare religious figure backed by Beijing.

Several monks in orange robes walk along a cobblestone path in front of an ornate, very old church structure.
Master Hsing Yun, center, and members of his delegation visiting the Vatican in 1997. His movement flourished in China because it focused on individual piety and compassion, not social change, and did not challenge the government.Credit...Massimo Sambucetti/Associated Press
Several monks in orange robes walk along a cobblestone path in front of an ornate, very old church structure.

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The Venerable Master Hsing Yun, a Buddhist monk who built a global network of temples that extended to mainland China, putting him at the vanguard of popularizing Buddhism in a country whose government had long been hostile to religion, died on Feb. 5 in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. He was 95.

His death, at the Fo Guang Shan Monastery, was announced by his organization, Fo Guang Shan. No cause was given.

Master Hsing Yun was criticized for his political ties, especially for his support of China’s authoritarian leader, President Xi Jinping. But his movement flourished in China because it focused on individual piety and compassion, not social change, and did not challenge the government.

Insisting that Buddhism was apolitical and that Buddhists supported “whoever was in charge,” he was the rare religious figure to secure the backing of Beijing, and he maintained a congenial, yearslong relationship with Mr. Xi. He met the Chinese leader four times, and Mr. Xi claimed to have read “all the books that master sent me.”

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An adherent of humanistic Buddhism, which emphasizes this life over the afterlife, Master Hsing Yun tried to broaden its appeal by building universities in the United States, Australia and the Philippines, and by using rock-concert-style effects like smoke generators and lasers at religious events.

He was also a major figure in Taiwan, the self-governing island that Beijing considers a breakaway province. He helped revive Buddhism and build the trappings of a vibrant civil society there as Taiwan transitioned from a military dictatorship to a democracy in the 1970s and ’80s.

Master Hsing Yun’s organization was based in Taiwan, but he was born in the mainland, where he later returned on visits to build his modern branch of Buddhism.

He saw himself as a “symbolic bridge” between the two entities, said Stuart Chandler, a professor at Indiana University of Pennsylvania who has written a book on the master and his monastic order.

“People gravitated toward him because of his charisma,” Professor Chandler said. “He was a monk from the mainland who connected with Taiwanese, and as Taiwanese started going around the world, he was a symbol of Chinese culture.”

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But it was a tricky balancing act, and his support for Beijing sometimes alienated his base in Taiwan.

In 2009, in a clumsy effort to point out that the people on the mainland and in Taiwan were the same, he said that residents of Taiwan were Chinese, not Taiwanese, stoking the ire of those who supported the island’s independence. In 2013, he declared his support for Mr. Xi’s “Chinese dream,” saying he believed that the agenda would lead to a more egalitarian society.

He also stumbled into a political scandal in the United States, after nuns and monks of his Hsi Lai Temple in Southern California were accused of making illegal donations to the Democratic Party at a luncheon in 1996 attended by Vice President Al Gore and the monk, prompting a federal investigation that became an embarrassment for President Bill Clinton’s re-election campaign.

Hsing Yun was born Li Guoshen, the third of four children of a poor family in the eastern city of Yangzhou, China, in August 1927. His father, Li Chengbao, an incense vendor, disappeared in the wake of Japan’s invasion of Nanjing. While searching for him with his mother, Li-Liu Yuying, Hsing Yun visited a famous temple that ignited his interest in religion, according to his official biography.

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A large bookcase is flanked by a monk in a long orange robe and a man in a white raincoat.
Master Hsing Yun at a ceremony in Taipei with the president of Taiwan, Ma Ying-jeou, in 2013. He was known for having strong ties to political figures.Credit...Mandy Cheng/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
A large bookcase is flanked by a monk in a long orange robe and a man in a white raincoat.

He soon joined a monastic order and was ordained in his early teens. He stumbled upon the dictionary definition for “hsing yun,” or “nebula,” and was so taken by its connotations of cosmic infinity that he selected it as his dharma name, according to his writings.

As the Communist Party took control of China, Master Hsing Yun escaped to Taiwan in 1949, joining an exodus of Buddhist monks who feared religious repression. But Taiwanese leaders, who were then suspicious of religions other than Christianity, had the secret police follow him around, and he was briefly imprisoned on suspicion of spying for the Communists.

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Over time he built a following and in 1967, seeking to make Buddhism more accessible to ordinary people, he established the Fo Guang Shan monastic order in the southern Taiwanese port city of Kaohsiung. He also embraced mass-marketing tactics. And, taking inspiration from Roman Catholic missionaries, he sought to promote the faith through education.

As Taiwan lifted martial law, he founded a number of schools, Buddhist seminaries, publishing houses and even a television station. His teachings, emphasizing social harmony and reconciliation, helped balance some of the potentially disruptive forces of the political transition, according to Richard Madsen, an emeritus professor of sociology at the University of California, San Diego, and the author of “Democracy’s Dharma: Religious Renaissance and Political Development in Taiwan” (2007).

“He popularized Buddhism in a way that made it very user-friendly with these emerging middle classes and led to a surge of religiosity among the middle classes,” Professor Madsen said. “It was indirectly political and provided stability in civil society.”

As waves of Taiwanese migrated to North America and elsewhere, Master Hsing Yun set his sights on global expansion. His organization established two temples in Los Angeles County in 1976 and constructed the 15-acre Hsi Lai Temple in the Los Angeles suburb Hacienda Heights in 1988.

Fo Guang Shan has since opened more than 120 temples in 30 countries, catering mainly to the Chinese diaspora, according to Jens Reinke, the director of the Institute for the Study of Humanistic Buddhism at University of the West in Los Angeles. In addition to the one in California, the group has major temples in Bronkhorstspruit, South Africa, and Berkeley, Australia.

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Visitors to a monument look at and take photos of a tall statue of a monk perched on a pedestal.
A statue of Master Hsing Yun in Yixing, Jiangsu Province, China. Even as China cracked down on other religions, he opened libraries, cultural centers and temples there.Credit...Gilles Sabrié for The New York Times
Visitors to a monument look at and take photos of a tall statue of a monk perched on a pedestal.

Master Hsing Yun employed elaborate theme-park-style attractions like fireworks, light shows and slot machines to draw followers to his sprawling temples. Their grounds attract crowds every Lunar New Year, when the monastery and temples are decked with multicolored lights and lanterns.

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“People would come for the show, but they would leave with the dharma,” the essential Buddhist principles, Professor Chandler said. “That was an important seed for him to do things kind of big and flashy.”

Master Hsing Yun’s relations with Beijing were not always smooth. In 1989, he was barred from China for a few years after he reportedly sheltered an official who fled his post in the wake of the Tiananmen Square crackdown that year.

The monk denied it and was allowed into China to visit his hometown in 2003.

Since 2007, he has built eight Buddhist facilities in China, including cultural centers, libraries and a giant temple in the city of Yixing featuring a 15-story pagoda. Even as the government cracked down on other religions, he was allowed to expand thanks in large part to his willingness to set aside criticism of Communist Party leaders.

“I support the leadership,” he said in a 2017 interview with The New York Times. “They care for us, as well. It is mutual. We Buddhists uphold whomever is in charge. Buddhists don’t get involved in politics.”

He chafed at being called a “political monk” by critics but eventually seemed to come to terms with it. In his 2005 memoir, “Hear Me Out: Messages From a Humble Monk,” he wrote: “Having been a monk my whole life, I neither want to be an official or the people’s representative. But when it comes to fairness in society, sometimes I can’t help but share my opinions.”

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