Taixu
Venerable Master Taixu
(1890-1947), Chinese Buddhist reformer, founder of the Wuchang Buddhist
Institute and the Buddhist journal Haichaoyin, and active participant in
various Buddhist movements., He advocated the reform and renewal of
Buddhism in China.
Taixu was born
in Hǎin岥ng in Zhejiang province. His lay name was Lǚ P岢il岥n. His parents
died when he was still young, and he was raised by his grandparents. At
16 he was ordained into the Linji school of Chan Buddhism in Xiao
Jiǔhuá Temple in Suzhou. Not long after being ordained he was given the
Dharma name of Taixu, meaning Great Emptiness. In 1909 he traveled to
Nanjing to join the Sutra Carving Society established there by the lay
Buddhist Yang Renshan.
As a result of
being exposed to the political writings of Kang Youwei, Liang Qichao,
Tan Sitong and Zhang Taiyan, Taixu turned his mind to the reformation of
Buddhism. In 1911 while in Guangzhou, he made contact with the
revolutionaries plotting to overthrow the Qing dynasty and participated
in some secret revolutionary activities. Taixu would later describe the
formation of his political thinking during this time in his
Autobiography:
"My social and
political thought was based upon 'Mr. Constitution', the Republican
Revolution, Socialism, and Anarchism. As I read works such as Zhang
Taiyan's "On Establishing Religion", "On the Five Negatives", and "On
Evolution", I came to see Anarchism and Buddhism as close companions,
and as a possible advancement from Democratic Socialism."
He tried to put
his reform programs into practice by founding the Fojiao Xiejin Hui
(Association for the Advancement of Buddhism) in 1912, which lasted only
a short time due to resistance from conservative Buddhists. Unable to
convince the Buddhist community of his ideas, and shocked by the
outbreak of the First World War and the sufferings in China, Taixu went
into seclusion on Putuoshan for three years from October 1914. In 1917
Taixu visited Taiwan and Japan. Later, he established the Enlightenment
Society (Jueshe) at Shanghai with the help of some eminent Chinese. The
society organized public lectures and disseminated knowledge of Buddhism
through its own publications. Taixu next made a preaching tour of
several cities in China and in Malaya. In 1920 he founded the Buddhist
periodical Haichaoyin. He established the Wuchang Buddhist Institute in
1922, the first modern Buddhist seminary in China. In 1923, Taixu and a
few followers founded the World Buddhist Federation, which included
among its members Inada Eisai and K. L. Reichelt. Two years later he led
the Chinese Buddhist delegation to the Tokyo Conference of East Asian
Buddhists. In 1927 he became the head of the Minnan Buddhist Institute.
During that year, he associated with the Chinese Nationalist leader
Chiang Kai-shek, who financed Taixu's world tour in 1928. The Chinese
Buddhist Association was founded by Reverend Yuanying (1878—1953) at
Shanghai in 1929, but Taixu's early relation with it was not cordial,
though he was on its standing committee. In 1930 he founded the
Sino-Tibetan Buddhist Institute in Chongqing; this became the
headquarters of the Chinese Buddhist Association in the war years, 1937
to 1945. During the war, Taixu led a Chinese Buddhist mission of
goodwill to Burma, India, Ceylon, and Malaya to win support and sympathy
for China, and he was awarded a medal by the Chinese government for his
contributions to the war effort.
Taixu's
attempts to reform and modernize Chinese Buddhism were to some extent
successful. A number of prominent scholars and religious leaders were
trained at the academies and libraries that he founded, and his lectures
and writings helped create a more positive public attitude toward
Buddhism. But his larger dream of a worldwide Buddhist movement, and his
plan for reorganizing Buddhist institutions throughout China never
materialized during his lifetime. His ideas were often viewed by the
conservative Buddhist establishment as radical and unacceptable. They
cooperated with him reluctantly in times of crisis but were always
opposed to his ideas on monastic affairs. Yet, viewed from a historical
perspective, his program of reform and modernization (the establishment
of Buddhist academies, journals, foreign contacts, and so forth) can be
seen to have created new patterns for Chinese Buddhism.
The religious
thought of Taixu falls in the mainstream of Chinese Buddhism. It
recognizes that all sentient beings possess the Buddha nature and are
subject to the law of causation. The operation of cause and conditions
is universal and incessant, and all worldly phenomena are based on that
operation. If one follows the five Buddhist precepts, a happy life in
this world is achievable. This happy life is, however, not lasting; it
is subject to change. One must therefore strive for a higher wisdom and
thus attain nirvāṇa. When one realizes that there is neither self nor
object and that only the mind is universal and unlimited, one will work
for the salvation of all sentient beings so that they too may become
Buddha. Taixu's contribution is his adoption of a new terminology and a
modern style of writing, thus tuning the old philosophy to the new
thought in China. He often used words like revolution, evolution,
science, democracy, philosophy, and freedom, as well as other concepts
popular in his time. Although he may not always have used these terms
with a clear understanding of their modern meaning, by incorporating
them into the context of Buddhism he made the tradition continue to
appeal to young people at the beginning of the twentieth century.
Source: http://www.bookrags.com;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taixu