Dongshan Liangjie
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Dongshan Liangjie (807–869) (; ) was a Chan Buddhist monk of the Tang dynasty. He founded the Caodong school (), which was transmitted to Japan in the thirteenth century (Song-Yuan era) by
Dōgen Dōgen Zenji (道元禅師; 26 January 1200 – 22 September 1253), also known as Dōgen Kigen (道元希玄), Eihei Dōgen (永平道元), Kōso Jōyō Daishi (高祖承陽大師), or Busshō Dentō Kokushi (仏性伝東国師), was a J ...
and developed into the
Sōtō Sōtō Zen or is the largest of the three traditional sects of Zen in Japanese Buddhism (the others being Rinzai and Ōbaku). It is the Japanese line of the Chinese Cáodòng school, which was founded during the Tang dynasty by Dòngsh ...
school of
Zen Zen ( zh, t=禪, p=Chán; ja, text= 禅, translit=zen; ko, text=선, translit=Seon; vi, text=Thiền) is a school of Mahayana Buddhism that originated in China during the Tang dynasty, known as the Chan School (''Chánzong'' 禪宗), and ...
. Dongshan is also known for the poetic ''
Five Ranks The ''Five Ranks'' (; ) is a poem consisting of five stanzas describing the stages of realization in the practice of Zen Buddhism. It expresses the interplay of absolute and relative truth and the fundamental non-dualism of Buddhist teaching. ...
''.


Biography


Start of Chan studies

Dongshan was born during the
Tang dynasty The Tang dynasty (, ; zh, t= ), or Tang Empire, was an Dynasties in Chinese history, imperial dynasty of China that ruled from 618 to 907 AD, with an Zhou dynasty (690–705), interregnum between 690 and 705. It was preceded by the Sui dyn ...
in Kuaiji (present-day
Shaoxing Shaoxing (; ) is a prefecture-level city on the southern shore of Hangzhou Bay in northeastern Zhejiang province, China. It was formerly known as Kuaiji and Shanyin and abbreviated in Chinese as (''Yuè'') from the area's former inhabitant ...
,
Zhejiang Zhejiang ( or , ; , also romanized as Chekiang) is an eastern, coastal province of the People's Republic of China. Its capital and largest city is Hangzhou, and other notable cities include Ningbo and Wenzhou. Zhejiang is bordered by Ji ...
) to the south of
Hangzhou Bay Hangzhou Bay, or the Bay of Hangzhou (), is a funnel-shaped inlet of the East China Sea, bordered by the province of Zhejiang and the municipality of Shanghai, which lies north of the Bay. The Bay extends from the East China Sea to its head ...
. His secular birth surname was Yu (兪氏). He started his private studies in Chan Buddhism at a young age, as was popular among educated elite families of the time. At the village cloister, Dongshan showed promise by questioning the fundamental Doctrine of the Six Roots during his tutor's recitation of the '' Heart Sutra''. Though aged only ten, he was sent away from his home village to train under Lingmo (霊黙) at the monastery on nearby Wutai Mountain (五台山). He also had his head shaved and took on yellow robes, which represented the first steps in his path to becoming a monk, ordaining as a
śrāmaṇera A sāmaṇera (Pali); sa, श्रामणेर (), is a novice male monastic in a Buddhist context. A female novice is a ''śrāmaṇerī'' or ''śrāmaṇerikā'' (Sanskrit; Pāli: ''sāmaṇerī''). Etymology The ''sāmaṇera'' is a ...
. At the age of twenty-one, he went to Shaolin Monastery on
Mount Song Mount Song (, "lofty mountain") is an isolated mountain range in north central China's Henan Province, along the southern bank of the Yellow River. It is known in literary and folk tradition as the central mountain of the Five Great Mountains o ...
, where he took the complete monk's precepts as a bhikṣu.


Wandering life

Dongshan Liangjie spent a large portion of his early life wandering between Chan masters and hermits in the Hongzhou () region. He obtained instruction from Nanquan Puyuan ( 南泉普願), and later from Guishan Lingyou ( 溈山靈祐). But the teacher of preeminent influence was Master Yunyan Tansheng, of whom Dongshan became the dharma heir. According to the work ''Rentian yanmu'' (《人天眼目》, "The Eye of Humans and Gods," 1188), Dongshan inherited from Yunyan Tansheng the knowledge of the Three Types of Leakage (三種滲漏, ''shenlou'') and the ''baojing sanmei'' (宝鏡三昧 "jewel mirror ''samādhi'' or precious mirror ''samādhi''"; Japanese: ''hōkyō zanmai''). Most of what is recorded regarding his journey and studies exists in the form of philosophical dialogues, or ''kōan'', between him and his various teachers. These provide very little insight into his personality or experiences beyond his daily rituals, style of spiritual education, and a few specific events. During the later years of his pilgrimage Emperor Wuzong's
Great Anti-Buddhist Persecution The Huichang Persecution of Buddhism () was initiated by Emperor Wuzong (Li Chan) of the Tang dynasty during the Huichang era (841–845). Among its purposes were to appropriate war funds and to cleanse Tang China of foreign influences. As such ...
(843–845) reached its height, but it had little effect on Dongshan or his newfound followers. A little over a decade later, in 859, Dongshan felt he had completed his role as an assistant instructor at Hsin-feng Mountain, so with the blessing of his last masters, he took some students and left to establish his own school.


Establishing the Caodong school of Chan

At the age of fifty-two, Dongshan established a mountain school at the mountain named Dongshan (in what is now the city of
Gao'an Gao'an () is a county-level city in the northwest-central part of Jiangxi province, China. It is under the jurisdiction of the prefecture-level city of Yichun, and is located about 35 kilometers west from Nanchang, the provincial capital. It co ...
in
Jiangxi Jiangxi (; ; formerly romanized as Kiangsi or Chianghsi) is a landlocked province in the east of the People's Republic of China. Its major cities include Nanchang and Jiujiang. Spanning from the banks of the Yangtze river in the north int ...
province). The cloister temple he founded bore such names as Guanfu (広福寺), Gongde (功德寺), Chongxian Longbao (崇先隆報寺) but was named Puli Yuan (普利院) in the early
Song dynasty The Song dynasty (; ; 960–1279) was an imperial dynasty of China that began in 960 and lasted until 1279. The dynasty was founded by Emperor Taizu of Song following his usurpation of the throne of the Later Zhou. The Song conquered the res ...
period. , p.62 Here, according to tradition, he composed the '' Song of the Precious Mirror Samādhi''. His disciples here are said to have numbered between five hundred and one thousand. This
Caodong Caodong school () is a Chinese Chan Buddhist sect and one of the Five Houses of Chán. Etymology The key figure in the Caodong school was founder Dongshan Liangjie (807-869, 洞山良价 or Jpn. Tozan Ryokai). Some attribute the name "Cáodòng ...
school became regarded as one of the Five Houses of Zen. At the time, they were just considered schools led by individualistic masters with distinct styles and personalities; in reality, the fact that they were all—with the exception of Linji—located in close geographic proximity to each other and that they all were at the height of their teaching around the same time, established a custom among students to routinely visit the other masters.


Death

Dongshan died at the age of sixty-three, in the tenth year of the Xiantong era (869), having spent forty-two years as a monk. His shrine, built in keeping with Buddhist tradition, was named the Stūpa of Wisdom-awareness, and his posthumous name was Chan Master Wu-Pen. According to one of the ''kōan''s of his sect, Dongshan announced the end of his life several days before the event, and used the opportunity to teach his students one final time. In response to their grief over the news of his impending death, he told them to create a "delusion banquet." After a week of preparations, he took one bite of the meal and, telling the students not to "make a great commotion over nothing," went to his room and died.


Teaching

Although Lin-chi and Liang-chieh shared pupils, Liang-chieh had a particular style. Since his early life he had utilized ''gātha'', or small poems, in order to try better to understand and to expound the meaning of Chan principles for himself and others. Examples are and Further features of the school included particular interpretations of ''kōan'', an emphasis on "silent illumination" Chan, and organization of students into the "three root types." He is still well known for his creation of the Five Ranks.


Use of ''kōan'' and silent illumination

Some descendants of Dongshan much later in the Song dynasty, around the twelfth century, argued that the '' kōan'', which developed over centuries based on dialogues attributed to Dongshan and his contemporaries, should not have a specific goal, because that would naturally " mplya dualist distinction between ignorance and enlightenment." This view is based on Dongshan's perspective of not basing practice on stages of attainment. Instead, such Dongshan lineage descendants as Hongzhi encouraged the use of Silent Illumination Chan (''mo-chao chán'') as a way to take a self-fulfilling, rather than a competitive, path to enlightenment. These two differences contrasted especially with the style of Linji's descendants; "silent illumination Chan" was originally one of many pejorative terms created by successors of Linji regarding successors of Dongshan.


Three categories of students

Dongshan was distinguished by his ability to instruct all three categories of students, which he defined as * "Those who see but do not yet comprehend the Dharma" * "Those in the process of understanding" * "Those who have already understood"


Five Ranks

A large portion of Master Dongshan's fame came from his having attributed to him the Verses of the Five Ranks. The Five Ranks were a
doctrine Doctrine (from la, doctrina, meaning "teaching, instruction") is a codification of beliefs or a body of teachings or instructions, taught principles or positions, as the essence of teachings in a given branch of knowledge or in a belief syste ...
which mapped out five stages of comprehension of the relationship between the
absolute Absolute may refer to: Companies * Absolute Entertainment, a video game publisher * Absolute Radio, (formerly Virgin Radio), independent national radio station in the UK * Absolute Software Corporation, specializes in security and data risk manag ...
and relative realities. The Five Ranks are:Hakuin, ''Secrets of the Five Ranks of Soto Zen''. In: Thomas Cleary (2005), ''Classics of Buddhism and Zen. The Collected Translations of Thomas Cleary''. Volume Three, Part Three, ''Kensho: The Heart of Zen''. p. 297–305 * The Absolute within the Relative (Cheng chung p'ien) * The Relative within the Absolute (P'ien chung cheng) * The Coming from Within the Absolute (Cheng chung lai) * The Contrasted Relative Alone (Pien chung chih) * Unity Attained (Chien chung tao), when the two previously opposite states become one For each of these ranks, Dongshan wrote a verse trying to bring such abstract ideals into the realm of real experience. He used metaphors of day-to-day occurrences that his students could understand. His student Ts'ao-shan Pen-chi later went on to relate the Five Ranks to the classic Chinese text, the
I Ching The ''I Ching'' or ''Yi Jing'' (, ), usually translated ''Book of Changes'' or ''Classic of Changes'', is an ancient Chinese divination text that is among the oldest of the Chinese classics. Originally a divination manual in the Western Zh ...
.


Lineage

Dongshan's most renowned students were Caoshan Benji (W-G: T'sao-shan, 840–901) and Yunju Daoying (W-G: Yun-chu Taoying, 835–902). Caoshan refined and finalized on Dongshan's works on Buddhist doctrine. The sect's name, Caodong, may possibly take after the names of these two teachers. (An alternate theory says the "Cao" refers to Caoxi Huineng 渓慧能 W-G: Ts'ao-hsi Hui-neng the sixth ancestor of Chan; see Sōtō#Chinese origins.) The lineage that T'sao-shan began did not last beyond his immediate disciples. Yunju Daoying started a branch of Dongshan's lineage which lasted in China until the seventeenth century. Thirteen generations later, the Japanese Buddhist monk Dōgen Kigen (1200–1253) was educated in the traditions of Dongshan's Caodong school of Chan. Following his education, he returned to his homeland and started the Sōtō school ("Sōtō" is the Japanese reading of "Caodong").


Modern scholarship

Very little documentation remains about Dongshan's life. Information is usually limited to dates, names, and general locations. The only primary sources available are two collections of doctrine and lineage, ''T'su-t'ang-chi'' (''Records from the Halls of the Patriarchs'') and ''Ching-tê chʻuan teng lu'' (''Transmission of the Lamp''). Both only indicate the name as having been generated from Tun-shan's connections to "T'sao," and they are equally ambiguous on most other facts.


References


Sources

* * *Demiéville, Paul. ''Choix d'études sinologiques''. Leiden, Netherlands: E. J. Brill, 1970. * * *Dumoulin, Heinrich. ''Zen Buddhism: A History''. Trans. James W. Heisig and Paul F. Knitter. Vol. 2. New York: Macmillan, 1988. *Keown, Damien. ''A Dictionary of Buddhism''. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2003. * Ku, Y. H. ''History of Zen''. Privately published by Y. H. Ku, Emeritus Professor, University of Pennsylvania, 1979. *Lai, Whalen, and Lewis R. Lancaster, eds. ''Early Ch'an in China and Tibet''. Berkeley, California: Asian Humanities Press, 1983. *Leighton, Taigen Dan. ''Just This Is It: Dongshan and the Practice of Suchness''. Boston & London: Shambhala, 2015. *(Liang-chieh.) ''The Record of Tung-shan''. Trans. William F. Powell. Kuroda Institute Classics in East Asian Buddhism. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press, 1986. *


External links


The Five Ranks of Tozan
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dongshan Chan Buddhist monks * Tang dynasty poets Chinese Zen Buddhists 807 births 869 deaths Tang dynasty Buddhist monks Writers from Shaoxing 9th-century Chinese poets Poets from Zhejiang