[This article by
Mahendranath (Dadaji), first appeared in Values magazine, an
Indian title now defunct, in the 1970s.]
The Story of the Transmission of Wisdom
RAG ROBE BARE FEET HARD SEAT SlT NEAT
Would you like to become a Buddha? It will be a
wonderful experience, and how the neighbours will talk about you ! There
are two kinds of Buddhas so you can take your choice. One belongs to the
Theravada school of Southern Buddhism where they tell of a Buddha who
spent most of his enlightened years making rules and telling other
people what to do.
Oddly enough. before he became an enlightened Buddha.
we are led to believe that he spent his life either silent or speaking
very little. This could have been his most interesting period and more
intimate details of his life and experience which led to his great
realization could have been of much practical value to his followers.
But practically nothing is recorded of this period, only the latter part
where we are overwhelmed by sermons.
The other Buddha belongs to the Zen tradition and
reveals a wiser man and one who had the wisdom to keep quiet. Zen does
have scriptures passed on from ancient tradition, but they are from
Mahayana sources, and thereby tactfully, have rejected the whole of the
Pali Canon. Although Zen does have these scriptures, now translated from
the original Sanskrit, none are accepted as being an authority or final
word. The Buddha of Zen presents a different and wiser type. The Pali
Canon relates that soon after the experience of Awakening (Bodhi), the
Buddha rushed to the Deer Park near Varanasi to preach and convert his
former associates. Zen has a very different viewpoint and tells us the
Buddha "never said a word". This must not be taken to imply the Buddha
lived a life of complete silence but rather that Truth cannot be
expressed in words.
Thus the viewpoint of Zen must be that sermons and
sutras can never in themselves express the final Truth. Zen had little
regard for chronology or history and never tried to invent any. They
tell a wonderful and beautiful story which serves to illustrate their
viewpoint rather than as an event in history.
The story is told that the Sage Gautama was sitting
quietly beneath a tree surrounded by disciples, a curious public and odd
sight-seers. Then suddenly a local panjandrum waddled into the scene,
paid his respects, gave his dakshina or offering, and presented the
Buddha with a beautiful yellow flower of golden hue. Then, perhaps with
a sincere desire for spiritual food or the mere intention to get
something for his money, he begged the Sage Gautama to preach a sermon
on the golden flower which he held in his hand. When the official was
seated, all listened intensely for the sermon. The Buddha held up the
flower so that all the audience could both see and gaze at it. Gautama
himself did precisely the same thing and sat silently gazing at the
flower and smiled to the mystified mob to indicate the sermon was
finished. But practically everyone betrayed a puzzled countenance and
revealed their bewilderment. When-the glance of the Buddha fell on the
face of Mahakashyapa, his leading disciple, their eyes met and they both
smiled. Then the Buddha knew that of all the congregation, only Kashyapa
got the message. Zen calls this the transmission of mind to mind.
Thus Zen dragged Buddhism out of the relative ruts
into which it was rapidly sinking. The cult of Zen Buddhism first came
to bloom in China and became known as Ch'an. It was the real Golden
Flower and had grown on a spectacular plant which had its roots in the
Tantra of the Hindus, Taoism and Buddhism of the Indian school of
Mahayana. The Hindu roots are there, and most obvious, but seldom is any
reference made because scholars, especially foreign scholars, who write
most of the Zen books, have never yet studied the higher Upanishad
teachings, and less so the Agamas of ancient India and the expressions
of these which are found in the teaching of Sri Dattatreya. So vivid are
these relationships and so similar the fundamentals that it would not
now appear odd if Bodhidharma, who is said to have taken the Dhyana cult
to China, was proved to be a Hindu. He himself never claimed to be a
Buddhist but it could easily have happened that the Chinese thought all
monks or sadhus from India were all Buddhists. Prior to Bodhidharma,
they had all been so. Certainly the pattern of his visit to the Chinese
court, his answers and general behaviour were not the usual pattern of a
Buddhist of any' school. The story of Bodhidharma being the twenty-
eighth Patriarch of Indian Buddhism is doubted even by the Zen people
themselves and no Indian records of his period even mention him.
Buddhism in India never did have an exclusively Dhyana school or cult
but always existed in -mixed patterns. Ch'an tradition tells us that he
arrived in China about 520 A.D. Zen, however rises above all these
things, because it is the living lamp which gives the light and not the
burnt-out wick of tradition.
Ch'an flourished in China for about 800 years and
terminated as a monastic sect with its own Masters in the 13th century.
In spite of its brilliance it reached a stage of weakness and became
transformed into the very relativistic Pure Land school. Earlier it had
spread into Tibet Korea and Japan and only in the latter country was it
able to continue as two separate but related schools of Zen. Its
existence in Japan in the present day is well known but Ch'an in China
never completely died. It continued with separate monks who had access
to its vast literature, records and teachings. But nearly all Chinese
schools began to merge and the late Patriarch was known by the title of
Patriarch of the Five Schools. It also existed in Malaysia where a very
fine monk had a temple in Kuala Lumpar and identified himself completely
as a Ch'an monk.
People have become somewhat conditioned to think of
Buddhism as an atheistic religion. In some schools this could be so, but
the interesting feature of early Ch'an is that the Patriarchs and
Masters so rarely used the word Buddha or Buddhism. Instead, we find
them talking and thinking in terms of the Tao and the Supreme Reality.
Lao Tzu was generally the most quoted, not by name, but by the teachings
he had expounded in the Tao Teh Ching. The Meditation Master Fa-Yung
tells us: "No-thought is the Absolute Reality". He correctly used the
term Ultimate Essence. for the Sanskrit word Sunyata, though it later
degenerated into being regarded as "nothingness" or "void". He also used
the term of one's "Original Nature" to mean this "Ultimate Essence", but
it too became changed, in time, to "Buddha's Nature".
The oldest Zen poem, by Seng-Ts'an, the Third
Patriarch begins with the words "The Perfect Tao is without difficulty",
and "Follow your nature and accord with the Tao". The early period of
Ch'an was much neglected by the recorders, but having become more
Buddha-.conditioned, they might have neglected what was obviously
Ch'an's earlier Tao period. As time passed, the Tao of Supreme Substance
was thought of as Nothingness --- a void. Perhaps rivalry with the
existing Taoist religion may have had something to do with the change.
Zen values are infinite. It helps one to better
understand Yoga Vidya, and Yoga Vidya helps one to better understand
Zen. Both can play important parts in man's attainment of Immortality.
Now that Zen no longer exists as an organized cult in China, it is
useless for Western people to go there to find it, also, unless you are
a ping-pong player, you might have potential difficulties. While Japan
still retains the Zen cult, even in a modernized form, the country does
present great difficulties to the foreigner. Zen training today has now
developed into a system of hardening and character building for young
Japanese gentlemen and is considered an excellent introduction to a
business career. To become involved in this system is not what the
sincere seeker of wisdom really wants. The scanty diet and bitterly cold
climate in the winter season do not provide the ideal conditions for any
foreigner to spend two or three years in meditation. Language is also an
insurmountable barrier and even where English is spoken it is not easy
for teachers to translate into those subtle idioms of English which Zen
requires.
Yet there is still an answer to the inherent desire
of the awakened man to find the Supreme Absolute. To do this does not
require any fixed religious or cult patterns. One need not join a new
religion or even seek an entirely different way of life. Though these
things have their values to the local people of different lands, they
might be impediments to one from abroad. It is like trying to put the
wind in a bottle. this must not be taken to imply that the cultural
patterns and conventions of your own land will provide you with the
ideal conditions. You must get the mind and body disentangled from these
also. Zen, Yoga-Vidya and Tao all teach a Supreme attainment but one
which is only attainable by a natural man or woman. Stories you can read
in books, but to acquire naturalness, to be natural, and to revert to
your own primitive nature, this you must do yourself and empty the mind
of wrong ideas and free the body from its obligations and impediments.
Thus Zen can help us much by a study of the teachings and injunctions of
those who walked the path, achieved success and became competent as
guides for others.
Zen and Yoga-Vidya lie close together. Zen is only
the Japanese, but now the most universal form of the Chinese Ch'an. This
in its turn is taken from the Sanskrit Dhyana and was the Chinese
equivalent to the colloquial form (which generally drops the last
letter) of Dhyan. Yoga-Vidya is a rather modern form of Brahma-Vidya or
Atma-Vidya. It only means the Science of Attainment. Although popular
opinion associates it with the highest form of Hinduism it actually
comes from the ancient pre-Aryan Tantric cult. But these associations
should not mislead anyone into thinking of them as cult concepts of a
separate religion. They arose in Ancient India long before people
thought of themselves as Indians and lived without any ideas of
separateness or nationalism. They lived in a world without fences,
frontiers and borders. The cult of Yoga-Vidya, of which Zen become
another expression, is international and .belongs only to the cosmos.
Thus it becomes the Science of the Microcosm attaining the Macrocosm.
Yoga-Vidya expounds only the One Supreme Reality (Paramatman), the
Cosmic Soul. Belief in relative gods and goddesses were only, necessary
to people of lower wisdom.
Zen was imported into Japan and developed as two
separate but related schools. Soto-Zen is exclusively a meditation sect
and tends to imply gradual awakening through mind training. Rinzai-Zen
came through a monk who studied under Huang Po and Lin-Chi. It is the
"Sudden" school of Zen which utilized the verbal and mental conundrums
known as the Ko-an plus the well-directed application of a big stick.
This amusing process assumes that some people behave better when
battered. At least, it keeps the boys awake, if not "awakened".
The real characters of Zen were always the most
fantastic and unconventional. Lin-Chi became so free from entanglements
that his own disciples failed to recognize him. When he removed his
outer robe and appeared only in his undergarment his students knew him
instantly and would playfully cluster around him. Lin-Chi was so pleased
with the results that he decided to take the experiment to its obvious
conclusion. He removed the undergarment and put on a nude act. But then
everything changed and the students ran away. Later he lectured to his
boys, "not to try to recognize a man only by what he wears, since a
man's clothes are only attachments". He then explained that "To be a
great Zen Master one must be free from all these attachments and a good
disciple is one who can see and recognize the Master's freedom "
Truth does not become more valid because it is seen
by the light of a Chinese lantern or wrapped in a Japanese kimono. The
Masters may have been distinguishable because they wore Mongolian masks,
but the real souls of Absolutism were universal and cosmopolitan. Take
them out of the Oriental environment and they are still great Masters.
Many of the greatest are probably unknown, preached but little, did not
seek disciples and were never entangled in monastic life. They lived
like leaves blown by the wind. If realization does not give real
freedom, then it is not realization. Liberation has no entanglements and
involvements and those who permit them are not liberated.
Japanese Zen was much reflected in Japanese art, yet
the favourite subjects of the artists were Patriarchs and Masters
revealed in their Absolute expressions and not as conventional preachers
and seat-sitters. Instead they were presented in wild abandonment,
shouting, laughing, yelling and scolding. They became the insane ideals
of Japanese spiritual life. It may also be noted that the characters
most commonly represented were not the big names in Zen, but the obscure
hermits Han-Shan and Shih-Te, dirty, ragged vagabonds of the hills and
forests.
Another was the fat-bellied folk-god of the Chinese,
Pu-Tai, whom Zen transformed into a Zen Bhikshu to make him more welcome
on Japanese soil. Here was the real cult of Zen and the men of real
value, living in just the same way as their forerunners had lived in
India and the true pattern of drop-outs all over the world. One cannot
become real Yog, Zen or Tao, until one reaches the stage of Naturalness
(Chinese Tzu jan; Japanese Shizen; Sanskrit Sahaja). So if one
distinguishes natural differences, then the thinking must be at fault.
Zen maintains complete identity with Yog as both are
based on roll-realization as being their essential principle: and that
meditation is the method to attain it. I cannot recommend Zen books
which should be read but I can recommend many which should be burned.
The worst books in English have been written by
Japanese with Europeans panting up behind. Zen literature, translated
into English has its own real values. But one does not actually read
real Zen but rather absorbs it. If you cannot understand it, then you
are not ready for Zen. Too many find Zen, like Yoga-Vidya, beyond them.
To make things easier the only practical steps one can safely recommend
is for you to kill yourself and try for a better rebirth where you can
grow up less conditioned, brainwashed and have less rubbish-soaked
brains. You might have to do this several times.
Zen is an excellent approach to the Absolute but it
is not the only one. Realization of the Supreme Reality is latent in
each and every individual. People like to think that books help them but
actually they become an obstacle. This is most true in the West where
people have become conditioned to imagine that knowledge and wisdom must
always be somewhere presented in black and white. Yet the Supreme
Absolute which they seek has not a single word, phrase or sentence which
is appropriate to describe it. How then, can it be conveyed by the
printed word? Meditation is an experience and improves only with
practice while "all-about-it books" lead only to confusion. So where do
we go from here ?
Once-a-week Zen is just about as useless as
once-a-week Yoga. The Science of the Soul is a way of life and must
permeate your thought and action for twenty-four hours of every day. Eat
less, sleep less and meditate the more. You will not find it in
societies and classes but only within. No guru can help you unless he is
a Realized Soul- a Buddha himself. Only the awakened should be the
guides to awaken others. Otherwise you are trying to buy purgatives from
constipated doctors. Now that someone has already written "Teach
Yourself Zen", we are but a short time away from someone who will start
teaching Zen by correspondence courses. Then tapes and gramophone
records. While there are worms there will always be cunning birds
looking for them.
Let us muse and meditate a while on the world of
relative comparisons. A Hebrew, Christian or Muslim fanatic will become
most aggressively insane if he feels his scripture is insulted. He will
die to defend the name of his God and fight those who deny it. On the
other hand Zen, not only lampooned itself, but ridiculed those who took
the religious tradition and substratum too seriously. Yoga-Vidya went a
step further and cracked relativity wide open. Sri Sukodev, the naked
yogi, warned his disciples in the following way. "The Supreme Absolute
is in all things and manifests as all characteristics and is represented
in various ways in all religious systems and presented by learned
people, but they are all under the influence of delusion (maya) and so
it remains unknown to them".
The Absolute, through the mouth of Krishna as Guru,
says, "What theory is it possible to maintain when all are based on My
illusion (maya) ?' Speaking of the very life-blood of Hinduism, the
manifestations and Avatars of the Supreme Reality, which millions
worship, "I have indicated to you, in brief, all these manifestations of
the Absolute but you must know them to be nothing but the fancy of the
imagination --mere words, unreal".
Also speaking of Gods and Avatars, Ugrasrava Suta
says; "The descents and deeds of the Absolute are likewise illusionary,
for the Absolute is changeless and has neither birth nor action".
In Christian patterns talk like this would have had
them burned. It is only where there is real strength of teachings that a
religion or path can freely express itself. Zen never produced holy or
pious men in the usual accepted meaning of the word. Piety was even
recognized as a defect and an outward show which need have no
relationship to one's inner understanding.
Niu-T'ou Fa-Yung was one of the Ch'an Masters who
lived in the early part of the 7th century. Having passed through
considerable study of Confucianism, and Chinese History, he embraced
Buddhism. Soon after, he went to live in a cave on Niu-T'ou Mountain as
a hermit. Here he spent his days in the conventional patterns of
Buddhism and developed such a condition of piety and holiness that a
hundred birds would come every day and drop flowers and other things
which birds drop, into his lap as he sat praying or meditating. Fa-Yung
should have been in a glass case. He might well have died and rotted
away in the odour of sanctity if the Fourth Patriarch, Tao-Hsin, had not
chanced to pass that way and visit him.
The Zen Masters did not always use the word Buddha in
the sense it came to be used in Theravada and Mahayana schools, yet
their use was more in accord with the real meaning. The medieval
courtesy title of Buddha only meant an Awakened One. It was identical to
the stage of Pratibha -- awakening, insight or illumination and in
Japanese they use the term Satori and the Chinese Tun-Wu Thus, when a
Japanese student attains Satori it means he has become an Awakened One,
but this does not imply or mean that he has reached the stage of Moksha
or Enlightenment and is free from rebirth. Zen did not really intend to
make men into Buddhas of the Theravada type, although the Theravada
attitude is somewhat inconsistent, for the fundamental basis of the
whole Buddha. story is to demonstrate that what one man can achieve,
others can do also.
The Theravada outlook is that a Buddha appears only
once in millions and millions of years but this has the germ of its own
degeneration and only presents the ultimate goal as being impossible for
ordinary men. They also think of a Buddha as only being a man but cannot
explain why there could not be a female Buddha. Zen is much aloof from
these relative entanglements but it is important to understand what they
actually meant and implied by "Buddhahood".
Zen is not achieved by a calculating mind, nor by the
intellect. Men become trapped by their own thoughts and these lead to
other thought traps. Like Master Nan- ch'uan's goose in the bottle, it
is not really the goose which needs liberating from the bottle but man
himself.
Master Nan-ch'uan related to one astonished disciple,
"Last night I gave Manjusri and Samantabhadra twenty blows with my stick
and drove them out of the temple". This was the way of telling the
disciple that those seeking for Truth must not become attached even to
Buddhism or its concepts. Other Ch'an masters made the same point when
they said, "If you meet the Buddha, kill the Buddha; if you meet a
Patriarch, then kill him also".
Master Wen-Yen gives us the warning, "To grasp Zen
you must experience it, and if you do not have that experience, do not
pretend to know." And "when the great awakening takes place, no effort
needs to be made by you. You will then be no different from the Buddha
or any of the Patriarchs". And "Search for the coin in the river where
you lost it."
People all over the world have shown an interest in
Zen. Many must feel it has something they want. But how can they grasp
it? From a world of names, symbols, forms, classifications, groupings
and mechanical packaging, it is not easy to grasp something which cannot
be grasped easily and defies not only reason and classification but
thought itself. To such people an attempt to understand Zen can only be
like trying to get horse dung from a rocking horse. But there is no law
to prevent one trying. Realization is always something outside and
beyond normal control.
As Sri Dattatreya taught about 4000 years ago, "'It
is spontaneous and comes of itself". It cannot come to "normal" people,
because the civilized "normal" man is so artificial. He will strive for
something and make efforts which prove to be obstacles. He will try to
reason, debate, memorize and wrangle to improve his knowledge and the
Essence only gets further and further away. To become natural and stop
reasoning and calculating often proves to be impossible because he has
been conditioned and educated that way. He is always tempted to seek
knowledge from someone he thinks has studied more and read more books
than himself. This leads to more confusion.
The Master Ma-Tzu summed this up by saying:
"Cultivation is an obstacle for attaining the Tao. All you can do is
become free from defilements (conditionings). When the mind is tainted
with thoughts of life and death or intentional action, they are
defilements. Grasping the Truth is a quality of everyday mindedness.
Everyday mindedness (spontaneity) is free from intentional action, free
from the concepts of right and wrong, taking and giving, the finite or
the infinite. All our daily activities should be natural responses to
situations as we deal with all circumstances when they arise. All this
is Tao".
The time will soon come when the simple expression
Zen will have common usage, and be used in a general sense to express
the essence of a new freedom, previously unknown in the West. Hitherto,
the Western approach to Zen has been much too conventional as it has
been presented as an orderly, scrupulously clean and neat temple and
monastic life with strict disciplines. None of this is really Zen and it
can have no outward forms or patterns Most of the ancient Indian gurus
were more Zen than much which is found today in Japanese temples. The
same is also true of the celebrated dropouts of European history, not to
mention many of the tramps and hobos of Europe and America. Zen can have
no fixed patterns and it is a Truth which needs no robes. Japanese Zen
is too much entangled in Confucian and other ethics. The real Masters
are the hermits, vagabonds, and disembodied rogues who live in nature's
wilds, blown about like leaves in the wind.
Thus Zen must be the simplest of all simple patterns.
It can have no methods beyond the spontaneity of natural people. It
cannot be preached, for there is nothing to preach. It is the Golden
Flower beyond explanation or definition. Children and insane vagabonds
are nearer to Zen than most of the people who call themselves Zen
masters. Its real history and records are written in the trees, plants
and stones, and its only temples and monasteries are the hills,
mountains, rivers and clouds. It belongs to nature and to natural man.
You will not find it in the cities because it cannot live or survive
there.
The first approach to Zen is the first approach to
the Absolute Reality. It means you are already Zen just as you are also
Supreme Reality. It is only ignorance and delusion of maya which
prevents you seeing this. Stop reading newspapers, listening to radio
and watching television. Worry not about what you wear or how you are
dressed. Stop planning and living in the delusions of a vague future.
Live only in the bliss and detachment of the present moment. Cease
holding opinions and being well-informed. If you sincerely seek the
Absolute, remember only verse 13 of the Book of Ashes:
All the materials of the higher path,
All the foundations for spiritual gain,
All and everything to attain the goal
Are sleeping latent in the human frame.
WHAT MORE DO YOU WANT TO KNOW ?