Posted on: 13 October 2011

Digital Book :
The Zen Experience
By Thomas Hoover
Published by Signet Books, New York - 1980

There is a Zen legend that a bearded Indian monk named Bodhidharma (ca. 470-532), son of a South Indian Brahmin king, appeared one day at the southern Chinese port city of Canton, sometime around the year 520. From there he traveled northeast to Nanking, near the mouth of the Yangtze River, to honor an invitation from China's most devout Buddhist, Emperor Wu of the Liang Dynasty. After a famous interview in which his irreverence left the emperor dismayed, Bodhidharma pressed onward to the Buddhist centers of the north, finally settling in at the Shao-lin monastery on Mt. Sung for nine years of meditation staring at a wall. He then transmitted his insights and a copy of the Lankavatara sutra to a successor and passed on-either physically, spiritually, or both. His devotion to meditation and to the aforementioned sutra were his legacies to China. He was later honored as father of the Chinese Dhyana, or "Meditation," school of Buddhism, called Ch'an.

Bodhidharma attracted little notice during his years in China, and the first historical account of his life is a brief mention in a chronicle compiled well over a hundred years after the fact, identifying him merely as a practitioner of meditation. However, later stories of his life became increasingly embellished, as he was slowly elevated to the office of First Patriarch of Chinese Ch'an. His life was made to fulfill admirably the requirements of a legend, as it was slowly enveloped in symbolic anecdotes illustrating the truth more richly than did mere fact. However, most scholars do agree that there actually was a Bodhidharma, that he was a South Indian who came to China, that he practiced an intensive form of meditation, and that a short treatise ascribed to him is probably more or less authentic. Although the legend attached to this unshaven Indian Buddhist tells us fully as much about early Ch'an as it does about the man himself, it is nonetheless the first page in the book of Zen.


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Read Book Online : http://www.archive.org/stream/TheZenExperience_227/ZenExperiencePdf#page/n0/mode/2up

Download pdf Book : http://ia600202.us.archive.org/16/items/TheZenExperience_227/ZenExperiencePdf.pdf

Read from googlebooks: http://books.google.co.in/books?id=y5UbWD-ZhtUC&pg=PT25&dq=BODHIDHARMA+ZEN&hl=en&ei=OiqXTqnMPIvzrQfdvr2BBA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CDAQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=BODHIDHARMA%20ZEN&f=false

Bodhidharma His Holiness The First Patriarch of Chinese Zen Lineage Bodhidharma was a Buddhist monk who lived during the 5th/6th century and is traditionally credited as the leading patriarch and transmitter of Zen (Chinese: Chán, Sanskrit: Dhyāna) to China. According to Chinese legend, he also began the physical training of the Shaolin monks that led to the creation of Shaolinquan. However, martial arts historians have shown this legend stems from a 17th century qigong manual known as the Yijin Jing. Little contemporary biographical information on Bodhidharma is extant, and subsequent accounts became layered with legend, but many accounts state that he was from a Brahmin family in southern India and possibly of royal lineage.[1] Scholars have concluded his place of birth to be Kanchipuram in Tamil Nadu. Read more : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodhidharma

thank you.

He was the third prince of the Chola dynasty, born in Kanchipuram. He is the patron saint of Shaolin Temple, the creator of Kung Fu and Karate.