About: Dongchu

An Entity of Type: animal, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

Dongchu (Chinese: 東初; pinyin: Dōngchū, 1907–1977) was a Chinese Ch'an Master in Mainland China and later in Taiwan, and also the teacher of respected modern-day Ch'an Master Sheng-yen. He is the 51st generation of Zen patriarch from the Caodong School (See Lineage Chart). He also established several monasteries and organizations in Taiwan that continue to exist and expand to this very day, including and Nung Chan Monastery. The Chinese name of New York City's Ch'an Meditation Center (東初禪寺) is named after Ven. Master Dongchu by his disciple Ven. Master Sheng-yen.

Property Value
dbo:abstract
  • Dongchu (Chinese: 東初; pinyin: Dōngchū, 1907–1977) was a Chinese Ch'an Master in Mainland China and later in Taiwan, and also the teacher of respected modern-day Ch'an Master Sheng-yen. He is the 51st generation of Zen patriarch from the Caodong School (See Lineage Chart). He also established several monasteries and organizations in Taiwan that continue to exist and expand to this very day, including and Nung Chan Monastery. He was born in Jiangsu province, China. At his early education period, he studied with various prominent monks such as Master Aiting and Master Nanting from the Zhulin Buddhist Institute in Zhenjiang. He then pursues his study further at Minnan Buddhist Institute in Xiamen, and studied under renowned scholar-monk and modernist Master Taixu. His peers in the institute include Master Yinshun, Zhumo, and Cihang (Tzuhang) – all of whom also became influential monks. After graduating from Minnan Buddhist Institute, Ven. Dongchu then became dean of the prestigious school Jiaoshan Buddhist Institute. At the same time, he was abbot of the in Zhenjiang, Jiangsu province. Dinghui Monastery (Monastery of Samadhi and Wisdom) was a very famous Ch'an monastery in China, it stands on an island in the Yangtze River, on a hill called Floating Jade Mountain. It was first built around 194-195 CE and changed names several times before finally became Dinghui Monastery during Qing Dynasty. He also taught classes at several other Buddhist institutes, including Jingan Si (Quiet Calm) Academy in Shanghai – at which young Sheng-yen, who was studying there, first encountered him. Ven. Dongchu had a reputation as a progressive thinker who, unlike most monks at his time, would not hesitate to criticize others. He was also known as a fierce teacher and his students gave him the nickname the 'Big Gun'. His paradigm was much influence by his teacher, Taixu. He also became the first permanent council member in the in 1947. But it did not last long as within the next couple of years, the Communist Party drove Nationalists out of the Mainland China, and many religious leaders, in fear of the Communists' persecution, fled overseas – including Ven. Dongchu, who fled to Taiwan at 1949. He took temporary shelter at Beitou, near Taipei, at the Fazang Monastery. Three months later, his passion for Buddhist education and culture led him to start the Humanity Magazine – the first Buddhist periodical in Taiwan. Its mission is to "purify the minds of the people and establish Life Buddhism." By the early 1950s, it had grown very popular and its circulation reached Southeast Asia and East Asia, and the United States. Ven. Dongchu established his first monastery in Taiwan at 1955. It was located in Beitou, near Taipei, and was completed a year later. Instead of naming it a 'monastery', he named it Chung-Hwa Institute of Buddhist Culture to establish a foundation for cultural work. In 1956, he started a charity program called 'Winter Relief Drive' to collect donations to buy rice, oil, and winter clothing for poor families and orphanages in Beitou, Tamsui, Sanchong, Yilan, Taoyuan, and Xinzhuang. Therefore, they could celebrate Chinese New Year with warmth and meal. Ven. Sheng-yen, who had been an active writer in the Humanity Magazine under his pen-name Xing Shi Jiang Jun ("World Awakening General"), became Ven. Dongchu's disciple in 1959. Ven. Sheng-yen was a soldier in the intelligence unit at that time, he joined the Army unwillingly in order to escape from Mainland China. Despite his position in the intelligence, Ven. Sheng-yen's request to be dismissed from his post was accepted by his superior with Ven. Dongchu's help. Aside from his intellectual and charity activities, Ven. Dongchu didn't spend much time leading Buddhist ceremonies or rituals. In his later years, he rarely went out to focus on his writings. Thus, he didn't have many followers and disciples. However, he was persistent and in the 1960s he bought a 2.5 acres of land in the Guandu Plain, near Taipei. In the beginning it only serves as a farmland cultivated by Ven. Dongchu and his two disciples – Ven. Sheng-yen was in solitary retreat at southern Taiwan by the time. Step by step, he built a farmhouse, and after four years of works, he succeeded to establish another monastery, Nung Chan Monastery in 1975. In Nung Chan, meaning Farming Ch'an, the residents practice Ch'an while grow their own food. They live by the famous aphorism by Zen Master Baizhang Huaihai, "A day without work is a day without food". The monastery was dedicated to Bodhisattva Manjusri, which symbolizes great wisdom. In 1976, Ven. Dongchu had a chance to visit his disciple Ven. Sheng-yen in New York. Ven. Sheng-yen was an abbot of a small monastery at the Bronx and he succeeded to gain a number of Western followers. They both had parted long before. Ven. Sheng-yen went to six-years solitary retreat in 1961. He then studied in Japan for some years and earned a doctorate degree before arriving in United States. Ven. Dongchu died in 1977 in sitting position with no clear illness. In his last will he passed down the abbotship of Chung-hwa Institute of Buddhist Culture and Nung Chan to Ven. Sheng-yen. His ashes, which were kept in Chung-hwa Institute of Buddhist Culture before, were buried in the Life Memorial Garden of Dharma Drum Mountain in 2007. The Chinese name of New York City's Ch'an Meditation Center (東初禪寺) is named after Ven. Master Dongchu by his disciple Ven. Master Sheng-yen. (en)
  • Преподобный Дунчу (кит. упр. 東初, пиньинь Dōngchū, 1907—1977) — буддийский монах и учитель в Китае и на Тайване, наставник преп. Шэнъяня. Он был 51-м патриархом школы цаодун чань-буддизма. Учредил несколько монастырей и организаций на Тайване, которые существуют и развиваются и поныне, включая Китайский институт буддийской культуры (CHIBC) и монастырь Нунчань. Родился в провинции Цзянсу в Китае. В ранний период обучения занимался у выдающихся монахов, мастеров Айтина и Наньтина из Буддийского института Чжулинь в Чжэньцзяне. Затем он продолжил обучение в Институте Миннань в Сямэни, где учился у известного ученого монаха, модерниста Тайсюя. Его соучениками были , , , ставшие позже влиятельными буддийскими учителями и религиозными реформаторами. Преп. Дунчу занимал пост декана в Буддийском институте Цзяошань, одновременно являясь настоятелем монастыря Динхуэй в Чжэцзяне, столице провинции Цзянсу. Это был знаменитый чаньский монастырь, построенный около 194—195 гг. н. э.; он стоял на острове на реке Янцзы. Он также преподавал в Академии Цзиньгансы в Шанхае, где впервые встретил молодого Шэнъяня. Он стал первым постоянным членом президиума Буддийской ассоциации Республики Китай в 1947 г., но уже в 1949 г. ему пришлось бежать на Тайвань вместе с потерпевшим поражением в гражданской войне Гоминьданом. На Тайване он нашел временное пристанище в монастыре Фацзан в Бэйтоу, около Тайбэя. Скоро он начал издавать журнал «Человечность», первое буддийское периодическое издание на острове. Миссия издания была «очистить умы людей и утвердить живой буддизм». Свой первый монастырь он основал на Тайване в 1955 г. Он назвал его Китайский институт буддийской культуры и активно приступил к культурной работе. В 1956 г. он начал благотворительную программу «Движение зимней помощи», чтобы обеспечить рисом, маслом и теплой одеждой бедные семьи и сирот в Бэйтоу, Даншуе, Санчуне, Илане, Таоюане, Синчжуане к празднику Китайского нового года. В 1959 году преп. Шэнъянь стал учеником Мастера Дунчу. До этого он служил в армии, был автором журнала «Человечность» под псевдонимом Синши Цзянцзун. Преп. Дунчу не придавал большого значения проведению церемоний и ритуалов, он редко давал учения, поэтому у него не было большого числа учеников и последователей. В 1960-х гг. он приобрел участок в 2,5 акра на равнине Гуанду около Тайбэя.Постепенно ему удалось построить двухэтажный дом, и в 1975 году он учредил монастырь Нунчань (досл. «сельский чань»). Монастырь был посвящён Бодхисаттве Манджушри, который символизирует великую мудрость. В 1976 г. преп. Дунчу побывал с визитом в США, где Шэнъянь стал настоятелем небольшого монастыря в Бронксе, Нью-Йорк и сумел привлечь много западных последователей. Он умер в 1977 г. в сидячем положении, не имея явных болезней. Своей последней волей он передал пост настоятеля CHIBC и Нунчань преподобному Шэнъяню. Прах преп. Дунчу, хранившийся в CHIBC, был захоронен в мемориальном саду в Фагушани в 2007. (ru)
  • 釋東初(1908年9月22日-1977年12月15日),俗姓范,法名鐙朗,法號東初,人稱鐙朗東初,江蘇泰縣人,為近代著名的佛教禪師,源自曹洞宗、臨濟宗,為太虛大師門徒,又因在臨濟宗的常州天寧寺參學,一人傳承曹洞宗與臨濟宗兩支法門。法鼓山聖嚴法師與慈光山聖開法師的入門師父,被尊稱為東初禪師、東初老人、東初長老。 (zh)
dbo:birthDate
  • 1908-09-22 (xsd:date)
dbo:birthName
  • (en)
  • (surname) Fan (en)
dbo:birthPlace
dbo:deathDate
  • 1977-12-15 (xsd:date)
dbo:deathPlace
dbo:religion
dbo:thumbnail
dbo:title
  • Venerable (en)
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
dbo:wikiPageID
  • 24700804 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength
  • 9104 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
  • 1106289530 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbp:birthDate
  • 1908-09-22 (xsd:date)
dbp:birthName
  • Fan (en)
  • (en)
dbp:birthPlace
dbp:c
  • 東初 (en)
dbp:deathDate
  • 1977-12-15 (xsd:date)
dbp:deathPlace
dbp:name
  • Dongchu (en)
  • 東初 (en)
dbp:nationality
  • Chinese (en)
dbp:p
  • Dōngchū (en)
dbp:religion
dbp:title
  • Venerable (en)
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dcterms:subject
gold:hypernym
schema:sameAs
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • 釋東初(1908年9月22日-1977年12月15日),俗姓范,法名鐙朗,法號東初,人稱鐙朗東初,江蘇泰縣人,為近代著名的佛教禪師,源自曹洞宗、臨濟宗,為太虛大師門徒,又因在臨濟宗的常州天寧寺參學,一人傳承曹洞宗與臨濟宗兩支法門。法鼓山聖嚴法師與慈光山聖開法師的入門師父,被尊稱為東初禪師、東初老人、東初長老。 (zh)
  • Dongchu (Chinese: 東初; pinyin: Dōngchū, 1907–1977) was a Chinese Ch'an Master in Mainland China and later in Taiwan, and also the teacher of respected modern-day Ch'an Master Sheng-yen. He is the 51st generation of Zen patriarch from the Caodong School (See Lineage Chart). He also established several monasteries and organizations in Taiwan that continue to exist and expand to this very day, including and Nung Chan Monastery. The Chinese name of New York City's Ch'an Meditation Center (東初禪寺) is named after Ven. Master Dongchu by his disciple Ven. Master Sheng-yen. (en)
  • Преподобный Дунчу (кит. упр. 東初, пиньинь Dōngchū, 1907—1977) — буддийский монах и учитель в Китае и на Тайване, наставник преп. Шэнъяня. Он был 51-м патриархом школы цаодун чань-буддизма. Учредил несколько монастырей и организаций на Тайване, которые существуют и развиваются и поныне, включая Китайский институт буддийской культуры (CHIBC) и монастырь Нунчань. Он стал первым постоянным членом президиума Буддийской ассоциации Республики Китай в 1947 г., но уже в 1949 г. ему пришлось бежать на Тайвань вместе с потерпевшим поражением в гражданской войне Гоминьданом. (ru)
rdfs:label
  • Dongchu (en)
  • Дунчу (ru)
  • 釋東初 (zh)
owl:sameAs
prov:wasDerivedFrom
foaf:depiction
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
foaf:name
  • Dongchu (en)
  • 東初 (en)
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of
is foaf:primaryTopic of
Powered by OpenLink Virtuoso    This material is Open Knowledge     W3C Semantic Web Technology     This material is Open Knowledge    Valid XHTML + RDFa
This content was extracted from Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License