Master
Hsing Yun's 2007 Letter to Devotees and Friends
Dear Dharma Protectors
and Friends,
May this spring
bring prosperity, and may everything go perfectly for you in the New Year!
As autumn fades
and winter arrives, and as winter ends and spring comes, Fo Guang Shan
has ripened to a mature age amidst the changing seasons. Weathering
forty summers and winters, the thorny bamboos and the various plants and
trees on the hilly slopes have all grown considerably and the majestic
shrines and halls have become a place of practice for Humanistic Buddhism.
On New Year’s
Day 2007, I reflect on the path I’ve taken in the past decades: founding
Fo Guang Shan monastery, passing down the lineage, retiring from the abbotship,
closing the Monastery to the general public, building schools and universities,
starting a newspaper, establishing a television station, providing the
Sangha community with a place of peace, traveling and teaching and taking
the Dharma everywhere. All of these things that have taken place
are like drawing a map of the world. I hope that sentient beings
in the Saha world can all find a place of refuge.
Last year, Fo
Guang Shan’s 40th Anniversary Celebrations began with the Festival of Light
and Peace and Fellowship Meeting for Fo Guang Shan Disciples with Masters
and Doctorate Degrees. At the same time, there was the “Ah Fu Welcomes
Spring – Huishan Ceramic Figurine Sculpture Exhibition” which provided
colorful examples of Chinese culture for the spring festivities.
At the end of March, we started 49-day meditation and chanting retreats
for monastics and laity, as well as yearlong “Pilgrimage and Cultivation”
events. From May 16th up to the present, over a million people have
taken part in these events. In recalling the early days of founding
the order, the purpose for starting the pilgrimages was to encourage devotees,
who had the opportunity to come to Fo Guang Shan, to pay their respects
to the Buddha. Since then, we have received many devotees who were
pleased to come and visit. Gradually, by word of mouth, the name
of Fo Guang Shan has spread through societies and onto the world stage.
Our order has further developed its diverse enterprises for spreading the
Dharma. With the seemingly endless passing of time, forty years have
gone by.
To celebrate this
auspicious occasion, Fo Guang Shan hosted the International Association
of Religious Freedom Congress (IARF), the International Association of
Liberal Religious Women (IALRW), General Conference of the World Fellowship
of Buddhists (WFB), International Buddhist Youth and Leadership Conference,
World Buddhist University Conference, and World Scout Inter-religious Symposium.
Buddha’s Light International Association also hosted the 2006 Asia-Region
Fellowship Meeting and International Young Executive Conference.
Its General Conference for members from throughout the world was conducted
at both Fo Guang Shan and in the Taipei Arena. My keynote speech
for the conference was entitled, “Change the World and Benefit Humanity,”
in which I shared with all BLIA members the following: 1) self-awareness
and integrity, 2) resolve and energy, 3) participation and involvement,
and 4) bodhi wisdom and the power of vows - encouraging those attending
the conference to “change the world and benefit humanity.”
In March I was
invited to Yuelu College in Hunan, China – famous for being an educational
institution for more than a thousand years. Amidst the rainy, misty
weather, I gave a lecture on “Chinese Culture and the Five Vehicles of
Buddhism.” Afterwards, I also spoke at Fooyin, Fu Jen, Central, and
Taipei Universities. In early April, I accidentally broke three ribs
in a fall. I would like to express my thanks for the care and concern I
received from people of all walks of life! Although I am already
advanced in years, I still upheld my principle of never breaking a promise
and went as scheduled to Hangzhou in Zhejiang to attend the First World
Buddhist Forum. The subject of my speech at the forum was “How to
Build a Harmonious Society.” I hope to do my best to further the
cause of harmony among spiritual traditions, cultures, and ethnicities
in the future.
Due to endless
causes and conditions, my travels to spread the Dharma didn’t slow down.
I went to Stockholm University in Sweden, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
in Zurich, and the International Conference Center in Geneva to speak about
“Harmony and Peace.” Though spiritual traditions may be different
from one another, their emphasis on peace and pursuit of harmony is the
same. Then, I also went to St. Paul’s Cathedral in the Vatican and
met with Pope Benedict XVI with the hope of enhancing further understanding
and cooperation between Buddhism and the Roman Catholic Church. Through
exchanges and interaction, we can strengthen our mutual understanding and
work towards the common goals of peace and harmony.
In India, I spoke
at Osmania (Hyderabad) and Delhi Universities. In America, I conducted
a course on “Current Issues” at the University of the West. Employing
distance education via the Internet, I connected with students and devotees
around the world, discussing the Buddhist perspective on issues such as
social problems, ethics, ethnicities, funeral traditions, cosmology and
life, as well as the Heart Sutra. Immediately afterwards, I went
to Hong Kong and spoke at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Polytechnic
University, Hong Kong University, and also at Chung Shan University in
Guangzhou. Through the technology of the Internet and live television,
Buddha’s Light members around the world were able to listen to the Dharma
and take refuge in the Triple Gem simultaneously. Technological advancements
have indeed further realized the ideal of a global village.
In mid-October,
with a weakening heart and an irregular heartbeat, I flew in the company
of Dr. Chi-woon Kong, my family doctor, to Hyderabad in India to conduct
a refuge ceremony. This was done because India is the birthplace
of the Buddha who advocated equality, also of Nagarjuna who founded Mahayana
Buddhism, and of Dr. Ambedkar who actively spread the spirit of equality.
For the future of Buddhism in India, I encouraged all present at the ceremony
to learn and practice in the great spirit of the Buddhas and bodhisattvas,
and courageously walk out of the bondage of the caste system.
At the end of
2006, based on the causes and conditions arranged by Venerable Man Lian
for me to speak annually for the last twenty years at the Hong Kong Coliseum,
I delivered three lectures on the “Teachings of Precepts”, “Meditative
Concentration”, and “Wisdom Within Humanistic Buddhism.” It is hoped
that under the verification of the Three Dharma Seals, the torch of the
Three Trainings will be lit, shining on the universe with the Dharma and
establishing an outpost of the Pure Land, a place of peace and ease in
the world. A few days later, at the 30th anniversary of my annual
Dharma lectures in Taipei’s Dr. Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall, I conducted
discussions with Stanley Yen, President of the Landis Taipei Hotel on “Managing
Affairs and Managing People,” Cardinal Paul Shan on “When Christ Meets
the Buddha,” and with Taipei Mayor Ma Ying-jeou on “Harmony of the Supramundane
and the Mundane.” Wu Po-hsiung chaired the panel of moderators, with
Lee Jih-Chu, Chai Sung-lin, and Charles H.C. Kao as members.
While Fo Guang
Shan’s teaching of the Dharma has continued to increase around the world,
the building of temples and the promotion of culture and education remain
constant. Foundation laying ceremonies were held for the Tokyo Fo
Guang Shan Temple and the Paris Fo Guang Shan Temple. After seven
years of construction, the New Zealand North Island Fo Guang Shan Temple
was completed with a Sangha Offering Dharma Function and Jade Buddha Enshrinement
Ceremony. The Kuantan Buddhist Center in Malaysia and the Fo Guang
Shan Geneva Conference Center were both inaugurated. In Japan, the
Fukuoka Fo Guang Yuan was renamed the Fukuoka Fo Guang Shan Temple.
In Taiwan, Tainan Temple, Nan Ping Temple in Kaohsiung, Jiao Hsi Lodge
in Ilan, and Feng Shan Vihara were all officially opened. At Fo Guang
Shan, the Fo Guang Shan Peace Bell is being crafted and a bell tower will
be built next to the Lumbini Garden.
Last year, the
University of the West was granted full-member status by the Western Association
of Schools and Colleges (WASC), with many thanks to years of dedication
by President Dr. Lewis Lancaster and Dean Dr. Ananda W. P. Guruge.
Fo Guang University, on the other hand, is now under the leadership of
a new president, Weng Cheng-I, former Chairman of the National Science
Council and former President of National Cheng Kung University. The
university has been approved by the Ministry of Education to establish
two new departments – the Department of Sciences and Engineering and the
Department of Buddhist Studies. This means that Buddhist studies
will now be formally included in the government’s higher education scheme,
in which degrees in Religious Studies will be awarded. Furthermore,
Nan Hua University has been evaluated by the Ministry of Education and
praised for excellence. The foundation-laying ceremony for the new
Pumen High School campus has been completed, and preparation for the new
Jun-Yi Junior High and Elementary School has also begun. The school
will begin construction in Taitung, and overseen by Ji Guang Temple.
The Fo Guang Shan
Records of Extraordinary Phenomena published by Venerables Yung Ming and
Yung Jin of the FGS Cultural Council has inspired the hearts of many devotees
in continuing with their spiritual cultivation. Tsai Menghua of the
Gandha Samudra Cultural Company published the ten-volume Fragrance of Books,
the four-volume set of Ancient and Present Talks written by Venerable Tzu
Hui, and the ten-volume Amazing Persons and Extraordinary Matters edited
by Venerable Miao Yun. The television program Journey into Buddha’s
Lands produced by Liao Wen-yu that aired on ETTV, TVBS, and BLTV, won the
Golden Bell Award. In order to celebrate Fo Guang Shan’s 40th anniversary,
Commonwealth Publishing Company published 80 Years of Star and Cloud, and
A Pioneer of Humanistic Buddhism – The Life & Philosophy of Master
Hsing Yun (Yun-Shui-Ri-Yue). Written by Fu Chi-ying, not only is
it a biography about me, but also a shared record of how the Buddha’s Light
members of the world have stood by my side over the past decades and assisted
in the endeavor of changing the world and benefiting humanity.
Good news continued
to pour into Fo Guang Shan throughout last year. The Merit Times is now
distributed on China Airlines, Air Macau, Far Eastern Air Transport and
TransAsia Airways. The “Sounds of the Human World” Music Competition is
now entering its fifth year. This music has reached into communities,
radio stations, jails, high schools, and colleges, and the compositions
have been released on CD. Therefore, we have taken the opportunity
to establish the “Sounds of the Human World Buddhist Music Orchestra,”
led by conductor Dr. Wang Ching-ping and erhu player Weng Chin-lung, in
hopes that with music, the Dharma can spread further in order to benefit
people.
The Sixth “Assessment
of Outstanding Professional Organizations Engaged in Cross-strait Cultural
and Educational Exchanges” conducted by the Mainland Affairs Council has
conferred awards of excellence on the Fo Guang Shan Foundation for Culture
and Education and also Beautiful Life Television in the areas of art, literature,
academics, and education. BLIA Chunghwa has received the Award for
Outstanding Social Group from the Ministry of the Interior, which also
selected Fo Guang Shan’s branch temples – Lanyan Temple, Yuan Fu Temple,
and Fu Shan Temple – for Outstanding Religious Organizations. Pumen
Junior High School’s Gymnastic Team came in second in the Junior High School
Division and also the High School and Vocational School Division of the
National Gymnastics Competition. The school’s basketball team also
made the finals in the National High School Basketball Competition, defeating
Taiwan’s top high school – Taipei First Girl’s High School – in the games.
I am embarrassed
that although my calligraphy is unskilled, my works have been exhibited
at Hunan Provincial Museum, Hong Kong Central Library, and in other countries
on the “To Enlighten Sentient Beings” World Exhibition Tour. I hope
that the audience will not look just at the calligraphy but at my heart,
for I use calligraphy as a vehicle to express my sincere best wishes and
gratitude to those who have supported Buddhism.
I would like to
express my gratitude to Griffith University in Australia and Fu Jen Catholic
University in Taiwan for conferring upon me an Honorary Doctorate and Honorary
Doctor of Law Degree. Phoenix TV in Hong Kong also presented me with
the Phoenix Award on its 10th Anniversary, while the Chinese Writer’s Association,
the United States Republican Party's Asian Committee, and Chinese Writers'
& Artists' Association honored me with the Award for Lifetime Achievement,
Award for Outstanding Achievement, and Award for Cultural Contribution.
I am grateful for the blessings of the Triple Gem and all those who have
supported me. If it were not for everyone’s recognition and kind
love, these achievements would not have been possible.
In addition, many
of my disciples have also received honors. Venerable Tzu Hui was
given the Literary and Art Works Award from the Chinese Writers’ &
Artists’ Association; Venerable Tzu Jung received the Award of Excellence
for her Contribution to Education from Taiwan’s Ministry of Education;
Venerable Hsin Ting was presented with the National Welfare Award; Venerable
Yifa received the Juliet Hollister Award for Interfaith and Peace Work
at the United Nations; Venerable Yi Lai won the Australia Day Cultural
Award; Venerable Man Shin was made a Justice of Peace by the Australian
Government, Venerable Chueh Shan won the Rankin Australia Day Award; Venerable
Miao Hsi was commended by Los Angeles County for her contribution in providing
relief on Community Day; and Venerables Hui Kai and Chueh Pei received
the Award for Contribution to Social Education from Taiwan’s Ministry of
Education. I am delighted to see the efforts of Fo Guang Shan being
recognized by society and am very happy for those who have stood by the
organization for the past forty years.
Looking back on
the past eighty years of my life, I have spent sixty of them spreading
the Dharma. For the sake of Buddhism, I have studied at monasteries
and traveled to different parts of the world, brought Buddhism into people’s
lives and given Dharma talks. My intention was to allow the light
of Dharma to shine far and wide, so that all sentient beings may be blessed
with compassion and wisdom, and the pure land and virtuous people may be
everywhere.
I am getting old
now. In the sixty years that I have been working, I have never taken
a day off but remained steady in my progress. Therefore, I am confident
that I have lived a life worth three hundred years. I announced during
an interview in August last year that I would be scaling down my public
appearances after touring the world in 2007. From then on, I will
no longer give major public lectures. Instead, I will focus on reading,
writing, instructing my disciples, and providing guidance under appropriate
conditions. Nevertheless, to continue promoting education is a goal
that I never intend to give up. I shall fulfill my duty as a monk
every day. Your continued support and protection of the Dharma and
Humanistic Buddhism is gratefully appreciated. With the New Year
and spring approaching, I would like to express my best wishes to you all.
May everything
go smoothly for you and may all have an auspicious life!
Hsing Yun
January 2007

