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   Founder’s Expectation and Encouragement   |  History    

Master Sheng Yen liked to call himself “an itinerant monk pressing forward in snow and wind”. He was once selected by the Commonwealth Magazine as one of the 50 most influential people in Taiwan in 400 years. Looking back, his life was full of challenges, tribulations, and turning points.

The Master endured frail health since young and became a novice monk in Wolf Hills of Jiangsu, China at the age of 14. Afterwards, he spent years performing deliverance rituals, then serving in the army, before returning to monastic life at the age of 30. Whether it is during the time of his six years of solitary retreat, studies in Japan, spreading the Dharma in the USA, or founding the Dharma Drum    Mountain (DDM), the Master had always been able to find a way out when there seemed to be none. His compassionate vows glow clearly through hardships, and his wisdom of Chan manifests with his perseverance. Life to him is a journey of living the Buddhadharma.

In order to raise the status of Buddhism and the quality of monastic, Master Sheng Yen at his forty, decided to go to Japan for further studies. After receiving the Doctor of Literature degree from Rissho University in Tokyo in 1975, he served as a professor at Chinese Culture University, Soochow University, and other universities and colleges. He also served as the Director of the Institute of Buddhist Studies at the China Academy of the College of Chinese Culture, Vice President of the Buddhist Association of the United States, the Director of the Institute of Tripitaka Translation supported by the Buddhist Association of the United States, and founded the Chung-Hwa Institute of Buddhist Studies, the Sangha University, and the Dharma Drum College of Humanities and Social Science to cultivate various talents for higher Buddhist education. In addition, he launched the Chung-Hwa Buddhist Journal and the Chung-Hwa Buddhist Studies, served as a advising professor for doctoral and master’s students at National Chenchi University, Chinese Culture University, and other higher education institutes, and gave more than 200 lectures or speeches at more than 100 universities or colleges around the world.

In 1989, the master founded Dharma Drum Mountain with a vision to establish it as a world center for Buddhist education dedicated to academic research, Dharma practice and propagation, and social care efforts. Over time, it has developed into an organization that endeavors in Dharma propagation and popularization, promotion of Chan practice, culture, education, and social caring works in Taiwan and overseas. Currently, branches of Buddhist practice and meditation centers have been set up in Taiwan and countries in Europe, Asia, America, and Australia. For a long period of time Master Sheng Yen traveled between Taiwan and the United States to spread the Buddhadharma and visited other countries around the globe to offer guidance on Chan practice, and was recognized internationally as a prominent Chan master. With the formal transmission of both the Linji and Caodong lineages of Chan school, the Master was able to penetrate the Buddhist canons and integrated various Buddhist traditions to offer guidance and teachings suitable for people from different cultural backgrounds in a natural and vivid manner, thereby incorporating and influencing numerous people in both the West and the East.

Master Sheng Yen devoted to spread the Buddhadharma with a language and perspective accessible to a broad range of audience in modern time. Despite his hectic schedule, he nonetheless dedicated himself to writings and has authored more than 100 books. Other than publications in Chinese, English, and Japanese, many of his books were translated into other languages and published worldwide. Moreover, he had won the Sun Yat-sen Art and Literary Award, the Sun Yat-sen Academic Award, the National Culture Award, and the President Cultural Award, among other awards and prizes.

In recent years, in order to carry out his ideals of promoting culture, education, the Buddhadharma, and spiritual practice, the Master has held dialogues with prominent figures in technology, fine art, and culture, as well as collaborated with other religions.  Thus reflected his greatness of mind and global perspective and won him universal recognition. The Master initiated the concept of Protecting the Spiritual Environment and advocated the ideal of “uplifting the character of humanity and building a pure land on Earth.” With his basis on Chinese Buddhism, the Master made incessant efforts in bringing Buddhism to the modern world in multifold aspects and diversification, carrying out a sublime mission of inheriting the tradition and aspiring a prominent future.

Important Events in Master Sheng Yen’s Life

 

1930   Born in Jiangsu Province, China.

1943   Becomes a novice at 14 at Guangjiao Monastery, Nantong, Jiangsu province.

1949   Joins the army and arrives in Taiwan from Shanghai by ship during Chinese Civil War.

1959   Ends his 10-year service in the army and is re-ordained under Ven. Master Dongchu.

1961   Begins a six-year solitary retreat at Chaoyuan Monastery in Kaohsiung to deepen his study and practice of Buddhadharma.

1969    Studies at Rissho University in Tokyo, Japan for six years where he obtains a doctor’s degrees in Buddhist Literature

1975    Goes to the U.S.A on invitation to teach and spread Buddhism

1976    Becomes the Vice President of the Buddhist Association of the United States and the abbot of Temple of Enlightenment.

1977    Returns to Taiwan taking over the reins of Chung-Hwa Institute of Buddhist Culture and Nung Chan Monastery by Ven. Master Dongchu’s will.

1978   Becomes the Director of the Institute of Buddhist Studies at the China Academy of the College of Chinese Culture.

1979 Establishes a monastery in New York named Chan Meditation Center.

1985 Establishes the Chung-Hwa Institute of Buddhist Studies in Beitou, Taipei.

1989 Establishes Dharma Drum Mountain (DDM) with the mission of “uplifting the character of humanity and building a pure land on earth.”

1990 Convenes the first Chung-Hwa International Conference on Buddhism.

1992   Proposes Protecting the Spiritual Environment as the core DDM vision.

1993   Holds the Bodhisattva Precepts ceremony in Taiwan for the first time. Receives a Leadership Award for Social Peace Movement.

1994 Proposes Protecting the Social Environment and promotes joint funerals, birthday celebrations for the elderly, and weddings in Buddhist spirit. 

1997    Sets up the Dharma Drum Retreat Center in Pine Bush, New York.

Attends the 11th International Meeting “Peoples and Religions” in Padua, Italy and meets with Pope John Paul II at the Vatican.

1998    Selected by Commonwealth Magazine as one of the 50 most influential people in Taiwan in 400 years.

1999    Proposes the Fivefold Spiritual Renaissance Campaign: A lifestyle for the 21st century.

               Establishes the Dharma Drum Research Grants of the Humanities and Social Sciences Foundation.

2000    Attends and makes a keynote speech at the Millennium World Peace Summit of Religious and Spiritual Leaders held at the UN headquarters in New York, representing Chinese Buddhism.

    ■ Receives a cultural award from Taiwan’s Executive Yuan for his lifetime contributions to cultural education work.

2001      Presides over the founding and school beginning ceremony for the Buddhist Seminary of Dharma Drum Sangha University at the DDM World Center for Buddhist Education.

Invited to make a speech at the Symposium on Religion, World Peace, and Protecting the Spiritual Environment held in Taipei.

Invited to attend and make a speech at the Consulting Committee of the Millennium World Peace Summit of Religious and Spiritual Leaders held in New York.

2002      Attends the World Economic Forum annual meeting in New York as the only invited Buddhist leader.

Attends the World Council of Religious Leaders (WCRL) in Bangkok.

Donates and escorts the Akshobhya Buddha head statue, stolen in 1997, back to Four Gate Pagoda in Shandong province, China.

Receives the Sun Yat-sen Academic Award for his book, Tiantai Keys to the Mind: A Vernacular Translation of and Commentary on Ouyi’s Jiaoguan gangzong.

2003      Directs the Dharma Drum Foundation for Humanities and Social Science Research Grants to establish the Dharma Drum Lecture Series in Humanities in cooperation with Beijing University.

                Attends the 1st preparatory meeting for the World Youth Peace Summit held in Kyoto, Japan at the invitation of WCRL.

Wins the Bodhi Prize of the 2nd Presidential Cultural Award.

2004       Directs the Dharma Drum Foundation for Humanities and Social Science Research Grants to establish the Dharma Drum Lecture Series in Humanities in cooperation with National Taiwan University and Tsinghua University in Beijing.

Presides over the ground-breaking ceremony for Dharma Drum Humanities and Social Sciences College.

Attends the World Youth Peace Summit Asia-Pacific hosted by WCRL in Bangkok, Thailand.

Attends WCRL held in Jordan.

Hosts the World Youth Peace Summit Taipei Conference.

2005      Attends Leaders’ Meeting on Faith and Development organized by the World Bank in Dublin, Ireland.

                Directs the Dharma Drum Foundation for Humanities and Social Science Research Grants to establish the Dharma Drum Lecture Series in Humanities in cooperation with National Cheng Kung University in Taiwan and Nanjing University.

Delivers speeches at Beijing University, Tsinghua University, Nanjing University, and Sun Yat-sen University, on an academic tour to China.

Receives honorary doctorate degree from Mahachulalongkorn-rajavidyalaya Buddhist University, Thailand.

Inauguration ceremony for the DDM World Center for Buddhist Education,  founded by the Master, takes place.

2006       Hands over the position of Abbot President, at the Inaugural Ceremony of the 2nd Abbot President, to successor Ven. Guo Dong at the Grand Buddha Hall of the DDM World Center for Buddhist Education.

Leads a delegation of 15 DDM youth leaders to attend the UN Global Youth Leadership Summit at the UN headquarters in New York.

2007      Establishes Dharma Drum Buddhist College, the first mono-religious educational institute in Taiwan to be accredited by the Ministry of Education (The name was changed to Dharma Drum Buddhist College in August, 2008).

The Sheng Yen Professorship in Chinese Buddhism is formally signed and established at Columbia University, New York.

Initiates the Six Ethics of the Mind campaign.

The Taipei County Jinshan Eco-friendly Memorial Garden, which DDM established at the DDM complex in collaboration with the Taipei County Government, finally starts operation after years of promoting eco-friendly burial sites.

Promotes activities for suicide prevention, establishing the “International Caring for Life Awards”.

2008      Receives the “K. T. Li Award for Outstanding Design of Economical/Social Systems” from the Society for Design and Process Science.

Receives the Cultural Contribution Award, an honorary arts and literature medal, from the Chinese Writers’ and Artists’ Association.

2009   Passes away on February 3rd.



 



 
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