- Nan Huai-Chin
-
Nan Huai-Chin (born 1918) (simplified Chinese: 南怀瑾; traditional Chinese: 南懷瑾; pinyin: Nán Huáijǐn) is a spiritual teacher of contemporary China. He is the most eminent student of the renowned lay Chán Buddhist teacher Yuan Huan-Xian (Ch. 袁煥仙; 1887–1966), and he has received confirmation of his enlightenment by various masters of the Buddhist traditions.[1] He is considered by many to be a major force in the revival of Chinese Buddhism.[2] While Nan is regarded by many in China as the most important living Chán Buddhist teacher, he is little known outside the Sinosphere.[3]
Contents
Early life and military career
Part of a series on Chinese Buddhism
History Major Figures Kumārajīva • Xuanzang
Huiyuan • Zhiyi • Bodhidharma
Huineng • Hsu Yun
Hsuan Hua • Nan HuaijinTraditions Chán • Tiantai • Huayan
Pure Land • Weishi • Sanlun • MizongTexts Chinese Buddhist canon
Taishō TripiṭakaArchitecture Buddhist Architecture in China
Sacred Mountains Culture Born 1918 in Wenzhou City, in China's Zhejiang Province to a scholar-class family. In his youth, Nan studied various Confucian and Daoist works, and his studies included basic coverage of traditional Chinese medicine, Chinese literature, calligraphy, and poetry as well. In his youth at the age of 18, he became the provincial martial arts champion after studying several Chinese martial arts, including swordsmanship.
Nan studied social welfare at Jinling University (now merged with Nanjing University) and later went on to teach at the Central Military Academy in Nanjing. In the late 1930s at age 21 years of age, Nan became a military commander at the border regions of Sichuan, Xikang, and Yunnan during the Second Sino-Japanese War.[4] There, he led a local group of 30,000 men against the Japanese invasion.[5]
Buddhist practice
While still young, Nan left his military career so that he could commit himself fully to his study of Buddhism and to meditation. In 1942 at age 24, he went on a three year meditation retreat in the Emei Mountains. It is said that it was there that he verified his enlightenment against the Chinese Buddhist Canon. During this time, Nan's primary teacher was Yuan Huan-Xian, a renowned lay Buddhist teacher.
In 1945, Nan later traveled to Tibet to learn the teachings of Vajrayana Buddhism. It was there that Kunga Hutuktu, a high-ranking tulku of the Kagyu school, also verified Nan's enlightenment. Kunga Hutuktu later gave Nan an additional title of "Vajra Master." Nan is one of the few multidisciplinary experts in the world to be versed in the cultivation schools of Vajrayana Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, and Chán Buddhism.[6]
Academic and personal life
Following the revolution in China, Nan later moved to Taiwan in 1949 where he became a well-known university professor and author. His first book, The Sea of Chán was published in 1956 and was the first in a line of over 40 books and related materials published in his name.
Nan's books have achieved a great deal of popularity in China and Taiwan. In total, more than 20 million copies of his books have been sold in Chinese-speaking countries.[1] Some of his more popular works have gone to a 20th printing in Taiwan and his works on Confucianism are used as standard university references in China and Taiwan.[7] Thomas Cleary, who has translated several of his books into English, has written the following about Nan's works and traditionally holistic teaching approach:[8]
“ There is no question that Master Nan's work is a cut above anything else available from modern authors, either academic or sectarian, and I would like to see his work gain its rightful place in the English speaking world. ... [His] studies contain broad learning in all three main traditions of Chinese thought, Confucian, Taoist, and Buddhist. Although this comprehensive purview was common to the greatest minds of China since the T'ang dynasty, it is rare among scholars today. ” In January 1992, Nan signed a contract with the Chinese government and invested 92 million RMB in the Jinwen Railway, which is the first joint-stock railway in China. In the 1990s, he changed his place of residence from Taiwan to Hong Kong, where he lived for some time. In 2004, Nan relocated to China where he currently resides near Suzhou.
Taihu Great Learning Center
Near Suzhou, Nan founded the 200-acre (0.81 km2) Taihu Great Learning Center (太湖大學堂), which contains the Wujiang Taihu International School. The school curriculum is meant to combine the best approaches of traditional China and the West. It has unique emphases such as meditation, ethics and etiquette, traditional Chinese medical theory, and Chinese and English recitation.[9]
Books in English
This is a list of translations of Nan Huaijin's books. The vast majority of books written by Nan have not been translated into the English language from the original Chinese.
- 1984 Tao & Longevity: Mind-Body Transformation, Paperback. 1984 ISBN 0-87728-542-X
- 1993 Working Toward Enlightenment: The Cultivation of Practice, Paperback. 1993 ISBN 0-87728-776-7
- 1994 To Realize Enlightenment: Practice of the Cultivation Path, Paperback. 1994 ISBN 0-87728-802-X
- 1995 The Story of Chinese Zen, Paperback. 1995 ISBN 0-8048-3050-9
- 1997 Basic Buddhism: Exploring Buddhism and Zen, Paperback. 1997 ISBN 1-57863-020-7
- 2004 Diamond Sutra Explained, Paperback. 2004 ISBN 0-9716561-2-6
References
- ^ http://www.meditationexpert.com/aboutus.html
- ^ http://www.nanhuaijin.org/
- ^ Scharmer, Otto, and Senge, Peter. Presence: Human Purpose and the Field of the Future. 2008. p. 179
- ^ Master Nan and his teachings
- ^ Nan Huaijin. Diamond Sutra Explained. Florham Park: Primordia, 2004
- ^ Interview with Master Nan
- ^ Yuan, Margaret. Grass Mountain: A Seven Day Intensive in Ch'an Training with Master Nan Huai-Chin. York Beach: Samuel Weiser, 1986
- ^ Master Nan book review "The Cultivation of Practice" translated by J.C. Cleary
- ^ educhina2000: Wujiang Taihu International School
Margaret Yuan & Janis Walker, Tr: Grass Mountain: A Seven Day Intensive in Ch'an Training with Master Nan Huai Chin (1986, York Beach, ME, Samuel Weiser) OP
Master Nan, Book Review: J. L. Walker, Parabola, Vol. 25, No. 2, Summer 2000 pp. 106–110: The Story of Chinese Zen (Thomas Cleary, Tr.; 1995).
Master Nan, poetry, article: J. L. Walker, Parabola, Vol. XXII, No. 1, Spring 1997, pp. 65–70: Wordgates: Knowing as a Gateway to Spiritual Experience
Categories:- 1918 births
- Living people
- Zen Buddhist teachers
- Chan Buddhists
- Chinese Zen Buddhists
- Republic of China Buddhists
- People's Republic of China Buddhists
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