KUAN YIN

There is still much scholarly debate regarding the origin of devotion 
to the female Bodhisattva Kuan Yin (also know as Quan Shi Yin and 
Kwan Yin). Quan means to inquire or look deeply into, Shi means the 
world of people, or generations, Yin means cries. The Boddhisatva of 
Compassion was inquiring into the suffering (cries) that has come 
down the generations. Kuan Yin is considered to be the feminine form 
of Avalokitesvara(Sanskrit), the bodhisattva of compassion of Indian 
Buddhism whose worship was introduced into China in the third century.


Scholars believe that the Buddhist monk and translator Kumarajiva was 
the first to refer to the female form of Kuan Yin in his Chinese 
translation of the Lotus Sutra in 406 A.D. Of the thirty-three 
appearances of the bodhisattva referred to in his translation, seven 
are female. (Devoted Chinese and Japanese Buddhists have since come 
to associate the number thirty-three with Kuan Yin.)


Although Kuan Yin was still being portrayed as a male as late as the 
tenth century, with the introduction of Tantric Buddhism into China 
in the eighth century during the T'ang Dynasty, the image of the 
celestial bodhisattva as a beautiful white-robed goddess was 
predominant and the devotional cult surrounding her became 
increasingly popular. By the ninth century there was a statue of Kuan 
Yin in every Buddhist monastery in China.


Despite the controversy over the origins of Kuan Yin as a feminine 
being, the depiction of a bodhisattva as both 'god' and 'goddess' is 
not inconsistent with Buddhist doctrine. The scriptures explain that 
a bodhisattva has the power to embody in any form--male, female, 
child, even animal—depending on the type of being he is seeking to 
save. As the Lotus Sutra relates, the bodhisattva Kuan Shih Yin, "by 
resort to a variety of shapes, travels in the world, conveying the 
beings to salvation."


The twelfth-century legend of the Buddhist saint Miao Shan, the 
Chinese princess who lived in about 700 B.C. and is widely believed 
to have been Kuan Yin, reinforced the image of the bodhisattva as a 
female. During the twelfth century Buddhist monks settled on P'u-t'o 
Shan--the sacred island-mountain in the Chusan Archipelago off the 
coast of Chekiang where Miao Shan is said to have lived for nine 
years, healing and saving sailors from shipwreck--and devotion to 
Kuan Yin spread throughout northern China.


This picturesque island became the chief center of worship of the 
compassionate Saviouress; crowds of pilgrims would journey from the 
remotest places in China and even from Manchuria, Mongolia and Tibet 
to attend stately services there. At one time there were more than a 
hundred temples on the island and over one thousand monks. The lore 
surrounding P'u-t'o island recounts numerous appearances and miracles 
performed by Kuan Yin, who, it is believed, reveals herself to the 
faithful in a certain cave on the island.


In the Pure Land sect of Buddhism, Kuan Yin forms part of a ruling 
triad that is often depicted in temples and is a popular theme in 
Buddhist art. In the center is the Buddha of Boundless Light, 
Amitabha (Chinese, A-mi-t'o Fo; Japanese, Amida). To his right is the 
bodhisattva of strength or power, Mahasthamaprapta, and to his left 
is Kuan Yin, personifying his endless mercy.


In Buddhist theology Kuan Yin is sometimes depicted as the captain of 
the "Bark of Salvation," guiding souls to Amitabha's Western 
Paradise, or Pure Land--the land of bliss where souls may be reborn 
to receive continued instruction toward the goal of enlightenment and 
perfection. The journey to Pure Land is frequently represented in 
woodcuts showing boats full of Amitabha's followers under Kuan Yin's 
captainship.


Amitabha, a beloved figure in the eyes of Buddhists desiring to be 
reborn in his Western Paradise and to obtain freedom from the wheel 
of rebirth, is said to be, in a mystical or spiritual sense, the 
father of Kuan Yin. Legends of the Mahayana School recount that 
Avalokitesvara was 'born' from a ray of white light which Amitabha 
emitted from his right eye as he was lost in ecstasy.


Thus Avalokitesvara, or Kuan Yin, is regarded as the "reflex" of 
Amitabha—a further emanation or embodiment of Karuna (compassion), 
the quality which Amitabha himself embodies in the highest sense. 
Many figures of Kuan Yin can be identified by the presence of a small 
image of Amitabha in her crown. It is believed that as the merciful 
redemptress Kuan Yin expresses Amitabha's compassion in a more direct 
and personal way and prayers to her are answered more quickly.


The iconography of Kuan Yin depicts her in many forms, each one 
revealing a unique aspect of her merciful presence. As the sublime 
Goddess of Mercy whose beauty, grace and compassion have come to 
represent the ideal of womanhood in the East, she is frequently 
portrayed as a slender woman in flowing white robes who carries in 
her left hand a white lotus, symbol of purity. Ornaments may adorn 
her form, symbolizing her attainment as a bodhisattva, or she may be 
pictured without them as a sign of her great virtue.


Kuan Yin's presence is widespread through her images as the "bestower 
of children" which are found in homes and temples. A great white veil 
covers her entire form and she may be seated on a lotus. She is often 
portrayed with a child in her arms, near her feet, or on her knees, 
or with several children about her. In this role, she is also 
referred to as the "white-robed honored one." Sometimes to her right 
and left are her two attendants, Shan-ts'ai Tung-tsi, the "young man 
of excellent capacities," and Lung-wang Nu, the "daughter of the 
Dragon-king."


Kuan Yin is also known as patron bodhisattva of P'u-t'o Shan, 
mistress of the Southern Sea and patroness of fishermen. As such she 
is shown crossing the sea seated or standing on a lotus or with her 
feet on the head of a dragon.


Like Avalokitesvara she is also depicted with a thousand arms and 
varying numbers of eyes, hands and heads, sometimes with an eye in 
the palm of each hand, and is commonly called "the thousand-arms, 
thousand-eyes" bodhisattva. In this form she represents the 
omnipresent mother, looking in all directions simultaneously, sensing 
the afflictions of humanity and extending her many arms to alleviate 
them with infinite expressions of her mercy.


Symbols characteristically associated with Kuan Yin are a willow 
branch, with which she sprinkles the divine nectar of life; a 
precious vase symbolizing the nectar of compassion and wisdom, the 
hallmarks of a bodhisattva; a dove, representing fecundity; a book or 
scroll of prayers which she holds in her hand, representing the 
dharma (teaching) of the Buddha or the sutra (Buddhist text) which 
Miao Shan is said to have constantly recited; and a rosary adorning 
her neck with which she calls upon the Buddhas for succor.


Images of Avalokitesvara, thus then Kuan Yin, is often shown holding 
a rosary; describing being born with a rosary in one hand --- not 
unlike a similar story oft repeated regarding the contemporary 
Japanese Zen master Yasutani Hakuun Roshi --- and a white lotus in 
the other. It is taught that the beads represent all living beings 
and the turning of the beads symbolizes that Avalokitesvara is 
leading them out of their state of misery and repeated rounds of 
rebirth into Nirvana.


Today Kuan Yin is worshipped by Taoists as well as Mahayana Buddhists-
-especially in Taiwan, Japan, Korea and once again in her homeland of 
China, where the practice of Buddhism had been suppressed by the 
Communists during the Cultural Revolution (1966-69). She is the 
protectress of women, sailors, merchants, craftsmen, and those under 
criminal prosecution, and is invoked particularly by those desiring 
progeny. Beloved as a mother figure and divine mediatrix who is very 
close to the daily affairs of her devotees, Kuan Yin's role as 
Buddhist Madonna has been compared to that of Mary the mother of 
Jesus in the West.


There is an implicit trust in Kuan Yin's saving grace and healing 
powers. Many believe that even the simple recitation of her name will 
bring her instantly to the scene. One of the most famous texts 
associated with the bodhisattva, the ancient Lotus Sutra whose twenty-
fifth chapter, dedicated to Kuan Yin, is known as the "Kuan Yin 
sutra," describes thirteen cases of impending disaster--from 
shipwreck to fire, imprisonment, robbers, demons, fatal poisons and 
karmic woes--in which the devotee will be rescued if his thoughts 
dwell on the power of Kuan Yin. The text is recited many times daily 
by those who wish to receive the benefits it promises.


Devotees also invoke the bodhisattva's power and merciful 
intercession with the mantra OM MANI PADME HUM-- "Hail to the jewel 
in the lotus!" or, as it has also been interpreted, "Hail to 
Avalokitesvara, who is the jewel in the heart of the lotus of the 
devotee's heart!" Throughout Tibet and Ladakh, Buddhists have 
inscribed OM MANI PADME HUM on flat prayer stones called "mani-
stones" as votive offerings in praise of Avalokitesvara. Thousands of 
these stones have been used to build mani-walls that line the roads 
entering villages and monasteries.


It is believed that Kuan Yin frequently appears in the sky or on the 
waves to save those who call upon her when in danger. Personal 
stories can be heard in Taiwan, for instance, from those who report 
that during World War II when the United States bombed the Japanese-
occupied Taiwan, she appeared in the sky as a young maiden, catching 
the bombs and covering them with her white garments so they would not 
explode.


Thus altars dedicated to the Goddess of Mercy are found everywhere--
shops, restaurants, even taxicab dashboards. In the home she is 
worshipped with the traditional "pai pai," a prayer ritual using 
incense, as well as the use of prayer charts--sheets of paper 
designed with pictures of Kuan Yin, lotus flowers, or pagodas and 
outlined with hundreds of little circles. With each set of prayers 
recited or sutras read in a novena for a relative, friend, or 
oneself, another circle is filled in. This chart has been described 
as a "Ship of Salvation" whereby departed souls are saved from the 
dangers of hell and the faithful safely conveyed to Amitabha's heaven 
not unlike the Cumeaean Sibyl and her golden bough in Greek mythology.


In addition to elaborate services with litanies and prayers, devotion 
to Kuan Yin is expressed in the popular literature of the people in 
poems and hymns of praise.


Devout followers of Kuan Yin may frequent local temples and make 
pilgrimages to larger temples on important occasions or when they are 
burdened with a special problem. The three yearly festivals held in 
her honor are on the nineteenth day of the second month (celebrated 
as her birthday), of the sixth month, and of the ninth month based on 
the Chinese lunar calendar.


In the tradition of the Great White Brotherhood Kuan Yin is known as 
the Ascended Lady Master who bears the office and title of "Goddess 
of Mercy" because she ensouls the God qualities of the law of mercy, 
compassion and forgiveness. She had numerous embodiments prior to her 
ascension thousands of years ago and has taken the vow of the 
bodhisattva to teach the unascended children of God how to balance 
their karma and fulfill their divine plan by loving service to life 
and the application of the violet flame through the science of the 
spoken Word.


Kuan Yin preceded the Ascended Master Saint Germain as Chohan (Lord) 
of the Seventh Ray of Freedom, Transmutation, Mercy and Justice and 
she is one of seven Ascended Masters who serve on the Karmic Board, a 
council of justice that mediates the karma of earth's evolutions--
dispensing opportunity, mercy and the true and righteous judgments of 
the Lord to each lifestream on earth. She is hierarch of the etheric 
Temple of Mercy over Peking, China, where she focuses the light of 
the Divine Mother on behalf of the children of the ancient land of 
China, the souls of humanity, and the sons and daughters of God.



References: 

Leon Hurvitz, trans., "Scripture of the Lotus Blossom of the Fine 
Dharma (The Lotus Sutra) (New York: Columbia University Press, 1976), 
p. 315. 

Glen Dudbridge, The Legend of Miao-shan (London: Ithaca Press, 1978). 

P. Steven Sangren, "Female Gender in Chinese Religious Symbols: Kuan 
Yin, Ma Tsu, and the 'Eternal Mother'," Signs: Journal of Women in 
Culture and Society, vol. 9, no. 1 (1983), pp. 4-25. 

R. A. Stein, "Avalokitesvara/Kouan-yin: Exemple de transformation 
d'un dieu en déesse," Cahiers d'Extrême-Asie, vol. 2 (1986), pp. 17-
80. 






--- In budaya_tionghua@yahoogroups.com, "jayasentosa_bali" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> Salam Sejahtera,
> Mohon Bantuannya, untuk menjelaskan tentang keberadaan Dewi Kwan Im.
> Apakah Dewi Kwan Im pernah hidup sebagai manusia?
> Apakah Dewi Kwan Im termasuk aliaran Buddha atau Tao atau Kongfucu?
> 
> TerimaKasih atas penjelasannya
> 
> Salam Damai.





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