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Toronto Star Article,
Nov 7, 2003
Buddhist icon's words of wisdom, "Human
health is tied to health of the Earth"
JANICE MAWHINNEY
LIFE WRITER
Yu Tian Jian, regarded in China as a living Buddha, is padding
around the kitchen of a small house in west Oakville in his
stocking feet. The Chinese Buddhist high master is about to
have breakfast when a reporter and photographer arrive on
time for a scheduled interview & photo shoot.
He sits in the kitchen and enjoys his food, shared with one
of his students. Half an hour later, leisurely meal over,
he genially joins the media representatives in the next room
for what had been planned as a 90-minute meeting. Three hours
later, Yu is still thoroughly engaged in the interview. People
with earlier appointments are restlessly stirring in the hall
and at the back of the room.
His focus is entirely on the person he is speaking with,
on sharing his knowledge and experiences, and he is clearly
enjoying the exchange. Other people wear watches and worry
about appointments and schedules, about the past and the future,
about what should be happening rather than what is happening.
Yu embodies the spiritual maxim about living in the moment.
He is absolutely present in whatever is going on right now.
He enjoys giving it his full attention.
This is one of the qualities that gives him a powerful presence
of his own. In China, Yu, 52, has reached the highest possible
rank in Buddhism, and is thought to be the reincarnation of
a high spiritual leader in a 1,700-year-old tradition. Some
people consider his rank higher than the Dalai Lama's. He
has been honoured by Buddhist leaders from other countries.
His full title is Master Yu Tian Jian the Great Enlightener
Golden Crown Dharma King. This is his first trip to Canada,
and he is spending a few days in Bronte as the guest of local
feng shui consultant Marcia Small, who travelled to Beijing
in September to attend a banquet honouring Yu and his work
in teaching and healing. Yu chose to visit southern Ontario
at this time because of SARS, says Small.
Among the talks, meditations and workshops he will give here
are a couple on the subject of purifying water, food and air.
He teaches that human health is tied to the health of the
Earth, and that everyone is now breathing contaminated air,
eating contaminated food and drinking contaminated water.
"The whole human race continues to destroy the natural
environment," he says in Mandarin, as his student Kuo
Hsia translates. "Some of my teachings involve better
treatment of the environment, and living by the laws of nature."
His main message is to look first to yourself. "If anyone
wants to change anything, you must change yourself first,"
he says. "He who wants to help others must help himself
first. "Only he who can help himself has the means to
help others. "If we want to change our natural environment
for the better, we must change our own thinking. Only then
will the world have a better future. You must change your
thinking and your behaviour to overcome your bad habits. "Let
go of your own attachments and prejudices."
Any one person's understanding of life is like the old parable
of the three blind men who fell to arguing after coming upon
an elephant, Yu says. One felt the elephant's leg and announced
that an elephant is like a pillar or tree trunk. Another felt
the side, and said an elephant is like a wall. The third felt
the trunk and said the elephant resembles a snake. "They
are all partially correct, but they don't have the whole picture,"
he says. "Even combining all of their knowledge, they
still don't know everything.
Everyone is used to this limited way of thinking. Your own
knowledge and understanding is simply a foundation for being
truly receptive to others." Yu is a doctor of traditional
Chinese medicine as well as author of a book about Hanmi Buddhism
that has sold a million copies in China. He was born in 1951
in Chaoyang City, Manchuria, just in time to grow up in the
oppressive early years of the Chinese Communist regime. In
Buddhist tradition, he would have been identified at the age
of 3, 6 or 9 as the inheritor of the leadership of the Hanmi
lineage of Chinese esoteric Buddhism. But when religion was
suppressed by the regime, he says he had a difficult childhood
and youth, and missed his chance to be raised in his religious
traditions or identified for his special role.
Yu became, he says, "an excellent Communist." He
had only six years of formal education in elementary school,
and his youth was full of hardship, "a rough life."
As a young man he was attacked by bandits and shot through
the head, leaving scars still visible today. Miraculously,
he survived that and other attacks. His body bears the marks
of 27 knife wounds and two bullet wounds. Through the tough
times there were bright notes. One was Yu's amazing memory:
he read anything once and remembered it. Another was a man
who seemed to be a spirit guide of some kind, who appeared
whenever Yu most needed help.
When he was 39 and head of the heavy machine factories in
his province, he says he was amazed when the man who had appeared
to him in spirit form over the years approached him in flesh
and blood and told him his destiny as a high Buddhist leader.
"My teacher came to me in physical form, a real man,
Oct. 24, 1989," Yu says. "I made my decision right
then and within three days I resigned my job, resigned as
a member of the Communist party, and donated all my savings
to charity. My relatives thought I was a fool. "I spent
six months with him at a monastery, learning and practising.
Much of what I know, I learned from him." He was trained
in the traditions, theory and thought of the Hanmi Mystery
School of Esoteric Buddhism. Yu says he attained enlightment
as a result of these experiences. At the end of the six months,
his teacher left him and returned to spirit form, he says.
Yu has spent the last 13 years travelling throughout China,
teaching and healing.
Some of his students have established a temple of Hanmi Buddhism
(http://www.dari-rulai-temple.org) in California, of which
he is abbot. He has recently been followed around by a film
crew making a documentary about him. Since his own destiny
has taken such a dramatic turn, Yu says he hopes to help other
people improve their own. "I would like to let people
get to know Buddhism and to learn how Buddha dharma (teachings)
can relieve suffering," he says. "I would like to
see people learn it for themselves so they can change their
destinies." Yu's workshops and meditation sessions all
take place at 43 Jones St. in west Oakville. Public healing
and meditations, for a suggested donation of $10, take place
Sunday and Monday mornings from 10:30 to 12:30. Several workshops
with fees ranging from $40 to $108 take place between this
evening and Tuesday afternoon. Directions and details are
available on Small's Web site at http://www.fengshuicanada.net
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