Bodhidharma was born fourteen
centuries ago as a son of a king in the south of India. There was a big empire,
the empire of Pallavas. He was the third son of his father, but seeing
everything — he was a man of tremendous intelligence — he renounced the kingdom.
He was not against the world, but he was not ready to waste his time in mundane
affairs, in trivia. His whole concern was to know his self-nature, because
without knowing it you have to accept death as the end.
Bodhidharma
renounced the kingdom saying to his father, “If you cannot save me from death,
then please don’t prevent me. Let me go in search of something that is beyond
death.”Those were beautiful days, particularly in the East. The father thought
for a moment and he said, “I will not prevent you, because I cannot prevent
your death. You go on your search with all my blessings. It is sad for me but
that is my problem; it is my attachment. I was hoping for you to be the
successor, to be the emperor of the great Pallavas empire, but you have chosen
something higher than that. I am your father so how can I prevent you?”
“And
you have put in such a simple way a question which I had never expected. You
say, ‘If you can prevent my death then I will not leave the palace, but if you
cannot prevent my death, then please don’t prevent me either.'” You can see
Bodhidharma’s caliber as a great intelligence.
Bodhidharma
got initiated by a woman who was enlightened. Her name was Pragyatara. Perhaps
people would have forgotten her name; it is only because of Bodhidharma that
her name still remains, but only the name — we don’t know anything else about
her. It was she who ordered Bodhidharma to go to China. Buddhism had reached
China six hundred years before Bodhidharma. It was something magical; it had
never happened anywhere, at any time — Buddha’s message immediately caught hold
of the whole Chinese people.
When
Buddhism reached China, it immediately entered to the very soul of the people…
as if they had been thirsty for centuries, and Buddhism had come as a rain
cloud. It quenched their thirst so immensely that something unimaginable
happened.
Buddhism
simply explained itself, and the beauty of the message was understood by the
people. They were thirsty for it, they were waiting for something like it. The
whole country, which was the biggest country in the world, turned to Buddhism.
When Bodhidharma reached there six hundred years later, there were already
thirty thousand Buddhist temples, monasteries, and two million Buddhist monks
in China. And two million Buddhist monks is not a small number; it was five
percent of the whole population of China.
Pragyatara,
Bodhidharma’s master, told him to go to China because the people who had
reached there before him had made a great impact, although none of them were
enlightened. They were great scholars, very disciplined people, very loving and
peaceful and compassionate, but none of them were enlightened. And now China
needed another Gautam Buddha. The ground was ready.
There
are many legends about the man; they all have some significance. The first
legend is: When he reached China — it took him three years — the Chinese
emperor Wu came to receive him. His fame had reached ahead of him. Emperor Wu
had done great service to the philosophy of Gautam Buddha. Thousands of
scholars were translating Buddhist scriptures from Pali into Chinese and the
emperor was the patron of all that great work of translation. He had made
thousands of temples and monasteries, and he was feeding thousands of monks. He
had put his whole treasure at the service of Gautam Buddha, and naturally the
Buddhist monks who had reached before Bodhidharma had been telling him that he
was earning great virtue, that he will be born as a god in heaven.
Naturally,
his first question to Bodhidharma was,“I have made so many monasteries, I am
feeding thousands of scholars, I have opened a whole university for the studies
of Gautam Buddha, I have put my whole empire and its treasures in the service
of Gautam Buddha. What is going to be my reward?”
He
was a little embarrassed seeing Bodhidharma, not thinking that the man would be
like this. He looked very ferocious. He had very big eyes, but he had a very
soft heart — just a lotus flower in his heart. But his face was almost as dangerous
as you can conceive. Just the sunglasses were missing; otherwise he was a mafia
guy!
With
great fear, Emperor Wu asked the question, and Bodhidharma said, “Nothing, no
reward. On the contrary, be ready to fall into the seventh hell.”
The
emperor said, “But I have not done anything wrong — why the seventh hell? I
have been doing everything that the Buddhist monks have been telling me.”
Bodhidharma
said, “Unless you start hearing your own voice, nobody can help you, Buddhist
or non-Buddhist. And you have not yet heard your inner voice. If you had heard
it, you would not have asked such a stupid question.”
“On
the path of Gautam Buddha there is no reward because the very desire for reward
comes from a greedy mind. The whole teaching of Gautam Buddha is desirelessness
and if you are doing all these so-called virtuous acts, making temples and
monasteries and feeding thousands of monks, with a desire in your mind, you are
preparing your way towards hell. If you are doing these things out of joy, to
share your joy with the whole empire, and there is not even a slight desire
anywhere for any reward, the very act is a reward unto itself. Otherwise you
have missed the whole point.”
Emperor
Wu said, “My mind is so full of thoughts. I have been trying to create some peace
of mind, but I have failed and because of these thoughts and their noise, I
cannot hear what you are calling the inner voice. I don’t know anything about
it.”
Bodhidharma
said, “Then, four o’clock in the morning, come alone without any bodyguards to the
temple in the mountains where I am going to stay. And I will put your mind at
peace, forever.”
The
emperor thought this man really outlandish, outrageous. He had met many monks;
they were so polite, but this one does not even bother that he is an emperor of
a great country. And to go to him in the darkness of early morning at four
o’clock, alone…. And this man seems to be dangerous — he always used to carry a
big staff with him.
The
emperor could not sleep the whole night, “To go or not to go? Because that man
can do anything. He seems to be absolutely unreliable.”And on the other hand,
he felt deep down in his heart the sincerity of the man, that he is not a
hypocrite. He does not care a bit that you are an emperor and he is just a
beggar. He behaves as an emperor, and in front of him you are just a beggar.
And the way he has said, “I will put your mind at peace forever.”
“Strange,
because I have been asking,” the emperor thought, “of many many wise people who
have come from India, and they all gave me methods, techniques, which I have
been practicing, but nothing is happening — and this strange fellow, who looks
almost mad, or drunk, and has a strange face with such big eyes that he creates
fear…. But he seems to be sincere too — he is a wild phenomenon. And it is
worth to risk. What can he do — at the most he can kill me.” Finally, he could
not resist the temptation because the man had promised, “I will put your mind
at peace forever.”
Emperor
Wu reached the temple at four o’clock, early in the morning in darkness, alone,
and Bodhidharma was standing there with his staff, just on the steps, and he
said, “I knew you would be coming, although the whole night you debated whether
to go or not to go. What kind of an emperor are you — so cowardly, being afraid
of a poor monk, a poor beggar who has nothing in the world except this staff.
And with this staff I am going to put your mind to silence.”
The
emperor thought, “My God, who has ever heard that with a staff you can put
somebody’s mind to silence! You can finish him, hit him hard on the head — then
the whole man is silent, not the mind. But now it is too late to go back.”
And
Bodhidharma said, “Sit down here in the courtyard of the temple.” There was not
a single man around. “Close your eyes, I am sitting in front of you with my
staff. Your work is to catch hold of the mind. Just close your eyes and go
inside looking for it — where it is. The moment you catch hold of it, just tell
me, ‘Here it is.’ And my staff will do the remaining thing.”
It
was the strangest experience any seeker of truth or peace or silence could have
ever had — but now there was no other way. Emperor Wu sat there with closed
eyes, knowing perfectly well that Bodhidharma seems to mean everything he says.
He looked all around — there was no mind. That staff did its work. For the
first time he was in such a situation. The choice… if you find the mind, one
never knows what this man is going to do with his staff. And in that silent
mountainous place, in the presence of Bodhidharma, who has a charisma of his
own…. There have been many enlightened people, but Bodhidharma stands aloof,
alone, like an Everest. His every act is unique and original. His every gesture
has his own signature; it is not borrowed.
He
tried hard to look for the mind, and for the first time he could not find the
mind. It is a small strategy. Mind exists only because you never look for it;
it exists only because you are never aware of it. When you are looking for it
you are aware of it, and awareness surely kills it completely. Hours passed and
the sun was rising in the silent mountains with a cool breeze. Bodhidharma
could see on the face of Emperor Wu such peace, such silence, such stillness as
if he was a statue. He shook him and asked him, “It has been a long time. Have
you found the mind?”
Emperor
Wu said, “Without using your staff, you have pacified my mind completely. I
don’t have any mind and I have heard the inner voice about which you talked.
Now I know whatever you said was right. You have transformed me without doing anything.
Now I know that each act has to be a reward unto itself; otherwise, don’t do
it. Who is there to give you the reward? This is a childish idea. Who is there
to give you the punishment? Your action is punishment and your action is your
reward. You are the master of your destiny.”
Bodhidharma
said, “You are a rare disciple. I love you, I respect you, not as an emperor
but as a man who has the courage just in a single sitting to bring so much
awareness, so much light, that all darkness of the mind disappears.”
Wu
tried to persuade him to come to the palace. He said, “That is not my place;
you can see I am wild, I do things I myself don’t know beforehand. I live
moment to moment spontaneously, I am very unpredictable. I may create
unnecessary trouble for you, your court, your people; I am not meant for
palaces, just let me live in my wildness.”
He
lived on this mountain whose name was Tai… The second legend is that
Bodhidharma was the first man who created tea — the name `tea’ comes from the
name TAI, because it was created on the mountain Tai. And all the words for tea
in any language, are derived from the same source, tai. In English it is tea,
in Hindi it is CHAI. That Chinese word tai can also be pronounced as CHA. The
Marathi word is exactly CHA.
The
way Bodhidharma created tea cannot be historical but is significant. He was
meditating almost all the time, and sometimes in the night he would start
falling asleep. So, just not to fall asleep, just to teach a lesson to his
eyes, he took out all his eyebrow hairs and threw them in the temple ground.
The story is that out of those eyebrows, the tea bushes grew. Those were the
first tea bushes. That’s why when you drink tea, you cannot sleep. And in
Buddhism it became a routine that for meditation, tea is immensely helpful. So
the whole Buddhist world drinks tea as part of meditation, because it keeps you
alert and awake.
Although
there were two million Buddhist monks in China, Bodhidharma could find only
four worthy to be accepted as his disciples. He was really very choosy. It took
him almost nine years to find his first disciple, Hui Ko.
For
nine years — and that is a historical fact, because there are ancientmost
references, almost contemporary to Bodhidharma which all mention that fact
although others may not be mentioned — for nine years, after sending Wu back to
the palace, he sat before the temple wall, facing the wall. He made it a great
meditation. He would just simply go on looking at the wall. Now, looking at the
wall for a long time, you cannot think. Slowly, slowly, just like the wall,
your mind screen also becomes empty.
And
there was a second reason. He declared,“Unless somebody who deserves to be my
disciple comes, I will not look at the audience.”
People
used to come and they would sit behind him. It was a strange situation. Nobody
had spoken in this way; he would speak to the wall. People would be sitting
behind him but he would not face the audience, because he said, “The audience
hurts me more, because it is just like a wall. Nobody understands, and to look
at human beings in such an ignorant state hurts deeply. But to look at the wall,
there is no question; a wall, after all is a wall. It cannot hear, so there is
no need to be hurt. I will turn to face the audience only if somebody proves by
his action that he is ready to be my disciple.”
Nine
years passed. People could not find what to do — what action would satisfy him.
They could not figure it out. Then came this young man, Hui Ko. He cut off one
of his hands with the sword, and threw the hand before Bodhidharma and said,
“This is the beginning. Either you turn, or my head will be falling before you.
I am going to cut my head too.”
Bodhidharma
turned and said, “You are really a man worthy of me. No need to cut the head,
we have to use it.” This man, Hui Ko, was his first disciple.
Finally
when he left China, or intended to leave China, he called his four disciples —
three more he had gathered after Hui Ko. He asked them, “In simple words, in
small sentences, telegraphic, tell me the essence of my teachings. I intend to
leave tomorrow morning to go back to the Himalayas, and I want to choose from
you four, one as my successor.”
The
first man said, “Your teaching is of going beyond mind, of being absolutely
silent, and then everything starts happening of its own accord.”
Bodhidharma
said, “You are not wrong, but you don’t satisfy me. You just have my skin.”
The
second one said, “To know that I am not, and only existence is, is your
fundamental teaching.”
Bodhidharma
said, “A little better, but not up to my standard. You have my bones; sit
down.”
And
the third one said, “Nothing can be said about it. No word is capable of saying
anything about it.”
Bodhidharma
said, “Good, but you have said already something about it. You have
contradicted yourself. Just sit down; you have my marrow.”
And
the fourth was his first disciple, Hui Ko, who simply fell at Bodhidharma’s
feet, without saying a word, tears rolling down from his eyes. Bodhidharma
said, “You have said it. You are going to be my successor.”
But
in the night Bodhidharma was poisoned by some disciple as a revenge, because he
had not been chosen as the successor. So they buried him, and the strangest
legend is that after three years he was found by a government official, walking
out of China towards the Himalayas with his staff in his hand and one of his
sandals hanging from the staff — and he was barefoot.
The
official had known him, had been to him many times, had fallen in love with the
man, although he was a little eccentric. He asked,“What is the meaning of this
staff, and one sandal hanging from it?” Bodhidharma said,“Soon you will know.
If you meet my people just tell them that I’m going into the Himalayas
forever.”
The
official reached immediately, as fast as he could, the monastery on the
mountain where Bodhidharma had been living. And there he heard that he had been
poisoned and he had died… and there was the tomb. The official had not heard
about it, because he was posted on the boundary lines of the empire. He said,
“My God, but I have seen him, and I cannot be deceived because I have seen him
many times before. He was the same man, those same ferocious eyes, the same
fiery and wild outlook, and on top of it, he was carrying on his staff one
sandal.”
The
disciples could not contain their curiosity, and they opened the tomb. All that
they could find there was only one sandal. And then the official understood why
he had said, “You will find out the meaning of it; soon you will know.”
Perhaps
he was only in a coma when they buried him, and then he came to his senses,
slipped out of the tomb, left one sandal there and put another sandal on his
staff, and according to the plan, he left.
He
wanted to die in the eternal snows of the Himalayas. He wanted that there
should be no tomb, no temple, no statue of him. He did not want to leave any
footprints behind him to be worshiped; those who love him should enter into
their own being — “I am not going to be worshiped.” And he disappeared almost
in thin air. Nobody heard anything about him — what happened, where he died. He
must be buried in the eternal snows of the Himalayas somewhere.
-
Osho
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