Kuan Yin: Goddess of Mercy, Friend of Mankind
By Eloise Hart
I first heard of Kuan Yin from a friend. She
had stepped into an Oriental gift shop and, making her way along aisles lined
with fine works of art, suddenly saw on a shelf in the rear of the store a statuette
that was so lovely, so spiritual that she stopped completely entranced, unaware
even of the proprietor's approach until she heard him say, "Kuan Yin, Goddess
of Mercy and Friend of Mankind," then softly, "not for sale." "Somehow
I knew that," my friend told me," and I thought, 'There's no need. She
is already mine . . . in my heart.'"
Since then I have found out a little
more about this Chinese goddess of mercy and love. In this country Kuan Yin is
known mostly to art connoisseurs, but in the Far East, notably in Japan, Korea,
Tibet, and China, she is the beloved personification of compassion. Images of
her can be found in homes, temples, and within thousands of shrines and grottoes
beside roads and shaded pools. People of all ages bring gifts of flowers and fruit,
but not in supplication. There is no need for that. Kuan Yin, like a wise and
loving parent knows and does what is best; does it with gentle guidance and never
needs to punish or coerce. Of all the world's great gods, she is undoubtedly the
kindest and most giving.
Innumerable folktales describe her beneficence and
each in its way inspires to noble action. Like her, devotees seek to help others
by giving of themselves, and of whatever they have. Like her, they avoid causing
pain to any other being for, as they say: when a worm is crushed, all beings are
crushed; when a single bee sucks honey, all beings in the myriad myriad universes
suck honey.
To the humble she is goddess, mother figure, friend, guide, and
protector; to the philosophical she represents the divine force of compassion
that not only pervades the cosmos, holding all together in harmonious accord,
but also manifests in this world in various forms sometimes through the spiritual
nature of one or a series of great men and women. Devotees claim they often feel
her nearness, or see her in person. Whether this presence is physical or a subtle
thought form perceived by mystic vision, who can say?
The statues and paintings
of Kuan Yin are as different as the artists who create them, and as varied as
their feelings about her. Some are of wood, suggesting with simplicity of line
the flow of life that nurtures all beings; others, of jade, emphasize virtue;
of marble, permanence and solidity; of porcelain, innocence and mobility; while
those of rock crystal convey the idea of spirituality. Often she wears a long
hooded robe and ornaments symbolic of her virtues; the most popular figure shows
her standing or floating on a large lotus petal. Her head, haloed with glory,
is bent slightly forward as if looking, listening, to catch any cry for help.
The earliest statues depict Kuan Yin either as a youth with a slight beard or
mustache, or androgynous -- embodying the noblest of both masculine and feminine
qualities. Yet, of whatever material or pose, her bearing is always one of "lordly
ease."
A seventh century Tibetan painting presents the idea of infinite
mercy as Avalokitesvara-Kuan Yin with a thousand arms with which to scatter blessings.
Usually, two arms are sufficient, Kuan Yin's beneficence being suggested by the
various objects she holds in her hands: in one, a vase of amrita, the dew of immortality;
in the other, a spray of willow branches with which to sprinkle her inexhaustible
compassion upon her devotees. Sometimes she carries a scroll or book, symbol of
truth; or the wish-fulfilling jewel, emblem of the attaining of holy aspirations.
When a child plays on her lap, or children at her feet, they symbolize not only
newborn and/or spiritual life, but also Mother Nature whose mysterious powers
continually produce, sustain, destroy, and renew life throughout the universe.
Her hands placed in her lap suggest meditation; when held palm to palm, not quite
touching, reverence for all beings; when fingers point downward, the flowing forth
of blessings is indicated; and when the right hand rests on the left, palms upward,
this signifies control over evil spirits. But regardless of ornamentation, symbolism,
or pose, the very presence of her likeness touches the heart. It is for this reason,
perhaps, that the Japanese and Koreans place huge statues of Kuan Yin in prominent
places so that those going to and from work are reminded of the spiritual worth
of unselfish deeds.
What, we may wonder, is the origin of this Kuan Yin concept?
The characterization of divine beneficence as an all-giving mother, goddess, or
madonna is as old as time and universal. However, the concept we are discussing
is the personification of one of the highest ideals of Mahayana Buddhism. The
Avalokitesvara of ancient Indian scriptures became Kuan Shih Yin and Kuan Yin
(masculine and feminine) in China; and in Japan, Kwannon or Kannon. All carry
the same meaning: "The Lord who is seen, or heard, from below," implying
the manifest appearance of a spiritual energy, or the divine self perceived by
the human self. Early Hindu literature characterized this spiritual-divine energy
as a "lord" or bodhisattva, probably because they believed it is channeled
through great human beings.
Indian sutras tell how Avalokitesvara was born
from a ray of light that shone forth from the right eye of Amitabha Buddha (amitabha
means "unmeasured splendor," "boundless light"). When born
he was holding a lotus and uttering the words: Om mani padme hum (Om, the jewel
in the lotus), now a popular mantra meaning that the seed, or "jewel,"
of divinity dwells in the heart of all beings. The lotus is identified with the
aspiring soul which, like the lotus, is born in the mire of worldly life, rises
undefiled through turbulent waters of mental and emotional conflicts, and blooms
in the light of the divine.
Teachings about Avalokitesvara were introduced
into China during the first century of our era as part of Buddhist doctrine, and
into Tibet during the seventh century by Padma Sambhava. Both nations took the
bodhisattva ideal to their hearts. The Tibetans considered Avalokitesvara-bodhisattva
to be not only the earthly representative of the Buddha -- who lived about six
hundred years before Christ -- but also the chief guardian of the Dharma or Sacred
Doctrine. The Chinese, however, had a hard time personifying as a man the quality
of love exemplified in the mother and child relationship, so they changed Avalokitesvara
into a woman! This took place gradually, and by the seventh century Kuan Yin was
referred to as "Mother of ten million Buddhas" -- the idea being that
from the feminine qualities of purity, compassion, and highest wisdom, Buddhas
are born. By the eleventh century the goddess figure had become so popular that
it all but obliterated the male representation.
According to tradition Kuan
Yin had been an ordinary person who had followed the path of wisdom and service
until after many incarnations she reached the supreme goal, nirvana. Pausing a
moment at the threshold, she heard, rising from the world, a great wail of woe,
as if all the rocks and trees, insects, animals, humans, gods and demons, cried
out in protest that so virtuous a one should depart from their midst. Without
a second thought this noble-hearted soul turned back, determined to remain until
every being without exception should precede her into nirvana.
Full of resolve
she exclaimed: "If in time to come I am to obtain power to benefit all beings,
may I now be endowed with a thousand hands, a thousand eyes." Instantly her
wish was granted, and since that moment Avalokitesvara-Kuan Yin has appeared in
so many different forms, and in so many lands, it does seem that she has a thousand
eyes and a thousand hands to help those in need. She is said to be a light for
the blind, a shade for those hot and weary, a stream for the thirsty, a remedy
for the ill, father and mother for those who suffer, and a guide for the beings
in hell.
Compassion pervades all worlds and resides in the heart of all creatures.
A recent Chinese commentator explains that as "one moon imprints a thousand
streams, and all the thousand streams reflect the one moon; one spring[-time]
nurtures a myriad flowers, and all the myriad flowers are endowed with the wonder
of spring." As the Kuan Yin Sutra states, when one turns to Kuan Yin, to
the self within which images the divine self, a raging fire becomes a placid pool;
chains that bind one's hands and feet are loosened; beasts flee, and snakes lose
their poison.
In times of great danger "miracles" do occur: it
may seem that Kuan Yin has come to our aid, but more likely it is our own inner
strength that has saved us. In fact, Su Tung-po, the eleventh century poet, tells
us: "Kuan Yin does not come hither; I do not go thither; the water is in
the basin; the moon is in the heavens. When the water is clear, the moon appears;
when the mirror [our mind] is bright, the image emerges." This image, our
awakened self-nature, is what sages call Kuan Yin. For when self-nature is awakened,
and compassion active, we are Kuan Yin -- the incarnation of mercy and love.
The statues help remind us of this. They speak to our spiritual self. The more
we are conscious in our higher natures and live as spiritual beings, the more
we feel with others and yearn to ease their pain. This closeness with others has
been referred to by mystics as atonement; by Hindus as yoga. The Japanese speak
of it as the " perfect interfusion," when mind and senses are silent,
the human is harmonized with nature, and the spirit within blends with the cosmic
forces. The idea that the transcendent powers of the divine are close and dear
to us all, whether characterized as the self-essence, as a goddess, or as a mother,
protector, and friend has great appeal. Even more appealing is the realization
that the whole cosmos is nothing but divinity. This idea was Kuan Yin's contribution
to Buddhist metaphysics according to the Mahaprajnaparamita Hsin Ching sutra (Sutra
of the Heart of Highest Wisdom). In it Buddha's basic teaching is restated, that
there is no permanent self in man: each is but a conglomeration of skandhas, "bundles"
of physical, psycho-emotional, mental, and spiritual energies held together during
earth-life by "the shining ray of the Buddha within."
This idea
is fundamental to Buddhist thought, yet in this Chinese version of the Heart Sutra
Buddha gives a further turn to the teaching: that when the bodhisattva Kuan Yin
was absorbed in deep contemplation, he (she) perceived that even the skandhas
or aggregates are impermanent, empty, void. Realizing that our bodies decay, our
feelings and perceptions alter, that also our volition and consciousness are changing,
Kuan Yin attained enlightenment, the recognition that "form differs not from
void, nor void from form. Form is void; void is form. With sensation, perception,
discrimination and consciousness it is the same."
The teaching continues:
he who is unattached to the body loses his fear of death, and thus overcomes one
of the great causes of suffering and pain. He who perceives that feelings are
empty and that mind concepts change, gains freedom from other causes of misery.
Gradually he comes to realize that the karma which produces the lower parts of
his nature must be caused to cease so that new compounds of a nobler and spiritual
quality can flower; yet even these will in time change, improve, and grow greater.
Kuan Yin, in keeping with her vow: 'A guard would I be to them who have no
protection, a guide to the voyager, a ship, a well, a spring, a bridge for the
seeker of the Other Shore," is frequently cast in the role of guiding devotees
to the "Pure Land." The idea isn't that one need go anywhere. According
to the Lotus Sutra the Pure Land is within ourselves. The altruistic qualities
that Kuan Yin represents are within the heart of every being: "In every corner
of the world she manifests her countless forms."
In admiring the bodhisattva
ideal, in paying homage to the divine, even if to do so we fix our attention on
a statue, we are reverencing compassion. However, admiring this quality wasn't
enough for the goddess Kuan Yin. She wished for and was granted a thousand hands
with which to bestow its blessings.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
" Blofeld,
John, Bodhisattva of Compassion, The Mystical Tradition of Kuan Yin, 1978.
" Koerber, Hans Nordewin von, "Kuan Yin, the Buddhist Madonna,"
The Theosophical Forum (1941), July 1941.
" Purucker, G. de, Fountain-Source
of Occultism, 1974; The Esoteric Tradition, 1935.
" Suzuki, Daisetz
Teitaro, Manual of Zen Buddhism, 1935.
" Tay, C. N., "Kuan-Yin:
The Cult of Half Asia," History of Religions (16:2), November 1976.
" Zimmer, Heinrich, Philosophies of India, 1959.
(From Sunrise magazine, December 1984/January 1985. Copyright © 1984 by Theosophical University Press)