Author Topic: Buddhism's Diamond Sutra: The Extraordinary Discovery Of The World's Oldest Book  (Read 6487 times)

Big Uncle

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Buddhism's Diamond Sutra: The Extraordinary Discovery Of The World's Oldest Book


Ask people to name the world's oldest printed book and the common reply is Gutenberg's Bible. Few venture that the answer is a revered Buddhist text called the Diamond Sutra, printed in 868 A.D. Or that by the time Gutenberg got ink on his fingers nearly 600 years later -- and his revolutionary technology helped usher in the Enlightenment -- this copy of the Diamond Sutra had been hidden for several centuries in a sacred cave on the edge of the Gobi Desert and would remain there for several more.

Its discovery is the result of a series of accidents and its significance realized belatedly. The book unwittingly came to light when a Chinese monk clearing sand from a Buddhist meditation cave in 1900 noticed a crack in a wall. It suggested the outline of a doorway. Plastered over and painted, the entrance had been deliberately concealed.

The monk, Abbot Wang Yuanlu, broke in and discovered a small chamber, about nine feet square and full from floor to ceiling with scrolls. They had been hidden and perfectly preserved in the dark, dry grotto for 1,000 years. Although he didn't know it, among the nearly 60,000 scrolls was the Diamond Sutra of 868 A.D., a woodblock printed scroll, more than 16 feet long, complete and dated, with an instruction that it be given away for free.

Ironically, this enduring scroll, with its illustrated frontispiece depicting the Buddha teaching his disciples, is about impermanence. The Diamond Sutra, for centuries a revered and popular scripture, distils Buddhism's central belief: that all is change.

Unable to interest authorities in his find, Abbot Wang was ordered to seal the chamber. But rumor of the discovery had reached the nearby oasis when Hungarian-British explorer Aurel Stein arrived in 1907.

Stein had heard of the Caves of Thousand Buddhas, a network of 500 sacred painted caves hand-carved into a cliff just outside Dunhuang in remote Gansu province. They were a reason he embarked on a dangerous and secret expedition that saw him travel overland from India, through Pakistan and Afghanistan and into western China.

He wanted to follow the route by which Buddhism migrated from its birthplace in the Himalayan foothills and into China. It traveled along the Silk Road, the ancient trade route that conveyed not just goods but ideas. And none was more influential than Buddhism.

Stein wanted to follow the footsteps of his "patron saint," a seventh-century Buddhist monk named Xuanzang, who made an epic journey from China to India and back in search of Buddhist scrolls. Over centuries, his exploits have morphed into myth, including in the cult television series "Monkey." But Xuanzang penned a true account of his journey, one scholars still consult, and which Stein carried in his saddle bags.

When he went in search of the caves' guardian, Stein learned that Wang too revered the ancient Chinese pilgrim. Nonetheless, the abbot was reluctant to open the cave to Stein. But he did allow Stein a furtive look at a few scrolls overnight. Stein's Chinese translator realized that some were versions of Buddhist texts translated by the scholar-pilgrim Xuanzang.

It was an astonishing -- and convenient -- coincidence. Surely from beyond the grave Xuanzang wanted the cave opened to a disciple from distant India? Stein dropped the "quasi divine hint." Within hours, Stein stood within the cave in astonishment. "Heaped up in layers, but without any order, there appeared in the dim light of the priest's little lamp a solid mass of manuscript bundles rising to a height of nearly ten feet," he later wrote.

Most of the scrolls were Chinese Buddhists texts, but there were also Tibetan Buddhist documents. Others were Nestorian and Manichaean texts, and there was even a fragment in Hebrew. The range of documents suggest that this Silk Road oasis was once a great cultural and religious crossroads.

Stein had little idea of what was in the 5,000 scrolls he bought from Wang for £130. He had no time to examine the documents properly, nor did he understand Chinese. And Stein's Chinese translator knew little about Buddhism. The fact that the Diamond Sutra was somewhere among the many bundles was simply an accident.

Stein, born 150 years ago this year, took the Diamond Sutra and the other scrolls to India and on to London, where they are now in the British Library. But the significance of the Diamond Sutra of 868 A.D. took years to sink in. When the usually meticulous Stein first referred to it in his book about his expedition, published 1911, he recorded its date wrong. Stein's great rival, Frenchman Paul Pelliot, appears to have spotted its significance when he studied the scroll a few years later. The Diamond Sutra was displayed in the British Library at one stage near a Gutenberg Bible -- with the latter labeled as the world's earliest printed book.

The Diamond Sutra, now recognized as one of the world's great literary jewels, has recently undergone conservation. Too fragile to go on permanent display, it can be viewed online in greater detail than peering through a dark display case would allow. And there it can be viewed for free -- just as initially intended.

4 Secrets of the Diamond Sutra
The Diamond Sutra distills Buddhism's central message that everything changes. It describes our fleeting world as a bubble in a stream.
Jack Kerouac was so influenced by the Diamond Sutra that he studied it daily for years and attempted his own rendition.
Brevity is one reason for the Diamond Sutra's popularity. It can be recited in 40 minutes.
The Diamond Sutra of 868 A.D. is printed on paper, a material unknown in the West for another couple centuries.
« Last Edit: September 18, 2012, 07:23:46 PM by Big Uncle »

buddhalovely

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The Chinese Diamond Sutra, the oldest known dated printed book in the world,
printed in the 9th year of Xiantong Era of the Tang Dynasty, i.e. 868 CE. British Library.
The Diamond Sutra ("The Sutra of the Perfection of Wisdom of the Diamond that Cuts Through
Illusion") is a short Mahayana sutra of the Perfection of Wisdom genre, which teaches the
practice of the avoidance of abiding in extremes of mental attachment. A copy of the Diamond
Sutra, found sealed in a cave in China in the early 20th century, is the oldest known printed book,
with a date of 868.

The Diamond Sutra, like many sutras, begins with the famous phrase "Thus have I heard" In this
sutra the Buddha has finished his daily walk with the monks to gather offerings of food and sits
down to rest. One of the more senior monks, Subhuti, comes forth and asks the Buddha a
question.

What proceeds from there is a lengthy, often repetitive, dialogue regarding the nature of
perception. The Buddha often uses paradoxical phrases like "What is called the highest teaching
is not the highest teaching".

The Buddha is trying to help Subhuti unlearn his preconceived, and limited, notions of what
reality is, the nature of Enlightenment, and compassion.

A particularly noteworthy part is when the Buddha teaches Subhuti that what makes a
Bodhisattva so great is that the Bodhisattva does not take pride in his work to save others, nor is
his compassion calculated or contrived. The Bodhisattva practices sincere compassion that
comes from deep within, without any sense of ego or gain.

In another section, Subhuti expresses concern that the Diamond Sutra will be forgotten 500 years
after it is taught (alternatively, during the last 500 years of this era). The Buddha assures Subhuti
that well after he is gone, there will still be some who can grasp the meaning of the Diamond
Sutra and put it into practice. This section seems to reflect a concern found in other Buddhist
texts that the teachings of the Buddha would eventually fade and become corrupted. A popular
Buddhist concept, known as mappo in Japanese, also reflects this same anxiety. 

RedLantern

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The Diamond Sutra is a short popular sutra of the Mahayana Buddhism.It emphasises on the practice of non-abiding and non-attachment.This Sanskrit were first translated in Chinese by the popular translator of his days.Kamaravijaya in 401CE.most Buddhist Sutras,even the Diamond Sutra starts with the famous Sanskrit line.  EVAM MAYAASHRUTAM, meaning 'thus I have heard'.
This printed book has a beautifully illustrated front piece.It depict the Buddha,surrounded by monks and devotees.In the lower-left hand corner of the illustration,can be found the Buddha's disciple Subhuthi,listening to Buddha presenting the Diamond Sutra.It is believed that Buddha taught the Diamond Sutra at the end of his life.This appears as a conversation between Buddha and his disciple Subhuti and the subject of the conversation is about impermanence and the nature of reality.
The copy of the Diamond Sutra had been hidden for several centuries in a sacred cave on the edge of the Gobi desert.It was discovered in 1900,more than a thousand years after it was printed,by a Buddhist monk,while cleaning the cave and observed a crack in the cave wall and realized it was deliberately concealed
to hide the Sutra.

Midakpa

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The Diamond Sutra or the Vajracchedika-prajna-paramita Sutra in Sanskrit is also known as the Sutra of the Cutting Diamond of the Perfection of Wisdom. It is one of the most popular and influential texts of the Mahayana "Perfection of Wisdom" literature. It has thirty-two chapters consisting of a dialogue between the Buddha and Subhuti on the subject of emptiness.

I think mankind is very lucky that this sutra was discovered and is now easily available for study and contemplation. In the sutra, the Buddha said that "all Buddhas and their Supreme-enlightenment Dharma originate from this sutra."

The Buddha, in reply to Subhuti's question on whether there will be living beings who can develop a true belief in these words, sentences and chapters when they are expounded to them, said:

"In the last 500 years, before the final passing of the Tathagata, there will be those who will observe the rules of morality and perform good actions which will result in blessing. These people will be able to develop a faith in these sentences embodying the truth....Upon hearing these sentences, there will arise in them a single thought of pure faith....Why? (Because) they will have wiped out false notions of an ego, a personality, a being and a life, of Dharma and Not-Dharma.... Therefore, one should not grasp and hold on to the notion of Dharma and Not-Dharma. This is why, the Tathagata always said: Ye Bhiksus, should know that the Dharma I expound is likened to a raft. Even the Dharma should be cast aside; how much more so the Not-Dharma?"

This is very similar to what is expounded in the Heart Sutra.