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Zen Stories
11.
The Story of Shunkai
The exquisite Shunkai whose other
name was Suzu was compelled to marry against her
wishes when she was quite
young. Later, after this marriage had ended, she
attended the university, where she studied
philosophy.
To see Shunkai was to fall in love with her.
Moreover, wherever she went, she herself fell in
love with others. Love was
with her at the university, and afterwards, when
philosophy did not satisfy her and she visited a
temple to learn about
Zen, the Zen students fell in love with her.
Shunkai’s whole life was saturated with love.
At last in Kyoto she became a real student of Zen.
Her brothers in the sub-temple of Kennin praised her
sincerity. One of
them proved to be a congenial spirit and assisted
her in the mastery of Zen.
The abbot of Kennin, Mokurai, Silent Thunder, was
severe. He kept the precepts himself and expected
his priests to do
so. In modern Japan whatever zeal these priests have
lost for Buddhism they seem to have gained for
having wives.
Mokurai used to take a broom and chase the women
away when he found them in any of his temples, but
the more wives
he swept out, the more seemed to come back.
In this particular temple the wife of the head
priest became jealous of Shunkai's earnestness and
beauty. Hearing the
students praise her serious Zen made this wife
squirm and itch. Finally she spread a rumor about
Shunkai and the young
man who was now her friend.
As a consequence he was
expelled and Shunkai was removed from the temple.
‘I may have made the mistake of love,' thought
Shunkai, 'but the priest’s wife shall not remain in
the temple either if my
friend is to be treated so unjustly.
Shunkai the same night with a can of kerosene set
fire to the five hundred year old temple and burned
it to the ground. In
the morning she found herself in the hands of the
police.
A young lawyer became interested in her and
endeavored to make her sentence lighter. ‘Do not
help me,' she told him. I
might decide to do something else which would only
imprison me again.'
At last a sentence of seven years was completed, and
Shunkai was released from the prison, where the
sixty-three-year old
warden also had become enamored of her.
But now everyone looked upon her as a ‘jailbird'. No
one would associate with her. Even the Zen people,
who are
supposed to believe in enlightenment in this life
and with this body, shunned her.
Zen, Shunkai found,
was one thing and
the followers of Zen quite another. Her relatives
would have nothing to do with her. She grew sick,
poor, and weak.
She met a Shinshu priest who taught her the name of
the Buddha of Love, and in this Shunkai found some
solace and
peace of mind. She passed away when she was still
exquisitely beautiful and hardly thirty years old.
She wrote her own story in a futile endeavor to
support herself and some of it she told to a woman
writer. So it reached
the Japanese people. Those who rejected Shunkai,
those who slandered and hated her, now read of her
life with tears of
remorse.
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