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Ancient Cultivation Stories: The Cultivator Huiyuan
Shi Huiyuan was from Yanmen in Loufan of ancient China. He loved to read from the time he was little. When he was thirteen he went with his uncle to study at Xuchang and Luoyang. He was knowledgeable about the Six Books of Chinese Classics and was particularly good in the Taoist school of philosophy. People all greatly admired his academic achievements. When he was twenty-one, he wanted to go to the Eastern Regions to live in seclusion with Fan Xuanzi, who was once a high official during the Eastern Jin dynasty. Unfortunately, just then General Shi Hu was killed and the Central Plains were in political upheaval. Roads leading to the southern regions of the country were so impassable that he could only wait patiently. Later, when he found out that Shi Daoan, an eminent monk, was spreading Buddhist dharma in the Taixing Mountains, he went there to listen to the dharma, where he reached enlightenment. Together with his younger brother, Huichi, they became monks. During the time general Tao Kan was guarding Guangzhou. Some fishermen saw a god's light at sea. It became an image of King Ayu. Tao Kan had the image sent to Hanxi Temple at Wuchang. Seng Zhen, who was in charge of the Hanxi Temple, went to Quxiakou and dreamed about the temple's catching on fire and a dragon god encircling the house that kept the image of King Ayu. When Seng Zhen awakened, he hurried back to the temple and found that it was destroyed by fire. Only the house that held the image of King Ayu remained intact. When Tao Kan was transferred to another post later, he sent for the image. As soon the image was loaded on a ship, it sank. After Huiyuan built Donglin Temple, he prayed devoutly. King Ayu gracefully appeared. Huiyuan cultivated for more than thirty years at Lu Mountain to spread Buddhist Dharma and had never left the mountain. He is regarded as the founder of Pure Land sect. In August, Yixi 18, of the Eastern Jin dynasty, Huiyaun passed away at the age of 83. (From the Legends of Holy Monks, vol. 2)
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