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Record of the Buddhist Country by Fa Hsien
(extracted from Buddhist Pilgrimage, by Bro
Chan Khoon San)
Fa Hsien went to India with some fellow monks, namely: Hui-king,
Tao-ching, Hui-ying, Hui-yu and others, for the purpose of
seeking the Vinaya or Monastic Rules.
Starting from Ch’ang-an (Xian) in 399 AD, they
travelled by stages on foot till they reached Chang-yeh,
a military station at the north-west extremity of the Great
Wall, where they met another party of Chinese monks led by
Pao-yun and Sung-king, also on their way to India. After
spending the rainy season together in Chang-yeh, they
pressed on to Dunhuang at the edge of the Takla Makan
desert, where they stopped for over a month. The local
prefect provided them with the necessities to cross the
desert and Fa Hsien’s party started out first on their long
trek across the Takla Makan desert. Walking for
seventeen days about 1,500 li (1 li = 1 mile) in a
south-westerly direction, keeping to the edge of the desert,
they reached the rugged and barren country of Shen-shen
(Loulan), south of Lop Nor. The king of this
country honoured the Buddhist religion and there were some
4,000 monks, belonging to the Small Vehicle or Hinayana1.
After resting there for about a month, they travelled
near the lake Bagarach.north-west for fifteen days, probably
following the course of the Tarim river, and arrived at the
country of Kara-shahr (Korla),
1
One hundred years after the Buddha’s Parinibbana, the Second
Buddhist Council was held at Vesali to discuss the Ten
Points practised by the Vajjian monks. Although the Ten
Points were ruled to be unlawful by the Council, the Vajjian
monks did not accept the verdict. This resulted in a schism
in the Sangha and the secession of the Mahasanghika (Vajjian
monks), believed to be the forerunners of the Mahayana. From
then on further schisms led to the formation of different
sub-sects until eighteen schools of Buddhism arose. The name
Hinayana was applied to these schools by the followers of
the Mahayana tradition, which developed sometime immediately
prior to the Christian era. The name reflected the
Mahayanists evaluation of their own tradition as a superior
method, surpassing the conservative schools in universality
and compassion. This name, however, was not accepted by the
conservative schools who considered it as degrading. The
modern upholders of the ancient Hinayana tradition are the
Theravadins (followers of the Way of the Elders), who are
but one of the eighteen ancient schools.
There, they met again the party of monks led by
Pao-yun, who had travelled by the northern route to Hami and
Turfan. While Fa Hsien’s group remained at Kara-shahr under
the protection of an important official, Pao-yun’s group
were not so lucky and they had to return to Turfan to
procure the necessities for their journey. After staying in
Kara-shahr for two months, Fa Hsien and his company
continued their journey south-west across the desert. On the
road, there were no dwellings or people. The sufferings of
their journey on account of the difficulties of the road and
rivers exceeded human comparison. They were on the road for
a month and five days before they reached the prosperous,
oasis town of Khotan. The ruler of the country provided them
with accommodation in a monastery where they stayed for
three months and were able to witness the grand procession
of images, which began on the first day of the fourth month
and lasted for fourteen days.
From Khotan, the pilgrims spent twenty-five days on
the road to Yarkand, where they stopped for fifteen days
before continuing their journey. After another twenty-five
days of walking, they arrived at Kashgar, in the middle of
the Tsung-ling range (Pamirs), in time to witness the
Pancavassika Parisa or Quinquennial assembly, a five-yearly
event instituted by King Asoka, in which the ruler made a
great offering to the Sangha. Leaving Kashgar, they entered
Tajikistan through the Sarykol range, taking a month to
cross the Pamir mountains, and continued their journey
south-west for fifteen days over a difficult, precipitous
and dangerous road. Fa Hsien described it thus:
“The mountain side is simply a stone wall
standing up 10,000 feet. Looking down, the sight is confused
and there is no sure foothold. Below is a river called
Sint’u-ho (Indus). In old days, men had cut away the rocks
to make a way down and spread out side ladders, of which
there are 700 steps to pass. When these are negotiated, the
river is crossed by a hanging rope bridge. The two banks of
the river are something less than 80 paces apart.”
After crossing the river, they arrived at the country
of Udyana, which comprises the regions from Chitral to Swat
in present day Northern Pakistan. It was then a flourishing
centre of Buddhism, with five hundred monasteries belonging
to the Small Vehicle. Three of the pilgrims, Hui-king, Tao-ching
and Hui Yu went on ahead to Nagarahara (Jalalabad) to pay
reverence to the Buddha-shadow2 at the Gopala Naga cave and
the tooth and skull bone relics at Hadda while Fa Hsien and
Hui Ying remained at Udyana to spend the rains-retreat. When
this was over, they journeyed south to Swat and descending
eastward for five days arrived at Gandhara (region between
Takkasila and modern day Charsadda). From there, they
travelled south to Peshawar to see the famed stupa of
Kaniska and the alms-bowl relic. Here they met the party of
Pao-yun and Sung-king who had come to pay homage to the
alms-bowl relic. One of Fa Hsien’s friends, Hui-yu, who had
previously gone to Nagarahara also came to Peshawar and at
this point, he decided to return to China with Pao-yun and
Sung-king. Meanwhile Fa Hsien’s companion, Hui-ying,
dwelling in the temple of the alms-bowl relic, died there.
2 According to a popular legend among the Chinese
pilgrims, the Buddha left his shadow in a cave on the
mountainside in Nagarahara (old capital of the Jalalabad
district). This cavern was the abode of a destructive
dragon, Naga Gopala, who was planning to destroy the kingdom
for a slight offence against him when he was a shepherd in a
former life. Out of compassion for the inhabitants, the
Buddha came to Nagarahara from mid India and after taming
the dragon, left his shadow on the wall of the Naga Gopala
cave. The Buddha advised the dragon to look at his shadow
whenever evil intentions arose in his mind and by its power
of love and virtue, the evil purpose would be stopped. In
later days, the shadow was not visible any more.
Fa Hsien now proceeded alone westward to Nagarahara.
On the borders, in the city of Hadda, he visited the vihara
of the Buddha’s skull-bone. At the capital of Nagarahara, he
visited the viharas of the Buddha’s religious staff and
sanghati (outer robe) and the Gopala Naga cave to pay homage
to the Buddha shadow. He teamed up with his two remaining
companions, Tao-ching and Hui-king and together they spent
two months of winter there. When winter was over, they
proceeded south and encountered great difficulties and
extreme cold crossing the Safed Koh mountain range. Hui-king,
barely recovering from an earlier illness, was unable to
proceed onwards. He died of exhaustion in Fa Hsien’s arms,
urging them to press on lest they too perished. With great
effort, the surviving pilgrims crossed the mountain range
and entered Afghanistan where they spent the rains-retreat
in the company of 3,000 monks in the vicinity.
After the rains-retreat they crossed the Punjab, where
they saw the Buddhist religion flourishing and after passing
many monasteries with myraids of monks, the pilgrims reached
Mathura country. Fa Hsien then visited in succession
Sankasia, Kanauj, Saketa or Ayodha and Savatthi, where the
monks at Jetavana monastery were astonished to see them, for
they had not seen men from Han (Chinese) come so far as this
before in search of the Buddha’s law. Moving eastward, they
travelled to the ancient Sakyan kingdom, where they visited
the birthplaces of Kakusandha Buddha and Kanakagamana Buddha
and saw the Asokan pillars erected there. The capital,
Kapilavatthu, was like a great desert, without any
inhabitants. There were only a congregation of monks and
about ten families of lay people. The roads were devoid of
travellers for fear of wild elephants and lions.
From Kapilavatthu, the pilgrims travelled to Kusinara,
scene of the Buddha’s Mahaparinibbana. In this city too,
there were few inhabitants and such families as were there,
were connected with the congregation of monks. Moving
onwards, they went to Vesali and Pataliputta, the capital of
ancient Magadha. From there, they moved on to Nalanda and
Rajagaha, where Fa Hsien ascended Gijjhakuta hill and after
offering flowers, incense and lights, remained there the
whole night contemplating and reciting the suttas.
Continuing the pilgrimage, they went to Buddhagaya, scene of
the Buddha’s Enlightenment, Deer Park at Sarnath where the
Buddha preached the First Sermon, Varanasi and lastly
Kosambi in Allahabad district, where they visited the ruins
of Ghositarama monastery. Returning to Pataliputta, Tao-ching
decided to take up permanent residence in India after seeing
the strict decorum observed by the monks in India with
regard to the Disciplinary rules compared with the meagre
character of the precepts known in China.
For Fa Hsien, the purpose of his sojourn was to seek
copies of the Monastic Rules to take home but throughout the
journey, he was unable to obtain a single copy as the rules
were transmitted orally. Here he was able to obtain a copy
used by the Mahasanghikas at Jetavana monastery. Fa Hsien
spent three years learning Sanskrit and copying out the
Rules. Then following the course of the Ganges river in an
easterly direction, he travelled to Tamralipti (modern
Tamluk in West Bengal), where he spent a further two years
copying the sacred texts and drawing image pictures. From
the port of Tamralipti, he took a ship to Sri Lanka where he
spent two more years collecting and copying the Buddhist
texts including the Mahisasaka monastic rules, unknown in
China.
Fa Hsien had been away from his homeland for many
years. Of the four monks who accompanied him to India, one
returned to China after going only as far as Peshawar, two
died in India and one remained behind in India. At the
Abhayagiri monastery in Anuradhapura, the sight of a
merchant making a religious offering of a white silk fan
from China, made him feel sad and homesick. Having completed
his original purpose of obtaining the knowledge of the
precepts to spread throughout the land of Han, he decided to
return home. In his voyage home by sea, he had several
miraculous escapes. His ship sprung a leak during a violent
storm and was driven to the island of Java, where he spent
five months. He took another boat bound for Canton but after
a month and some days, he encountered another storm that
drove the boat off course and landed on the shores of the
Shantung Peninsula instead. Yet in spite of all the perils
of the sea, he had managed to return home safely with his
precious cargo of the sacred texts intact.
After resting at Tsing-Chow for the summer, he
proceeded to Nanking where he exhibited the sacred books he
had brought back. He was away fourteen years and had
encountered great hardships and dangers in his travels
through nearly thirty different countries. Having been
protected by the power of the Triple Gem and delivered
safely from all dangers, he desired to share his experiences
with readers by writing these records of his travels from
399-414 AD. He died at the age of eighty-six after having
accomplished his mission of translating into Chinese the
Buddhist texts, which he had taken so much time and trouble
to bring back from India.
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