Wednesday, August 29, 2012

The Great Buddha of Kamakura







The
Great Buddha from Kamakura (Daibutsu) represents the Amida Buddha (in
Japanese Amida Nyorai), the Buddha of the Infinite Light, the main Deity
of the Buddhist Sect Jodo (Pure Land).












Actually, Buddha is not a name,
but a honorific term, like the Christian Mesia. Buddha comes from
Sanskrit and it is the past participle of the verb Buddh, meaning “to
awaken” or “to know", translated in English as “one who has awakened to
the truth".


In Japanese it is
also referred as Butsu, hence Daibutsu (written ?? or ??), from ? Dai,
meaning Great and ? or ? Butsu (the On reading), meaning Buddha. More
images after a break...




 


 




 






In the Mahayana tradition there
are many Buddha. The Historical Buddha (the Prince Siddhartha Gautama,
also known as Shakyamuni, the founder of Buddhism) is one of them and
the statues of the various Buddha share common attributes. The Amida
Buddha is not Siddhartha Gautama, it is a monk named Dharmakara, who
become a Buddha and lived in very old times (or in another realm…).
Amida Buddha is usually represented wearing simple monk clothes and the
Kamakura Daibutsu is no exception.












The hair is represented in small
spiral curls (Rahotsu in Japanese). This is an allusion to a legend
about Prince Siddhartha, who at one moment pulled his hair together into
a top knot and cut it. After the cut, the hair spiraled into fine curls
and he never needed to cut its hair again.






The statue of Amida Buddha must always have 656 curls.












On the top of the head we can see
Ushnisha (Nikkei in Japanese), a bump on top of the head symbolizing
the fact that Buddha is all-knowing and also symbolizing a fully
developed top chakra.






At the front base of the Nikkei
we can see a circular object, the Nikkeishu (Nikkei Jewel), which
“radiates the light of wisdom":












Also, on the forehead, we can
see Urna (Byakugo in Japanese), symbolic the representation of the third
eye, emitting rays of light and symbolizing that Buddha is all-seeing.
Usually, on Buddha statues the third eye is represented from a crystal
or a gem. On the Kamakura Great Buddha, Byakugo is made of pure silver,
weighing 13.5 kilograms.






 






The elongated ears symbolize that Buddha is all-hearing…












The hands are represented in the
position of Mida no Join (Meditation Mudra), a Japanese specific
position, used exclusively for Amida Buddha.












I will return tomorrow with a more down-to-earth look at this statue…






 








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