Zen master Bodhidharma
Osho: "
I
have
a
very
soft
corner
in
my
heart
for
Bodhidharma.
That
makes
it
a
very
special
occasion
to
speak
about
him.
Perhaps
he
is
the
only
man
whom
I
have
loved
so
deeply
that
speaking
on
him
I
will
be
almost
speaking
on
myself.
That
also
creates
a
great
complexity,
because
he
never
wrote
anything
in
his
life.
No
enlightened
being
has
ever
written.
Bodhidharma
is
not
an
exception,
but
by
tradition
these
three
books
that
we
are
going
to
discuss
are
attributed
to
Bodhidharma.
The
scholars
reason
that
because
there
is
no
contrary
evidence
--
and
for
almost
one
thousand
years,
these
books
have
been
attributed
to
Bodhidharma
--
there
is
no
reason
why
we
should
not
accept
them.
I
am
not
a
scholar,
and
there
are
certainly
fragments
which
must
have
been
spoken
by
Bodhidharma,
but
these
are
not
books
written
by
him.
These
are
notes
by
his
disciples.
It
was
an
ancient
tradition
that
when
a
disciple
takes
notes
from
the
master
he
does
not
put
his
own
name
on
those
notes,
because
nothing
of
it
belongs
to
him;
it
has
come
from
the
master.
But
knowing
Bodhidharma
as
intimately
as
I
know
him
...
There
are
so
many
fallacies
which
are
possible
only
if
somebody
else
was
taking
notes
and
his
own
mind
entered
into
it;
he
has
interpreted Bodhidharma
--
and
with
not
much
understanding.
Before
we
enter
into
these
sutras,
a
few
things
about
Bodhidharma
will
be
good
to
know.
That
will
give
you
the
flavor
of
the
man
and
a
way
to
understand
what
belongs
to
him
in
these
books
and
what
does
not
belong
to
him.
It
is
going
to
be
a
very
strange
commentary.
Bodhidharma
was
born
fourteen
centuries
ago
as
a
son
of
a
king
in
the
south
of
India.
There
was
a
big
empire,
the
empire
of
Pallavas.
He
was
the
third
son
of
his
father,
but
seeing
everything
--
he
was
a
man
of
tremendous
intelligence
--
he
renounced
the
kingdom.
He
was
not
against
the
world,
but
he
was
not
ready
to
waste
his
time
in
mundane
affairs,
in
trivia.
His
whole
concern
was
to
know
his
self-nature,
because
without
knowing
it
you
have
to
accept
death
as
the
end.
All
true
seekers
in
fact,
have
been
fighting
against
death.
Bertrand
Russell
has
made
a
statement
that
if
there
were
no
death,
there
would
be
no
religion.
There
is
some
truth
in
it.
I
will
not
agree
totally,
because
religion
is
a
vast
continent.
It
is
not
only
death,
it
is
also
the
search
for
bliss,
it
is
also
the
search
for
truth,
it
is
also
the
search
for
the
meaning
of
life;
it
is
many
more
things.
But
certainly
Bertrand
Russell
is
right:
if
there
were
no
death,
very
few,
very
rare
people
would
be
interested
in
religion.
Death
is
the
great
incentive.
Bodhidharma
renounced
the
kingdom
saying
to
his
father, "If
you
cannot
save
me
from
death,
then
please
don't
prevent
me.
Let
me
go
in
search
of
something
that
is
beyond
death."
Those
were
beautiful
days,
particularly
in
the
East.
The
father
thought
for
a
moment
and
he
said,
"I
will
not
prevent
you,
because
I
cannot
prevent
your
death.
You
go
on
your
search
with
all
my
blessings.
It
is
sad
for
me
but
that
is
my
problem;
it
is
my
attachment.
I
was
hoping
for
you
to
be
the
successor,
to
be
the
emperor
of
the
great
Pallavas
empire,
but
you
have
chosen
something
higher
than
that.
I
am
your
father
so
how
can
I
prevent
you?
"And
you
have
put
in
such
a
simple
way
a
question
which
I
had
never
expected.
You
say,
'If
you
can
prevent
my
death
then
I
will
not
leave
the
palace,
but
if
you
cannot
prevent
my
death,
then
please
don't
prevent
me
either.'"
You
can
see Bodhidharma's
caliber
as
a
great
intelligence.
And
the
second
thing
that
I
would
like
you
to
remember
is
that
although
he
was
a
follower
of
Gautam
Buddha,
in
some
instances
he
shows
higher
flights
than
Gautam
Buddha
himself.
For
example,
Gautam
Buddha
was
afraid
to
initiate
a
woman
into
his
commune
of
sannyasins
but
Bodhidharma
got
initiated
by
a
woman
who
was
enlightened.
Her
name
was
Pragyatara.
Perhaps
people
would
have
forgotten
her
name;
it
is
only
because
of
Bodhidharma
that
her
name
still
remains,
but
only
the
name
--
we
don't
know
anything
else
about
her.
It
was
she
who
ordered
Bodhidharma
to
go
to
China.
Buddhism
had
reached
China
six
hundred
years
before
Bodhidharma.
It
was
something
magical;
it
had
never
happened
anywhere,
at
any
time
--
Buddha's
message
immediately
caught
hold
of
the
whole
Chinese
people.
The
situation
was
that
China
had
lived
under
the
influence
of
Confucius
and
was
tired
of
it.
Because
Confucius
is
just
a
moralist,
a
puritan,
he
does
not
know
anything
about
the
inner
mysteries
of
life.
In
fact,
he
denies
that
there
is
anything
inner.
Everything
is
outer;
refine
it,
polish
it,
culture
it,
make
it
as
beautiful
as
possible.
There
were
people
like
Lao
Tzu,
Chuang
Tzu,
Lieh
Tzu,
contemporaries
of
Confucius,
but
they
were
mystics
not
masters.
They
could
not
create
a
counter
movement
against
Confucius
in
the
hearts
of
the
Chinese
people.
So
there
was
a
vacuum.
Nobody
can
live
without
a
soul,
and
once
you
start
thinking
that
there
is
no
soul,
your
life
starts
losing
all
meaning.
The
soul
is
your
very
integrating
concept;
without
it
you
are
cut
away
from
existence
and
eternal
life.
Just
like
a
branch
cut
off
from
a
tree
is
bound
to
die
--
it
has
lost
the
source
of
nourishment
--
the
very
idea
that
there
is
no
soul
inside
you,
no
consciousness,
cuts
you
away
from
existence.
One
starts
shrinking,
one
starts
feeling
suffocated.
But
Confucius
was
a
very
great
rationalist.
These
mystics,
Lao
Tzu,
Chuang
Tzu,
Lieh
Tzu,
knew
that
what
Confucius
was
doing
was
wrong,
but
they
were
not
masters.
They
remained
in
their
monasteries
with
their
few
disciples.
When
Buddhism
reached
China,
it
immediately
entered
to
the
very
soul
of
the
people...
as
if
they
had
been
thirsty
for
centuries,
and
Buddhism
had
come
as
a
rain
cloud.
It
quenched
their
thirst
so
immensely
that
something
unimaginable
happened.
Christianity
has
converted
many
people,
but
that
conversion
is
not
worth
calling
religious.
It
converts
the
poor,
the
hungry,
the
beggars,
the
orphans,
not
by
any
spiritual
impact
on
them
but
just
by
giving
them
food,
clothes,
shelter,
education.
But
these
have
nothing
to
do
with
spirituality.
Mohammedanism
has
converted
a
tremendous
amount
of
people,
but
on
the
point
of
the
sword:
either
you
be
a
Mohammedan,
or
you
cannot
live.
The
choice
is
yours.
The
conversion
that
happened
in
China
is
the
only
religious
conversion
in
the
whole
history
of
mankind.
Buddhism
simply
explained
itself,
and
the
beauty
of
the
message
was
understood
by
the
people.
They
were
thirsty
for
it,
they
were
waiting
for
something
like
it.
The
whole
country,
which
was
the
biggest
country
in
the
world,
turned
to
Buddhism.
When
Bodhidharma
reached
there
six
hundred
years
later,
there
were
already
thirty
thousand
Buddhist
temples,
monasteries,
and
two
million
Buddhist
monks
in
China.
And
two
million
Buddhist
monks
is
not
a
small
number;
it
was
five
percent
of
the
whole
population
of
China.
Pragyatara,
Bodhidharma's
master,
told
him
to
go
to
China
because
the
people
who
had
reached
there
before
him
had
made
a
great
impact,
although
none
of
them
were
enlightened.
They
were
great
scholars,
very
disciplined
people,
very
loving
and
peaceful
and
compassionate,
but
none
of
them
were
enlightened.
And
now
China
needed
another Gautam
Buddha.
The
ground
was
ready.
Bodhidharma
was
the
first
enlightened
man
to
reach
China.
The
point
I
want
to
make
clear
is
that
while
Gautam
Buddha
was
afraid
to
initiate
women
into
his
commune,
Bodhidharma
was
courageous
enough
to
be
initiated
by
a
woman
on
the
path
of
Gautam
Buddha.
There
were
other
enlightened
people,
but
he
chose
a
woman
for
a
certain
purpose.
And
the
purpose
was
to
show
that
a
woman
can
be
enlightened.
Not
only
that,
her
disciples
can
be
enlightened.
Bodhidharma's
name
stands
out
amongst
all
the
Buddhist
enlightened
people
second
only
to
Gautam
Buddha.
There
are
many
legends
about
the
man;
they
all
have
some
significance.
The
first
legend
is:
When
he
reached
China
--
it
took
him
three
years
--
the
Chinese
emperor
Wu
came
to
receive
him.
His
fame
had
reached
ahead
of
him.
Emperor
Wu
had
done
great
service
to
the
philosophy
of
Gautam
Buddha.
Thousands
of
scholars
were
translating
Buddhist
scriptures
from
Pali
into
Chinese
and
the
emperor
was
the
patron
of
all
that
great
work
of
translation.
He
had
made
thousands
of
temples
and
monasteries,
and
he
was
feeding
thousands
of
monks.
He
had
put
his
whole
treasure
at
the
service
of
Gautam
Buddha,
and
naturally
the
Buddhist
monks
who
had
reached
before
Bodhidharma
had
been
telling
him
that
he
was
earning
great
virtue,
that
he
will
be
born
as
a
god
in
heaven.
Naturally,
his
first
question
to
Bodhidharma
was,
"I
have
made
so
many
monasteries,
I
am
feeding
thousands
of
scholars,
I
have
opened
a
whole
university
for
the
studies
of
Gautam
Buddha,
I
have
put
my
whole
empire
and
its
treasures
in
the
service
of
Gautam
Buddha.
What
is
going
to
be
my
reward?"
He
was
a
little
embarrassed
seeing
Bodhidharma,
not
thinking
that
the
man
would
be
like
this.
He
looked
very
ferocious.
He
had
very
big
eyes,
but
he
had
a
very
soft
heart
--
just
a
lotus
flower
in
his
heart.
But
his
face
was
almost
as
dangerous
as
you
can
conceive.
Just
the
sunglasses
were
missing;
otherwise
he
was
a
mafia
guy!
With
great
fear,
Emperor
Wu
asked
the
question,
and
Bodhidharma
said,
"Nothing,
no
reward.
On
the
contrary,
be
ready
to
fall
into
the
seventh
hell."
The
emperor
said,
"But
I
have
not
done
anything
wrong
--
why
the
seventh
hell?
I
have
been
doing
everything
that
the
Buddhist
monks
have
been
telling
me."
Bodhidharma
said,
"Unless
you
start
hearing
your
own
voice,
nobody
can
help
you,
Buddhist
or
non-Buddhist.
And
you
have
not
yet
heard
your
inner
voice.
If
you
had
heard
it,
you
would
not
have
asked
such
a
stupid
question.
"On
the
path
of
Gautam
Buddha
there
is
no
reward
because
the
very
desire
for
reward
comes
from
a
greedy
mind.
The
whole
teaching
of
Gautam
Buddha
is
desirelessness
and
if
you
are
doing
all
these
so-called
virtuous
acts,
making
temples
and
monasteries
and
feeding
thousands
of
monks,
with
a
desire
in
your
mind,
you
are
preparing
your
way
towards
hell.
If
you
are
doing
these
things
out
of
joy,
to
share
your
joy
with
the
whole
empire,
and
there
is
not
even
a
slight
desire
anywhere
for
any
reward,
the
very
act
is
a
reward
unto
itself.
Otherwise
you
have
missed
the
whole
point."
Emperor
Wu
said,
"My
mind
is
so
full
of
thoughts.
I
have
been
trying
to
create
some
peace
of
mind,
but
I
have
failed
and
because
of
these
thoughts
and
their
noise,
I
cannot
hear
what
you
are
calling
the
inner
voice.
I
don't
know
anything
about
it."
Bodhidharma
said,
"Then,
four
o'clock
in
the
morning,
come
alone
without
any
bodyguards
to
the
temple
in
the
mountains
where
I
am
going
to
stay.
And
I
will
put
your
mind
at
peace,
forever."
The
emperor
thought
this
man
really
outlandish,
outrageous.
He
had
met
many
monks;
they
were
so
polite,
but
this
one
does
not
even
bother
that
he
is
an
emperor
of
a
great
country.
And
to
go
to
him
in
the
darkness
of
early
morning
at
four
o'clock,
alone....
And
this
man
seems
to
be
dangerous
--
he
always
used
to
carry
a
big
staff
with
him.
The
emperor
could
not
sleep
the
whole
night,
"To
go
or
not
to
go?
Because
that
man
can
do
anything.
He
seems
to
be
absolutely
unreliable."
And
on
the
other
hand,
he
felt
deep
down
in
his
heart
the
sincerity
of
the
man,
that
he
is
not
a
hypocrite.
He
does
not
care
a
bit
that
you
are
an
emperor
and
he
is
just
a
beggar.
He
behaves
as
an
emperor,
and
in
front
of
him
you
are
just
a
beggar.
And
the
way
he
has
said,
"I
will
put
your
mind
at
peace
forever."
"Strange,
because
I
have
been
asking,"
the
emperor
thought,
"of
many
many
wise
people
who
have
come
from
India,
and
they
all
gave
me
methods,
techniques,
which
I
have
been
practicing,
but
nothing
is
happening
--
and
this
strange
fellow,
who
looks
almost
mad,
or
drunk,
and
has
a
strange
face
with
such
big
eyes
that
he
creates
fear....
But
he
seems
to
be
sincere
too
--
he
is
a
wild
phenomenon.
And
it
is
worth
to
risk.
What
can
he
do
--
at
the
most
he
can
kill
me."
Finally,
he
could
not
resist
the
temptation
because
the
man
had
promised,
"I
will
put
your
mind
at
peace
forever."
Emperor
Wu
reached
the
temple
at
four
o'clock,
early
in
the
morning
in
darkness,
alone,
and
Bodhidharma
was
standing
there
with
his
staff,
just
on
the
steps,
and
he
said,
"I
knew
you
would
be
coming,
although
the
whole
night
you
debated
whether
to
go
or
not
to
go.
What
kind
of
an
emperor
are
you
--
so
cowardly,
being
afraid
of
a
poor
monk,
a
poor
beggar
who
has
nothing
in
the
world
except
this
staff.
And
with
this
staff
I
am
going
to
put
your
mind
to
silence."
The
emperor
thought,
"My
God,
who
has
ever
heard
that
with
a
staff
you
can
put
somebody's
mind
to
silence!
You
can
finish
him,
hit
him
hard
on
the
head
--
then
the
whole
man
is
silent,
not
the
mind.
But
now
it
is
too
late
to
go
back."
And
Bodhidharma
said,
"Sit
down
here
in
the
courtyard
of
the
temple."
There
was
not
a
single
man
around.
"Close
your
eyes,
I
am
sitting
in
front
of
you
with
my
staff.
Your
work
is
to
catch
hold
of
the
mind.
Just
close
your
eyes
and
go
inside
looking
for
it
--
where
it
is.
The
moment
you
catch
hold
of
it,
just
tell
me,
`Here
it
is.'
And
my
staff
will
do
the
remaining
thing."
It
was
the
strangest
experience
any
seeker
of
truth
or
peace
or
silence
could
have
ever
had --
but
now
there
was
no
other
way.
Emperor
Wu
sat
there
with
closed
eyes,
knowing
perfectly
well
that
Bodhidharma
seems
to
mean
everything
he
says.
He
looked
all
around
--
there
was
no
mind.
That
staff
did
its
work.
For
the
first
time
he
was
in
such
a
situation.
The
choice...
if
you
find
the
mind,
one
never
knows
what
this
man
is
going
to
do
with
his
staff.
And
in
that
silent
mountainous
place,
in
the
presence
of
Bodhidharma,
who
has
a
charisma
of
his
own....
There
have
been
many
enlightened
people,
but
Bodhidharma
stands
aloof,
alone,
like
an
Everest.
His
every
act
is
unique
and
original.
His
every
gesture
has
his
own
signature;
it
is
not
borrowed.
He
tried
hard
to
look
for
the
mind,
and
for
the
first
time
he
could
not
find
the
mind.
It
is
a
small
strategy.
Mind
exists
only
because
you
never
look
for
it;
it
exists
only
because
you
are
never
aware
of
it.
When
you
are
looking
for
it
you
are
aware
of
it,
and
awareness
surely
kills
it
completely.
Hours
passed
and
the
sun
was
rising
in
the
silent
mountains
with
a
cool
breeze.
Bodhidharma
could
see
on
the
face
of
Emperor
Wu
such
peace,
such
silence,
such
stillness
as
if
he
was
a
statue.
He
shook
him
and
asked
him,
"It
has
been
a
long
time.
Have
you
found
the
mind?"
Emperor
Wu
said,
"Without
using
your
staff,
you
have
pacified
my
mind
completely.
I
don't
have
any
mind
and
I
have
heard
the
inner
voice
about
which
you
talked.
Now
I
know
whatever
you
said
was
right.
You
have
transformed
me
without
doing
anything.
Now
I
know
that
each
act
has
to
be
a
reward
unto
itself;
otherwise,
don't
do
it.
Who
is
there
to
give
you
the
reward?
This
is
a
childish
idea.
Who
is
there
to
give
you
the
punishment?
Your
action
is
punishment
and
your
action
is
your
reward.
You
are
the
master
of
your
destiny."
Bodhidharma
said,
"You
are
a
rare
disciple.
I
love
you,
I
respect
you,
not
as
an
emperor
but
as
a
man
who
has
the
courage
just
in
a
single
sitting
to
bring
so
much
awareness,
so
much
light,
that
all
darkness
of
the
mind
disappears."
Wu
tried
to
persuade
him
to
come
to
the
palace.
He
said,
"That
is
not
my
place;
you
can
see
I
am
wild,
I
do
things
I
myself
don't
know
beforehand.
I
live
moment
to
moment
spontaneously,
I
am
very
unpredictable.
I
may
create
unnecessary
trouble
for
you,
your
court,
your
people;
I
am
not
meant
for
palaces,
just
let
me
live
in
my
wildness."
He
lived
on
this
mountain
whose
name
was
Tai...
The
second
legend
is
that
Bodhidharma
was
the
first
man
who
created
tea
--
the
name
`tea'
comes
from
the
name
TAI,
because
it
was
created
on
the
mountain
Tai.
And
all
the
words
for
tea
in
any
language,
are
derived
from
the
same
source,
tai.
In
English
it
is
tea,
in
Hindi
it
is
CHAI.
That
Chinese
word
tai
can
also
be
pronounced
as
CHA.
The
Marathi
word
is
exactly
CHA.
The
way
Bodhidharma
created
tea
cannot
be
historical
but
is
significant.
He
was
meditating
almost
all
the
time,
and
sometimes
in
the
night
he
would
start
falling
asleep.
So,
just
not
to
fall
asleep,
just
to
teach
a
lesson
to
his
eyes,
he
took
out
all
his
eyebrow
hairs
and
threw
them
in
the
temple
ground.
The
story
is
that
out
of
those
eyebrows,
the
tea
bushes
grew.
Those
were
the
first
tea
bushes.
That's
why
when
you
drink
tea,
you
cannot
sleep.
And
in
Buddhism
it
became
a
routine
that
for
meditation,
tea
is
immensely
helpful.
So
the
whole
Buddhist
world
drinks
tea
as
part
of
meditation,
because
it
keeps
you
alert
and
awake.
Although
there
were
two
million
Buddhist
monks
in
China,
Bodhidharma
could
find
only
four
worthy
to
be
accepted
as
his
disciples.
He
was
really
very
choosy.
It
took
him
almost
nine
years
to
find
his
first
disciple,
Hui
Ko.
For
nine
years
--
and
that
is
a
historical
fact,
because
there
are
ancientmost
references,
almost
contemporary
to
Bodhidharma
which
all
mention
that
fact
although
others
may
not
be
mentioned
--
for
nine
years,
after
sending
Wu
back
to
the
palace,
he
sat
before
the
temple
wall,
facing
the
wall.
He
made
it
a
great
meditation.
He
would
just
simply
go
on
looking
at
the
wall.
Now,
looking
at
the
wall
for
a
long
time,
you
cannot
think.
Slowly,
slowly,
just
like
the
wall,
your
mind
screen
also
becomes
empty.
And
there
was
a
second
reason.
He
declared,
"Unless
somebody
who
deserves
to
be
my
disciple
comes,
I
will
not
look
at
the
audience."
People
used
to
come
and
they
would
sit
behind
him.
It
was
a
strange
situation.
Nobody
had
spoken
in
this
way;
he
would
speak
to
the
wall.
People
would
be
sitting
behind
him
but
he
would
not
face
the
audience,
because
he
said,
"The
audience
hurts
me
more,
because
it
is
just
like
a
wall.
Nobody
understands,
and
to
look
at
human
beings
in
such
an
ignorant
state
hurts
deeply.
But
to
look
at
the
wall,
there
is
no
question;
a
wall,
after
all
is
a
wall.
It
cannot
hear,
so
there
is
no
need
to
be
hurt.
I
will
turn
to
face
the
audience
only
if
somebody
proves
by
his
action
that
he
is
ready
to
be
my
disciple."
Nine
years
passed.
People
could
not
find
what
to
do
--
what
action
would
satisfy
him.
They
could
not
figure
it
out.
Then
came
this
young
man,
Hui
Ko.
He
cut
off
one
of
his
hands
with
the
sword,
and
threw
the
hand
before
Bodhidharma
and
said,
"This
is
the
beginning.
Either
you
turn,
or
my
head
will
be
falling
before
you.
I
am
going
to
cut
my
head
too."
Bodhidharma
turned
and
said,
"You
are
really
a
man
worthy
of
me.
No
need
to
cut
the
head,
we
have
to
use
it."
This
man,
Hui
Ko,
was
his
first
disciple.
Finally
when
he
left
China,
or
intended
to
leave
China,
he
called
his
four
disciples
--
three
more
he
had
gathered
after
Hui
Ko.
He
asked
them,
"In
simple
words,
in
small
sentences,
telegraphic,
tell
me
the
essence
of
my
teachings.
I
intend
to
leave
tomorrow
morning
to
go
back
to
the
Himalayas,
and
I
want
to
choose
from
you
four,
one
as
my
successor."
The
first
man
said,
"Your
teaching
is
of
going
beyond
mind,
of
being
absolutely
silent,
and
then
everything
starts
happening
of
its
own
accord."
Bodhidharma
said,
"You
are
not
wrong,
but
you
don't
satisfy
me.
You
just
have
my
skin."
The
second
one
said,
"To
know
that
I
am
not,
and
only
existence
is,
is
your
fundamental
teaching."
Bodhidharma
said,
"A
little
better,
but
not
up
to
my
standard.
You
have
my
bones;
sit
down."
And
the
third
one
said,
"Nothing
can
be
said
about
it.
No
word
is
capable
of
saying
anything
about
it."
Bodhidharma
said,
"Good,
but
you
have
said
already
something
about
it.
You
have
contradicted
yourself.
Just
sit
down;
you
have
my
marrow."
And
the
fourth
was
his
first
disciple,
Hui
Ko,
who
simply
fell
at
Bodhidharma's
feet,
without
saying
a
word,
tears
rolling
down
from
his
eyes.
Bodhidharma
said,
"You
have
said
it.
You
are
going
to
be
my
successor."
But
in
the
night
Bodhidharma
was
poisoned
by
some
disciple
as
a
revenge,
because
he
had
not
been
chosen
as
the
successor.
So
they
buried
him,
and
the
strangest
legend
is
that
after
three
years
he
was
found
by
a
government
official,
walking
out
of
China
towards
the
Himalayas
with
his
staff
in
his
hand
and
one
of
his
sandals
hanging
from
the
staff
--
and
he
was
barefoot.
The
official
had
known
him,
had
been
to
him
many
times,
had
fallen
in
love
with
the
man,
although
he
was
a
little
eccentric.
He
asked,
"What
is
the
meaning
of
this
staff,
and
one
sandal
hanging
from
it?"
Bodhidharma
said,
"Soon
you
will
know.
If
you
meet
my
people
just
tell
them
that
I'm
going
into
the
Himalayas
forever."
The
official
reached
immediately,
as
fast
as
he
could,
the
monastery
on
the
mountain
where
Bodhidharma
had
been
living.
And
there
he
heard
that
he
had
been
poisoned
and
he
had
died...
and
there
was
the
tomb.
The
official
had
not
heard
about
it,
because
he
was
posted
on
the
boundary
lines
of
the
empire.
He
said,
"My
God,
but
I
have
seen
him,
and
I
cannot
be
deceived
because
I
have
seen
him
many
times
before.
He
was
the
same
man,
those
same
ferocious
eyes,
the
same
fiery
and
wild
outlook,
and
on
top
of
it,
he
was
carrying
on
his
staff
one
sandal."
The
disciples
could
not
contain
their
curiosity,
and
they
opened
the
tomb.
All
that
they
could
find
there
was
only
one
sandal.
And
then
the
official
understood
why
he
had
said,
"You
will
find
out
the
meaning
of
it;
soon
you
will
know."
We
have
heard
so
much
about
Jesus'
resurrection.
But
nobody
has
talked
much
of
the
resurrection
of
Bodhidharma.
Perhaps
he
was
only
in
a
coma
when
they
buried
him,
and
then
he
came
to
his
senses,
slipped
out
of
the
tomb,
left
one
sandal
there
and
put
another
sandal
on
his
staff,
and
according
to
the
plan,
he
left.
He
wanted
to
die
in
the
eternal
snows
of
the
Himalayas.
He
wanted
that
there
should
be
no
tomb,
no
temple,
no
statue
of
him.
He
did
not
want
to
leave
any
footprints
behind
him
to
be
worshiped;
those
who
love
him
should
enter
into
their
own
being
--
"I
am
not
going
to
be
worshiped."
And
he
disappeared
almost
in
thin
air.
Nobody
heard
anything
about
him
--
what
happened,
where
he
died.
He
must
be
buried
in
the
eternal
snows
of
the
Himalayas
somewhere.
This
is
the
man,
and
there
are
these
three
small
collections
which
we
are
taking
as
one
whole
book.
These
are
not
his
writings,
because
they
don't
show
any
quality
of
the
man.
They
are
notes
of
scholarly
disciples;
hence
they
are
bound
to
have
fundamental
and
essential
faults,
misunderstandings,
misinterpretations.
They
are
not
people
of
no-mind.
Their
minds
are
taking
the
notes;
their
minds
are
choosing
the
words.
Bodhidharma
was
not
a
man
of
words,
he
was
a
man
of
action.
There
is
no
possibility
of
him
writing
a
book.
A
man
who
never
wanted
to
be
worshiped,
a
man
who
never
wanted
to
leave
any
footprints
behind
him
to
be
followed,
is
not
going
to
write
a
book
either,
because
that
is
leaving
footprints
to
be
followed.
But
I
have
chosen
to
speak
on
them
because
these
three
small
collections
are
the
only
writings
which
for
centuries
have
been
believed
to
be
Bodhidharma's.
They
contain
here
and
there,
in
spite
of
the
people
who
were
taking
the
notes,
something
of
Bodhidharma
--
something
has
entered.
The
task
is
difficult
for
any
scholar
to
make
a
distinction
as
to
which
part
is
Bodhidharma's
and
which
part
is
the
note
taker's.
It
is
not
a
problem
for
me.
I
know
from
my
own
experience
what
can
be
unpolluted
Bodhidharma,
and
what
can
be
only
the
mind
of
a
scholar
interpreting
him.
So
these
are
not
ordinary
commentaries.
In
a
way
this
is
the
first
effort
about
Bodhidharma
to
sort
out
the
wheat
from
the
chaff.
Source:
"Bodhidharma
-
The
Greatest
Zen
Master" - Osho
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