CompleteMartialArts.com - Bodhisattva of Compassion: The Mystical Tradition of Kuan Yin (Shambhala Dragon Editions)

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Manufacturer: Shambhala
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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 294.34211 EAN: 9780877731269 ISBN: 0877731268 Label: Shambhala Manufacturer: Shambhala Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 158 Publication Date: 1988-02-12 Publisher: Shambhala Release Date: 1988-02-12 Studio: Shambhala
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Editorial Reviews:
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This portrait of the Buddhist embodiment of compassion is both an informative study by a leading scholar of Buddhism and an engaging account of the author's search for the mystical significance of the goddess. An object of joyous devotion in Chinese folk religion, Kuan Yin is revered for her saving power: it is said that anyone in distress who calls on her with sincerity will be rescued from suffering and harm. On a deeper level, Kuan Yin symbolizes the liberating energy of compassion, which is an indispensable aid in the quest for enlightenment. John Blofeld evokes the charming presence of Kuan Yin through colorful anecdotes, personal experiences, and descriptions of Buddhist rituals and legends encountered during his travels throughout China. At the same time, he offers a learned account of the goddess's history and importance in Chinese thought and religion. He explores the origin of the Bodhisattva of Compassion in India and Tibet, in the form of Avalokiteshvara (Tibetan: Chenresig), a male deity who evolved into the gentle mother/maiden figure of Chinese Buddhism. Meditation and visualization techniques associated with Kuan Yin are given, and her principal iconographic forms are described. Illustrated with images from Chinese and Tibetan sacred art, the book also contains translations of devotional poems and yogic texts. Bodhisattva of Compassion is undoubtedly the most complete and illuminating picture of Kuan Yin available.
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Very worthwhile... Comment: For anyone interested in Kuan Yin, the Boddhisatva of Compassion, this is a very worthwhile read! It traces the cultural origin of Kuan Yin and her place in the cosmology of Buddhism. The book gives both an esoteric and exoteric view of her being, and how she is honored/celibrated/worshipped in central and southeastern Asia. Interesting personal anecdotes by Blofeld prevent this from ever becoming a dry, theoretical, work. Anyone who loves Kuan Yin and wishes to learn more about her will enjoy and profit from a reading of this book!
SJD
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great Book! Comment: This is a great book to know about Kuan Yin and very classic. I work for Asia galleries where we sell a lot of antique Kuan Yin from China, Japan, and South East Asia. This book helps me to gain some knowledge about Kuan Yin.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Well Written Book on a Specific Facet of Buddhism Comment: Originally published in 1977, I read the 1988 print. To begin with an advise: Take care of the covers. Either they are highly responsive to bleaching in sunlight or to yellowing under pressure. Whatever the case the covers of my book are very uneaven now in accordance to the other books standing next / resting on top of it.
I am the absolute layperson when it comes to Buddhism and this review should be taken accordingly. I was interested in this book for the Mysticism hinted at in the title. Heaving read about Mysticism in general, primarily the Egyptian in The Mystical Journey from Jesus to Christ, I had just read about the Christian "German" mystic of the 13th/14th centuries, Master Eckhart and expected to compare that to some Buddhist mysticism. Extraordinary, how identical all religions get, as soon as myths and rites are dropped, considering the mysticism only. Which includes this book. However, the author is concerned with mysticism partly only and primarily writes about the myths and rites of female Kuan Yin. Who isn't a facet of Buddhism as such, but of an "alternative" part (the "Pure Land" teaching, without giving an explanation for this term), in some localities known by other names, such as Avalokita, who is considered male. The author doesn't really indulge all too much in the "gender change" - actually, he does, but not that deeply in a mystical way, where genders do not exist, but are considered an illusion. But then again, the author doesn't claim to overstand everything about Kuan Yin exactly and makes fun of himself, whenever he recollects his meetings with various holy people who do better. But even these have different concepts and answers. Which is a strength of this book: Someone NOT from "outside" would probably have written about their own ideas only and not given a variety of thoughts. It is also a personal quest of the author and well written as such.
For those who don't know, as myself before opening this book: A Bodhisattva is a "secondary stream of liberating energy". A primary stream would be called a Buddha. Yet, the book explains that deities are basically that what I-and-I (we) think of them. Ok, I am simplifying the message, please read the book instead.
Even though the book wasn't THAT much about mysticism, some aspects of it I found rewarding and hadn't read/thought about before in the universal mystic concept. That alone was well worth reading this book. Yet, you don't have to be a mystic to appreciate it. I had a hard time giving 4 or 5 stars, so I'll give 4.5, rounding it to five.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Meeting Kuan Yin Comment: This is a wonderful book. It's become my favorite "bedtime stories" book. What I especially like is that the engrossing tales of personal experiences with Kuan Yin (as well as some with Tara) create for readers our own "virtual" experience of a Bodhisattva being as a reality; I feel I'm actually meeting Her, and I fall asleep in a very pleasant mood. I love many Buddhist books, but "Bodhisattva of Compassion: The Mystical Tradition of Kuan Yin" is certainly one of the most absorbing and intimate. It's often whimsical and sometimes funny. At the same time there is a lot of new knowledge to be gained here, especially for people in the West who may not be so familiar with details of who Kuan Yin is and how she is regarded in the East. Also, there is wisdom, and good discussions of universal Buddhist concepts.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A Wonderful, Illuminating, Warm & Funny Book! Comment: If the rest of us "foreign devils", as Blofeld's friends refer to him, manage to inbibe even half the wisdom offered in this book, we'll be better off. His gentle, academically bumbling, tireless search for the origin and nature of Kuan Yin is something many of we rational Westerners can appreciate. I especially enjoyed the point that lesser path and greater path Buddhism are equal; one is not more "real" than the other. Kuan Yin is real as is the keyboard on which I type, as long as we remember that void & non-void are the same. The Chinese make no distinction...why should we?
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