Xuecheng (monk)

Xuecheng
学诚
Venerable Master Xuecheng
Religion Buddhism
Temple Guanghua Temple (Putian)
Famen Temple
Beijing Longquan Monastery
Education Buddhist Academy of China
Monastic name Master Xuecheng
Personal
Nationality Chinese
Born Fu Ruilin
(1966-10-03) 3 October 1966
Xianyou, Fujian, China
Senior posting
Based in Fenghuangling, Beijing, China
Religious career
Teacher Dinghai
Yuanzhuo
Works Understanding life
Present post President of the Buddhist Association of China, President of Buddhist Academy of China
Website twitter.com/xuecheng

Xuecheng (Chinese: 学诚; pinyin: Xuéchéng; born 3 October 1966) is a Buddhist monk,[1] a former member of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference,[2] and a popular blogger.[3][4] He was president of the Buddhist Association of China from 2015 to 2018.

Biography

Early life

Xuecheng was born as Fu Ruilin (Chinese: 傅瑞林), the eldest of three sons on October 3, 1966, to a family of strong Buddhist culture in Luofeng village of Laidian Town, Xianyou County, Fujian Province. His grandmother was a Buddhist practitioner and later became a nun. His mother was a devoted Buddhist in addition. His father worked as an accountant and office clerk in the village.

Influenced by his mother and grandmother, at age 10, Xuecheng voluntarily became a vegetarian, and began to chant Buddhist scriptures at age of 12.

Training

In 1982, at the age of 16, Master Xuecheng started his monastic life and received teachings from masters such as Ven. Master Dinghai, and Most Ven. Yuanzhuo. He graduated from the Buddhist Academy of China in 1991 with a master's degree.

Life as abbot

Xuecheng served as abbot of Guanghua Temple (Putian), Famen Temple (Fufeng, Shaanxi), and Beijing Longquan Monastery. In 2007 he was elected secretary general of the Buddhist Association of China,[5] taking over the presidency of this organisation in 2015. He was the youngest monastic ever to ascend to the position.[6]

Sexual misconduct accusations

In 2018, Xuecheng was under investigation after being accused of various violations in a 95-page report, including the sexual harassment of several nuns. [7] He resigned as the head of China's Buddhist association after a government investigation over the accusations, which he first denied and then partly admitted to.[8] According to the South China Morning Post, the report was written by two of the monastery's former monks and posted on social media. The report alleged that the abbot "sent suggestive messages to two female monks at Longquan Temple and made unwanted sexual advances towards at least four others." Other chapters of the report outlined how he had overseen the illegal construction of several buildings at the monastery and embezzled funds. "Longquan temple is under his spell ... Xuecheng manipulated disciples to serve his 'Buddhist empire,'" the report stated. One of the report's authors, Monk Xianqi , told that they didn't intend to make it public and didn't know how it leaked, but from CCN news, he has reported to CNN in July already[9]. The monks had submitted the report to the police.[10] The other authors said on social media that he was compelled to speak out after the victims were ignored by authorities who said they could not investigate the matter.[11] It has been claimed that this report has many doubtful points, which shows that the messages are not sent by master Xuecheng[12]

Publications

Academic collection:

  • Faith and Dialogues, ISBN 9787512502840
  • Harmony and Vision, ISBN 9787512507517
  • Responsibility and Commitment, ISBN 9787512507524

Dharma talks collections:

  • All Afflictions, Our Own Choices, ISBN 9787505733992
  • Let It Go: Losing is Gaining, ISBN 9787507542813
  • Understanding Life, ISBN 9787512502895
  • The Path of Refuge ISBN 9787504737045

Blog collection:

  • Ven. Master Xuecheng's Blog: Essay Collections (Vol. I—VII), ISBN 9787507521702
  • Xuecheng's Blog: Message Collections (Vol. I—VII), ISBN 9787507524055

Dharma talks by video:

  • Understanding Life
  • A Life of Suffering and Happiness
  • Knowing Life
  • Breakfast Talks
  • The Path of Refuge
  • The Path to Enlightenment
  • Lamrim Chenmo: Vipashyana
  • The Inner World: Lecture on the Treatise on the Illumination Door of the One Hundred Dharmas

References

  1. Shi, Huikong. Stories of Ven. Master Xuecheng. ISBN 978-7-5047-4151-6.
  2. "Lawmakers and advisors have dreams", China Daily, March 11, 2013.
  3. "Modern Abbot promotes Buddhism with microblog", CCTV.com English, July 3, 2012.
  4. Tang Yuankai, "New Tech Promotes an Old Religion", China Today, March 14, 2013.
  5. Ling Haicheng, Buddhism in China (2004), pp. 182-183.
  6. Master Xuecheng elected president of China's Buddhist association
  7. Didi Tang (2 August 2018). "China investigates top Buddhist monk Xuecheng for soliciting sex from nuns". thetimes.co.uk. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  8. Zhang, Lusha; Wen, Philip (14 August 2018). "Buddhist monk master in China resigns after sexual misconduct..." Reuters. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  9. http://news.dwnews.com/global/news/2018-08-23/60079940.html
  10. https://www.npr.org/2018/08/15/638897576/senior-chinese-monk-resigns-after-sexual-misconduct-allegations
  11. "Top China Buddhist leader quits in sex probe". Agence France Presse. 15 August 2018. Archived from the original on 15 August 2018.
  12. https://www.readme.in/5124.html
Buddhist titles
Preceded by
Chuan Yin
President of the Buddhist Association of China
2015 - 2018
Vacant
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.