Stillness and Strength: The
Great Buddha of Kamakura
Meher McArthur Buddhistdoor
Global | 2017-10-02 |
The city of Kamakura in
Japan’s Kanazawa Prefecture is home to one of the most poetic and
paradoxical works of Buddhist sculpture. The statue is the Great
Buddha, or Daibutsu, a giant bronze figure of Amida Buddha
measuring 11.3 meters in height at Kotoku-in, a temple of the
Jodo-shu branch of Pure Land Buddhism. The elegant Buddha is seated
in the lotus position with his hands in the gesture of meditation,
his eyes cast downward in peaceful contemplation. What is peculiar
about this magnificent Buddha is that he sits in the open air,
exposed to the elements, as he has done since 1498, after typhoons,
tidal waves, and earthquakes devastated the temple building that
once housed him. Since then, no new temple has been built around
the image. Instead, the Daibutsu sits calmly on a stone platform
emanating total balance and serenity—a monument, simultaneously and
paradoxically, to physical permanence and the Buddhist concept of
impermanence.
The beloved statue of Amida
(Skt: Amitabha, Amitayus) was built in the mid-13th century,
several decades after the nation’s political capital was moved from
Kyoto to Kamakura by the new military regime, the Kamakura
shogunate. The military rulers of Japan embraced Buddhism and
established many temples around their new capital to provide
spiritual sustenance for the elite and the samurai warriors who
served them. One of the traditions they embraced was Pure Land
Buddhism, a sect devoted to the worship of Amida Buddha. Amida is
believed to have vowed to liberate all beings from samsara,
irrespective of sex, age, social standing, and even behavior and
deeds. Simply by following Amida, devotees are guaranteed rebirth
in his glorious Western Pure Land, where the Buddha will then
assist their souls on their search for enlightenment, or
nirvana.
Pure Land Buddhism was
transmitted to Japan from China during the Heian period (794–1185),
when it was practiced mainly by members of the imperial court, but
under the new military regime the sect gain a broader following
among the general populace. Pure Land temples were established
throughout the country and images of Amida, his celestial entourage
of deities, and his glorious Western Paradise were commissioned for
display in the temples and for followers to worship in their homes.
In Pure Land Buddhist practice, mindfulness of Amida is supremely
important. Devotees repeatedly chant Amida’s name, a practice known
in Japanese as nembutsu, and perform meditative contemplation and
visualization of Amida, creating a bond with the deity to ensure
their soul’s passage to his Pure Land. Many images depict Amida
descending with his celestial attendants to collect the soul and
transport it to paradise, and, from the early days of Pure Land
Buddhism in Japan, devotees on their deathbed held the end of a
string attached to such images, known as Amida’s Welcoming Approach
(Japanese: Amida Raigo), to ensure that Amida carried their soul to
paradise.
According to chronicles of
the Kamakura shogunate, work on building the Great Buddha at
Kotokuin began in 1252, and priests from the temple gathered
donations from the local population to help pay for construction.
The bronze Buddha was originally covered in gold and housed in the
Great Buddha Hall, or Daibutsuden, but the structure was damaged by
typhoons in 1334 and 1369, and subsequently in a severe earthquake
in 1498. Over the years, the statue itself has been damaged by the
elements and repaired on several occasions but has remained
uncovered for more than half a century, during which time not only
Buddhists but also travelers from around the country have paid
their respects to the Great Buddha. In the mid-19th century, artist
Ando Hiroshige (1797–1858), who produced some of Japan’s most
famous woodblock printed landscapes, paid homage to the image with
a print, naming it after one of the later temple halls of the
Kotoku-in, the Shojosen-ji. Later in the century, British writer
Rudyard Kipling visited Japan and was so awed by the sculpture that
he penned a poem to the Buddha at Kamakura.
Today, Buddhists of all
traditions and travelers from all over the world come to visit the
Great Buddha of Kotoku-in. The figure has become so well known that
it now ranks alongside Katsushika Hokusai’s woodblock print The
Great Wave off Kanazawa as one of Japan’s most iconic artistic
creations. Just as Hokusai’s Great Wave, which depicts small
fishing boats being tossed around by a massive tidal wave, reminds
us of the truly awesome power of nature, this Great Buddha, sitting
in the open air without the protection of a temple building, is
also a reminder of the destruction that can be inflicted upon human
structures by the forces of nature. However, at a time when so many
regions in the world are suffering from the devastation of
earthquakes, hurricanes, tsunamis, fires, and other natural
disasters, this powerful Buddha image, which has survived wars,
fires, earthquakes, and typhoons for 750 years, is also a reminder
of the strength of the human spirit and in the belief in something
greater than ourselves.