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seventh world of chan buddhism - Zen Buddhist Order of Hsu Yun

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from the womb <strong>of</strong> their Holy Mother Earth. Everything... their crops, their present and<br />

future lives, depended upon the union and the issue <strong>of</strong> the Moon Sire and the Earth Dam.<br />

Photosynthesis they took for granted.<br />

To the sun-dazzled Aryans, this might have seemed peculiar but not, certainly,<br />

particularly <strong>of</strong>fensive. What shocked them was the manner in which the common folk<br />

participated in the divine assignation. The natives, as lunar representatives, believed<br />

themselves ordained to deliver a god's ravishments and saw this embassy as no small<br />

responsibility. How could puny men carry such love as this? As all lovers are, in<br />

principle at least, inclined to do, they were eager to show that no pain was too much to<br />

bear... no sacrifice was too great to make to demonstrate this proxied devotion to their<br />

paramour. To prove that they were equal to the burden, they allowed their priests, at<br />

harvest time, to select someone to be, as it were, the representative <strong>of</strong> the representatives.<br />

They fattened him and treated him like the divine consort he was to be, and then, as the<br />

planting season was about to commence and it was necessary that the moon impregnate<br />

their mother earth, they roasted the fellow alive so that his screams might prove how very<br />

much pain they were willing to bear for love <strong>of</strong> her... or else they sliced him up, alive and<br />

raw, all to the same effect. Whipped up by the priests into an orgy <strong>of</strong> passion, they<br />

reveled in their loathsome foreplay. And when the moon-man was thoroughly dead and<br />

silent and could be prodded into no further terms <strong>of</strong> endearment, the priests distributed a<br />

portion, slice or crackle, to each farmer who rushed home to complete the coitus by<br />

sticking the flesh deep into his plot <strong>of</strong> land. The sacrifice, when properly made, assured a<br />

good crop. It worked every time.<br />

The Aryans were, <strong>of</strong> course, appalled. It wasn't so much the atrocity - they were<br />

not tidy killers - it was the organized suspension <strong>of</strong> rationality, the human descent into<br />

taurian frenzy, the evaporation <strong>of</strong> individual identity and the wild, collective residua - a<br />

mob fornicating for the stars with the blood-semen <strong>of</strong> a neighbor's tortured flesh. To the<br />

Aryans, a simple lot, it didn't seem at all right. Other things that seemed amiss were the<br />

ubiquitous depictions <strong>of</strong> the divine couple. They had goddesses <strong>of</strong> their own and knew<br />

what goddesses should look like. Was not Dawn personified as the loveliest <strong>of</strong> women?<br />

But this earth mother was the ugliest female they had ever seen. "Kali" she was...<br />

"black"... black as plowed earth... black as moonlit blood... black as night, her special<br />

time. She was horrific, adorned with human skulls, mouth open, tongue protruding and<br />

dripping with the blood <strong>of</strong> man's carnivorous existence. And everywhere the Aryans<br />

looked - in temples, homes, town squares and roadsides - they found stone bull- phalli<br />

erected to service her. The farmers could not understand the Aryan's consternation. To<br />

them the phallus was a simple "lingam", a "plow". What could be more natural?<br />

But if all this wasn't enough to give a sun worshiper nightmares, the natives were<br />

all obsessed with insane thoughts <strong>of</strong> rebirth and reincarnation, return and renewal. Death<br />

was only a temporary condition. (Why, if a warrior lived long enough he might kill the<br />

same man half a dozen times!) This was too much for the Aryans who, in the novelty <strong>of</strong><br />

feeling both prudish and cerebral, ceased to be racially liberal. Clearly, these little, dark<br />

CHAPTER 1 INDIA<br />

S EVENTH W ORLD O F C HAN B UDDHISM<br />

7

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