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“Kumarajiva: Philosopher and Seer”
International Seminar and
Exhibition on
(3rd - 5th February 2011)

Concept note
Buddhist savants who traveled from India to China and from China to
India have contributed to the evolution of Sino–Indian cultural relations
in the classical age. They contributed not only to the spread of Buddhism
but also to an understanding of social and economic relations, as
torchbearers of Indian civilization to Central Asia and China.
Unfortunately ancient records of India are silent about them but there are
a large number of documents preserved in Chinese and Central Asian
languages. The proposed seminar is an effort to seek, evaluate and
exchange information on one of those great monks scholars—Kumarajiva.
Only a few Chinese records are so far discovered narrating the lives and
works of Indian monks in China. One such record is the Gao Seng Chuan
(Biographies of eminent monks) and another important work is the Kuang
hungming chi (Seng chao’s obituaries). One of the eminent scholars was
Kumarajiva, who broke political, geographical, cultural and linguistic
barriers wuth a long cherished mission: propagation of the true spirit of
Buddhism.
Kumarajiva or Jiū mó luó shí in Chinese, was born in the Central Asiatic
city of Kucha. He was the son of an Indian Brahmin and a Kuchean princess.
His father’s name was Kumarayana and his mother’s name was “Jiva”. Jiva
could clearly recognize penetrating intelligence of her son. She became
determined to give him the best available philosophical and spiritual
training. Thsu kumarajiva learnt the vast literature of Abhidharma at a
tender age. When he was seven years old, his mother became a Buddhist nun,
and he began to spend his life following her and studying the Buddhist
doctrine in Kucha, Kashmir and Kashgarh under eminent scholars. He was
ordained in the royal palace in Kucha at the age of twenty. In Kashgarh he
got converted from Hinayana to Mahayana Buddhism. He was a brilliant monk
and thoroughly versed in the Buddhist learning of the schools then current
in northern India. In AD 379 Kumarajiva's fame spread into China, and
efforts were made to bring him there. Fu Chien, the former Ch'in Emperor,
was so eager to have him at his court that, as certain sources suggest, he
sent his general Lü Kuang to conquer Kucha in AD 384 in order to bring
Kumarajiva to China. Lü Kuang captured Kumarajiva and kept him as a
captive in the Western Kingdom of the latter Liang for seventeen years,
first humiliating him and forcing him to break his vows of celibacy and
then using him as an official at his court. The long span of captivity
gave Kumarajiva an opportunity to learn Chinese more thoroughly.
The rulers of the Later Ch’in dynasty, the Yao family was trying hard to
bring Kumarajiva to Ch’ang-an. But lu Kuang kept on refusing to release
him. Eventually an army was sent and Kumarajiva was brought to Ch’ang-an
in 402 with a warm welcome by the rulers. Soon he took up translation work
that was sponsored by the state. Yao Hsing bestowed on him the title of
“Teacher of the Nation” (rajaguru). He presided over a team of
Chinese specialists before an audience of hundreds of monks. Within a few
years he translated 54 texts from Sanskrit into Chinese in about 300
volumes.
Some of the important texts attributed to Kumarajiva are: Diamond sutra,
Amitabha Sutra, Lotus Sutra, Vimalakirtinirdesa Sutra, Mulamadhyamakarika
and Astasahasrika-prajnaparamita Sutra.
In order to critically study and evaluate the contribution of Kumarajiva
in enhancement of Indo-Chinese cultural relations and other related
issues, Indira Gandhi National Center for the Arts has organized an
International Seminar for three days from 3rd to 5th February 2011.
Research papers are invited on the following sub –themes:
1. Biographies and oral legends
2. Philosophical texts in Chinese translations
3. Original Sanskrit text
4. Topics relevant to Kumarajiva’s life and philosophy.
The international seminar and exhibition on Kumarajiva, organized by
the IGNCA is valuable because generations after generations acknowledge
his brilliance, wisdom, proficiency in Sanskrit and Chinese languages and
above all his obeisance to the sacred voice. Kumarajiva along with
Dharmaraksa and Hsuan-tsang is the master who stands out by his
preeminence virtue and by spreading the subtle philosophical systems of
Buddhism. The process was begun by Dharmaraksa who was a Yueh-chih which
found its full flowering in Kumarajiva and culmination in Hsuan-tsang.
Kumarajiva remains central to practical Buddhism in East Asia. He has
bequeathed to us a casket of sacred sutras as the most authoritative
presentations by creating pure, boundless and unthinkable versions. The
impact of his works can still be felt in almost all the schools/sects of
Mahayana Buddhism in East Asia.
Important Deadlines:
Submission of abstract: November 15, 2010
Submission of Full Paper: December 31, 2010
Conference date: 3rd-5th February 2011
Contact Details:
Dr. Shashibala, Coordinator of the Seminar - 9811841183
drshashibala56@gmail.com
Dr. Ajay K. Mishra, Coordinator of the Seminar - 9810214677
Office : 091+011+23388437
E-Mail: kujeevaseminar@gmail.com
Venue:
Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts,
11, Mansingh Road, New Delhi-110001
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