Cerita Zen
The Story of Shunkai
The exquisite Shunkai whose other name was Suzu was compelled to marry
against her wishes when she was quite young. Later, after this
marriage had ended, she attended the university, where she studied
philosophy.
To see Shunkai was to fall in love with her. Moreover, wherever she
went, she herself fell in love with others. Love was with her at the
university, and afterwards, when philosophy did not satisfy her and
she visited a temple to learn about Zen, the Zen students fell in love
with her. Shunkai's whole life was saturated with love.
At last in Kyoto she became a real student of Zen. Her brothers in the
sub-temple of Kennin praised her sincerity. One of them proved to be a
congenial spirit and assisted her in the mastery of Zen.
The abbot of Kennin, Mokurai, Silent Thunder, was severe. He kept the
precepts himself and expected his priests to do so. In modern Japan
whatever zeal these priests have lost of Buddhism they seem to have
gained for their wives. Mokurai used to take a broom and chase the
women away when he found them in any of his temples, but the more
wives he swept out, the more seemed to come back.
In this particular temple the wife of the head priest became jealous
of Shunkai's earnestness and beauty. Hearing the students praise her
serious Zen made this wife squirm and itch. Finally she spread a rumor
about Shunkai and the young man who was her friend. As a consequence
he was expelled and Shunkai was removed from the temple.
"I may have made the mistake of love," thought Shunkai, "but the
priest's wife shall not remain in the temple either if my friend is to
be treated so unjustly."
Shunkai the same night with a can of kerosene set fire to the
five-hundred-year-old temple and burned it to the ground. In the
morning she found herself in the hands of the police.
A young lawyer became interested in her and endeavored to make her
sentence lighter. "Do not help me," she told him. "I might decide to
do something else which would only imprison me