This program discusses
the possibility of
breatharianism, or living
without eating food, and
is not a full instruction.
For your safety,
please do not attempt to
cease eating without
proper expert guidance.
For your safety,
please do not attempt to
cease eating without
proper expert guidance.
Today’s Between
Master and Disciples –
“The Venerable
Master Guang Qin:
Food-free
through Samadhi” –
will be presented
in Formosan with
subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Bulgarian, Chinese,
Czech-Slovak,
English, French,
German, Hindi,
Hungarian, Indonesian,
Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Malay,
Mongolian, Persian,
Polish, Portuguese,
Punjabi, Russian,
Spanish, and Thai.
In scriptures,
the human body
is often referred to
as the temple of God.
Yet, it is quite
an uncommon privilege
for any soul to
attain this sacred abode
that houses the Divine,
as it is truly a blessing
to be reborn
as a human being.
On several occasions,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
has spoken about the rarity
of this phenomenon:
To be reincarnated in
the human world is hard.
You have to have
enough Human Quality.
You have to have
affinity with the parents
and with the society,
with the people around
which you are born.
Very difficult.
To be a human,
you need some merit.
You have done
something good
in the past
in order to be able
to pick a human birth.
As a living temple of God,
the human body
is fully equipped
with miraculous wonders
that can be awakened
in those who
are spiritually conscious
and have complete faith
in the Creator of all life.
Inedia,
Latin for “fasting,”
is the human ability
to live without food.
Since time immemorial,
there have always been
individuals who
can sustain themselves
on prana,
or the vital life force.
Through the grace of
the Providence, inediates,
people who follow
a food-free lifestyle,
can draw the energy
from nature
to nourish themselves:
They live on the chi
from the ground,
or from the forest,
and from the sun
and from the air.
They make use
of all that.
Or they live on love,
on faith alone.
These individuals are
known as breatharians(pranarians or inediates),
solarians, or waterians,
and they come from
all walks of life, from
different cultures, and
all corners of the world.
Indeed, the possibilities
and miracles in this life
as our benevolent Creator
has designed for us
are endless;
we only need to connect
within to recognize
our abounding largess
as God’s children.
Supreme Master Ching Hai
has lovingly
recommended
a weekly series on
Supreme Master Television
to introduce
those individuals
of the past and present
who have chosen to
live food-free on Earth.
May their spiritual stories
enthrall you;
may hearts be opened,
and horizons be expanded.
We now invite you
to join us for
our program entitled,
“The Venerable Master
Guang Qin: Food-free
through Samadhi,”
on Between Master
and Disciples.
Since the time
of Shakyamuni Buddha,
Buddhist monks and nuns
have followed
the tradition of leading
an ascetic lifestyle,
renouncing
material possessions
and attachments to attain
perfect wisdom and
achieve enlightenment.
Their life is dedicated
to the spiritual upliftment
of humankind,
as well as their own
personal cultivation.
Aside from
the daily activities,
most of their time
is spent in meditation.
Absorbed in meditation,
the monks or nuns
oftentimes forgo food
for days or months,
sometimes years,
as is the case with
Ram Bahadur Bomjan,
the Buddha Boy
from Nepal,
who at one time went
food-free for four years
while deep in samadhi.
The inner bliss
of meditation far exceeds
the temporal satisfaction
of physical food.
The renowned Venerable
Master Guang Qin
of Formosa (Taiwan)
was no different.
He had been known
to live without food
and drink while engaged
in deep meditation.
During his one-year retreat,
he didn’t eat or drink.
It was true.
Many of his disciples
were with him at that time.
Let us now retrace
the steps of history
and explore the life
of one of
Formosa’s (Taiwan) most
revered Buddhist monks.
The Venerable
Master Guang Qin
was born in 1892
in Zhangzhou,
Fujian Province,
18 or 19 years after
the Guang Xu Emperor
ascended the throne.
He was born
into a very poor family.
Both of his parents
were farmers.
When he was
3 or 4 years old, he was
given to another family
to be raised
as an adopted son.
For health reasons,
his foster mother
had always kept
a vegetarian diet.
Therefore, ever since
the age of three or four,
when he was adopted,
Master Guang Qin
had been a vegetarian.
When his foster father
passed away
when he was 11,
he was sent
to Chengtian Zen
Monastery to be a monk.
At the age of 27,
the Venerable
Master Guang Qin
was ordained as a monk
at the Chengtian
Zen Monastery in China.
And here he learned
many valuable lessons.
On one occasion
just after he had taken
his monastic vows, he,
along with the other monks,
had been working hard
in the field, and
it was time for lunch.
The Venerable Master
Guang Qin was tired
and hungry and began
to follow the other monks
to the dining hall;
however, he was stopped
by an elderly monk who
asked him to put away
the tools before eating.
The Venerable Master
Guang Qin was
overcome with anger
and self-pity and decided
to leave the monastery.
After walking
for a short distance,
he realized that running
away from the monastery
would not be conducive
to his spiritual progress.
He put aside his emotions,
thinking, “I came here
to get liberation
from life and death.
Today, I only suffered
a little bit
and got depressed.”
With this realization,
he quickly returned
to the monastery,
put away the tools,
and confessed
to the elderly monk.
The wise monk forgave
him and offered his advice,
“Eat what people
don’t eat,
do what people don’t do;
someday
you will understand.”
Eventually, in 1946
the Venerable Master
Guang Qin arrived
in Formosa (Taiwan).
He had lived
in many places
in Formosa (Taiwan).
According
to some sources,
in his early years
he traveled to many places
and spent some time
in the Fairy Cave
in Keelung.
The environment
of the cave is similar
to that of the Chengtian
Zen Monastery
located in the mountains.
Later, he came to Taipei.
While in Formosa (Taiwan),
the Venerable Master
Guang Qin
became known as the
“Fruitarian Master.”
Why did people call
Master Guang Qin the
“Fruitarian Master”
in Formosa?
What’s the origin
of the story?
He stayed in Chengtian
Zen Monastery
for many years
after he returned
from Southeast Asia.
Later, he took with him
5 kilograms of rice
and went to live in a cave
in Qin Yuan Mountain
to practice spiritually.
This cave was about
10 kilometers
from the Chengtian
Zen Monastery.
He was 37 years old
at that time.
Soon, he finished all
5 kilograms of rice and
had nothing left to eat.
Since he was in a retreat
in the cave, he couldn’t
go out to beg for alms,
so he started to eat
wild fruits and vegetables
on the mountain.
It was said that monkeys
on the mountain
would come
to offer fruits to him.
One of my
Buddhist masters who
visited Master Guang Qin
years ago told me that
he once asked
Master Guang Qin,
“Why do people call you
the ‘Fruitarian Master’?”
He said that
Master Guang Qin
was very modest about it.
He didn’t brag
about the title
and simply said that
he ran out of rice,
so he had no choice
but to eat fruits.
He lived in the cave
for eight years and fruits
became his diet.
The Buddhist master said
that Master Guang Qin
didn’t try to be different
from other people;
he did it because
he had nothing else to eat
except fruits.
Later, he got used
to the fruit diet.
Much lesser known
was the fact that,
at one time,
the Venerable Master
Guang Qin chose
to give up food,
living solely on prana,
or the cosmic energy.
How long did you
practice with
Master Guang Qin?
Five years.
Five years.
Yes, five years.
We know
that Master Guang Qin
used to enter
a deep samadhi state,
when he would
stop taking any food.
During the time
you were with him,
what was the longest time
he remained in the state
of samadhi?
When he turned 80,
he started to keep silence.
He did come out
to let people see him
and to bless people,
but he didn’t talk
during that period.
When he was
about 80 years old,
he stopped eating for a year
because he didn’t feel
like eating.
Many disciples
pleaded with him, asking
him to take care of himself
and to eat something
to keep his body alive.
So, slowly he started
to drink some liquid and
slowly resumed his diet.
But he only ate fruit.
and drank liquid.
The Venerable Master
Guang Qin lived
a long and happy life.
He was still vibrant
and sharp even when
he was well into his 90s.
At the age of 95,
a group of his disciples
gathered around him,
reciting the name
of Amitabha Buddha.
The Venerable Master
Guang Qin recited
the name continuously
with ease, whereas
the disciples had to take
turns to recite with him,
losing their voices
and feeling pain
in their chests.
One disciple considered
the fact that
the Venerable Master
Guang Qin hadn’t eaten
for nearly a month and
worried that he might not
be able to
have the energy.
So he suggested,
“Master, we’ll recite,
you just need to listen.”
But the Venerable Master
Guang Qin opened
his eyes and said firmly,
“Everyone recites
for himself.
Everyone has to get
beyond death on his own.”
In your opinion,
what was Master Guang Qin’s
view of life?
I think he was a very
humble person.
He was diligent
in his spiritual practice.
He had always
told his disciples to recite
Buddha’s name
sincerely and diligently.
His last words,
which have become
well-known, were:
“There is no coming
and no going,” and
“Nothing is happening.”
It shows that he was
a very humble person.
For example,
about his fruit diet,
he could have told people,
“I eat fruits because
I want to
practice spiritually.”
He could have
told people so,
but instead he just said,
“It is because I had
no other food to eat
except fruits.”
From this example,
we can see that
he was a very humble
spiritual practitioner,
who just
practiced diligently.
That’s why he reached
such a high level
and was well-respected.
He was so humble
and ordinary.
He taught people
to recite the Buddha’s
name sincerely.
His spiritual practice
reflected his
responsible way of life.
The Venerable Master
Guang Qin passed away
in 1986 at the age of 95.
His simple lifestyle
and loving examples
of self cultivation
have touched the hearts
of thousands of people.
After his passing,
his devoted students
collected his teachings
and published them
in a book entitled,
“Monk Guang Qin’s
Aphorisms.”
Currently,
his sariras, or relics,
are on displayed as part
of the Maitreya Project
Heart Relic Tour.
Cherished viewers,
we appreciate
your loving company
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master
Television for
Good People, Good Works,
coming up next
after Noteworthy News.
God bless,
and farewell for now.
"Do not be pranic beings
but living beings
who find their way step
by step, at every step."
So that's basically
how I got to eating prana
for a decade now.
Tune in to
Supreme Master Television
on Sunday, November 14,
for our program,
“Reine-Claire Lussier:
Prana For a Busy Lifestyle,”
on Between Master
and Disciples.
Tune in to
Supreme Master Television
today for our program,
“Reine-Claire Lussier:
Prana For a Busy Lifestyle,”
on Between Master
and Disciples.