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Monkey King
Most Chinese are fascinated with the Monkey King, all prowess and wisdom, a
protagonist of the novel written by Wu Cheng'en (1500?-1582) - Pilgrimage to
the West , which is one of the renowned classical Chinese novels about an
allegorical rendition of the journey, mingled with Chinese fables, fairy tables,
legends, superstitions, popular beliefs, monster stories as well as whatever the
author could find in the Taoist and Buddhist religions.
It was based on a true story of a famous Chinese monk, Xuan Zang (602-664).
After years of trials and tribulations, he traveled on foot to what is today
India, the birthplace of Buddhism, to seek for the Sutra, the Buddhist holy
book. When he returned to China, or the Great Tang as was called that time, he
started to translate the sutras into Chinese, thus making a great contribution
to the development of Buddhism in China. Monkey King is an indeed rebellious
extraordinary being, born out of a rock and fertilized by the grace of Heaven.
Being extremely smart and capable, he learned all the
magic tricks and kungfu
from a master Taoist, being able to transform himself into seventy-two different
images such as a tree, a bird, a beast of prey or a bug as small as a mosquito
so as to sneak into an enemy's belly to fight him inside or out. Using clouds as
a vehicle he can travel 180,000 miles a single somersault and a huge iron bar
that supposedly serves as ballast of the seas and can expand or shrink at its
owner's command as his favorite weapon in his later feats. He claims to be the
king in defiance of the only authority over heaven, the seas, the earth and the
subterranean world -- Yu Huang Da Di, or the "Great Emperor of Jade" in Chinese.
That act of high treason, coupled with complaints from the masters of the four
seas and the hell, invites the relentless scourge of the heavenly army.
After many showdowns, the emperor had to offer the monkey an official title
to appease him. Enraged he revolted, fighting all his way back earth to resume
his own claim as a king after learning that the position he held was nothing but
a stable keeper. Eventually, the heavenly army subdued him, only after many a
battle, with the help of all the god warriors. However, having a bronze head and
iron shoulders, all methods of execution failed and the monkey dulled many a
sword inflicted upon him. As a last resort, the emperor commanded that he be
burned in the furnace where his Taoist minister Tai Shang Lao Jun refines his
pills of immortality. Instead of killing him, the fire and smoke added to the
monkey a pair of fiery golden crystal eyes that can see through what people
normally cannot. He fought his way down again.
Finally, under Buddha's help, the monkey was suppressed under a great
mountain known as the Mount of Five Fingers and he could not move. Only five
hundred years later, there came to his rescuer, the Tang Monk, Xuan Zang, whom
we mentioned at the beginning of the story. The Monkey King become the disciple
of the monk and escort him with Buddha's arrange to insure that he could make
for the West to get the sutras, along with two other disciples they later came
across, (actually also arranged by the Buddha). One is the humorous and not
uncourageous pig transgressed from a heavenly general for his crime of
assaulting a fairy, and the other a used-to-be sea monster. There started the
four's stormy journey west which was packed with actions and adventures that
brought into full play the puissance of the monks' disciples, the Monkey King in
particular.
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