 
THE
VENERABLE MAHÆSØ SAYÆDAW
The
Venerable U Sobhana Mahæthera, better known as Mahæsø
Sayædaw, was born on 29 July 1904 to the peasant proprietors,
U Kan Htaw and Daw Shwe Ok at Seikkhun Village,
which is about seven miles to the west of the town of Shwebo in Upper Myanmar,
once the capital of the founder of the last Myanmar dynasty.
At
the age of six he began his studies at a monastic school in his village, and
at the age of twelve he was ordained a Sæma¼era, (Novice) receiving
the name of Sobhana. On reaching the age of twenty, he was ordained
a Bhikkhu on 26 November 1923. He passed the Government Pæ¹i Examinations
in all the three classes (lower, middle and highest) in the following three
successive years.
In
the fourth year of his Bhikkhu Ordination, he proceeded to Mandalay, noted for
its pre-eminence in Buddhist studies, where he continued his further education
under various monks of high scholastic fame. In the fifth year he went to Mawlamyaing
where he took up the work of teaching the Buddhist scriptures at a monastery
known as ‘Taung-waing-galay Taik Kyaung’.
In
the eighth year after his Bhikkhu ordination, he and another monk left Mawlamyaing
equipped with the bare necessities of a Bhikkhu (i.e. alms bowl, a set of three
robes, etc.), and went in search of a clear and effective method in the practice
of meditation. At Thaton he met the well-known Meditation Teacher, the Venerable
U Nærada, who is also known as ‘Mingun Jetawun Sayædaw the First’.
He then placed himself under the guidance of the Sayædaw and at once proceeded
with an intensive course of meditation.
He
had progressed so well in his practice that he was able to teach the method
effectively to his first three disciples in Seikkhun while he was on a visit
there in 1938. These three lay disciples, too, made remarkable progress. Inspired
by the example of these three, gradually as many as fifty villagers joined the
courses of intensive practice.
The
Venerable Mahæsø Sayædaw could not stay with the Venerable
Mingun Sayædaw as long as he wanted as he was urgently asked to return
to the Mawlamyaing monastery. Its aged head monk was gravely ill and passed
away not long after the Venerable Mahæsø Sayædaw’s return.
The Venerable Mahæsø Sayædaw was then asked to take charge
of the monastery and to resume teaching the resident monks. During this time
he sat for the Pæ¹i Lectureship Examination on its first introduction
on the first attempt, in 1941 he was awarded the title of ‘Sæsanadhaja
Sri Pavara Dhammæcariya’.
On
the event of the Japanese invasion, the authorities gave an evacuation order
to those living near Mawlamyaing at the Taung-waing-galay Monastery and its
neighborhood. These places were close to an airfield and hence exposed to air
attacks. For the Sayædaw this was a welcome opportunity to return to his
native Seikkhun and to devote himself whole-heartedly to his own practice of
Vipassanæ meditation and to the teaching of it to others.
He
took residence at a monastery known as Mahæ-Sø Kyaung, which
was thus called because a drum (Myanmar si) of an unusually large (mahæ)
size was housed there. From that monastery, the Sayædaw’s popular
name, Mahæsø Sayædaw, is derived.
It
was during this period, in 1945, that the Sayædaw wrote his great work,
Manual of Vipassanæ Meditation, a comprehensive and authoritative
treatise expounding both the doctrinal and the practical aspects of the Satipa¥¥hæna
method of meditation. This work of two volumes, comprising 858 pages in print,
was written by him in just seven months, while the neighbouring town of Shwebo
was at times subjected to almost daily air attacks. So far, only one chapter
of this work, the fifth, has been translated into English and is published under
the title “Practical Insight Meditation: Basic and Progressive Stages” (Buddhist
Publication Society).
It
did not take long before the reputation of Mahæsø Sayædaw
as an able teacher of Insight Meditation (vipassanæ) had spread
throughout the Shwebo-Sagaing region and attracted the attention of a prominent
and very devout Buddhist layman, Sir U Thwin, who was regarded as Myanmar’s
‘Elder Statesman’. It was his wish to promote the inner strength of Buddhism
in Myanmar by setting up a meditation centre to be guided by a meditation teacher
of proven virtue and ability. After meeting Mahæsø Sayædaw
and listening to a discourse given by him and to the meditation instructions
given to nuns in Sagaing, Sir U Thwin was in no doubt that he had found the
ideal person he was looking for.
In
1947 the Buddha Sæsana Nuggaha Organization was founded in Yangon with
Sir U Thwin as its first President and with its object the furthering of the
study (pariyatti) and practice (pa¥ipa¥ti) of Buddhism.
In 1948 Sir U Thwin donated five acres of land at Kokkine, Yangon, to the organization
for the erection of a meditation centre. It is on this site that the present
Thathana (or Sæsana) Yeiktha, i.e. “Buddhist Retreat”, is situated,
which now, however, covers an area of twenty acres, with a large number of buildings.
In
1949, the then Prime Minister of Myanmar, U Nu, and Sir U Thwin requested that
the Venerable Mahæsø Sayædaw come to Yangon and give training
in meditational practice. On 4 December 1949, the Sayædaw introduced the
first group of 25 meditators into the methodical practice of Vipassanæ
meditation. Within a few years of the Sayædaw’s arrival in Yangon, similar
meditation centres sprang up all over Myanmar, until they numbered over one
hundred. In neighbouring Theravæda countries like Thailand and Sri Lanka,
such centres were also established in which the same method was taught and practised.
According to a 1972 census, the total number of meditators trained at all these
centres (both in Myanmar and abroad) had passed the figure of seven hundred
thousand: In the East and in several Western countries as well, Vipassanæ
courses continue to be conducted.
At
the historic Sixth Buddhist Council (Cha¥¥ha Sangæyanæ)
held at Yangon for two years, culminating in the year 2500 Buddhist Era (1956),
the Venerable Mahæsø Sayædaw had an important role. He was
one of the Final Editors of the canonical texts, which were recited and thereby
approved, in the sessions of the Council. Further, he was the Questioner (Pucchaka),
that is, he had to ask the questions concerning the respective canonical texts
that were to be recited. They were then answered by an erudite monk with a phenomenal
power of memory, by the name of Venerable Vicittasæræbhivamsa. To
appreciate fully the importance of these roles, it may be mentioned that at
the First Council held one hundred days after the passing away of the Buddha,
it was the Venerable Mahæ Kassapa who put forth those introductory questions
which were then answered by the Venerable Upæli and the Venerable Ænandæ.
After
the recital of the canonical scriptures, the Tipi¥aka, had been completed
at the Sixth Council, it was decided to continue with a rehearsal of the ancient
commentaries and subcommentaries, preceded by critical editing and scrutiny.
In the large task, too, the Mahæsø Sayædaw took a prominent
part.
In
the midst of all of these tasks, he was also a prolific and scholarly writer.
He authored more than 70 writings and translations, mostly in Myanmar, with
a few in the Pæ¹i language. One of these deserves to be singled out:
his Myanmar translation of the Commentary to the Visuddhi Magga (Visuddhimagga
Mahæ Tøkæ), which, in two large volumes of the Pæ¹i
original, is even more voluminous than the work commented upon, and presents
many difficulties, linguistically and in its contents. In 1957 Mahæsø
Sayædaw was awarded the title of ‘Agga-Mahæ-Pa¼ðita’.
Yet
even all of this did not exhaust the Mahæsø Sayædaw’s remarkable
capacity for work in the cause of the Buddha-Dhamma. He undertook several travels
abroad. The first two of his tours were in preparation for the Sixth Council,
but were likewise used for preaching and teaching.
Thailand,
Cambodia and Vietnam (1952); India and Sri Lanka (1953, 1959) Japan (1957);
Indonesia (1959); America, Hawaii, England, Continental Europe (1979); England,
Sri Lanka, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand (1980); Nepal, India (1981)
In
the midst of all these manifold and strenuous activities, he never neglected
his own meditative life which had enabled him to give wise guidance to those
instructed by him. His outstanding vigour of body and mind and his deep dedication
to the Dhamma sustained him through a life of 78 years.
On
14 August 1982, the Venerable Mahæsø Sayædaw succumbed to
a sudden and severe heart attack which he had suffered the night before. Yet
on the evening of the 13th, he had still given an introductory explanation to
a group of new meditators.
The
Venerable Mahæsø Sayædaw was one of the very rare personalities
in whom there was a balanced and high development of both profound erudition
linked with a keen intellect, and deep and advanced meditative experience. He
was also able to teach effectively both Buddhist thought and Buddhist practice.
His
long career of teaching through the spoken and printed word had a beneficial
impact on many hundreds of thousands in the East and the West. His personal
stature and his life’s work rank him among the great figures of contemporary
Buddhism.
WRITINGS
OF THE VENERABLE MAHÆSØ SAYÆDAW IN ENGLISH TRANSLATION
(Selection)
The Progress of Insight through the Stages of Purification. With the Pæ¹i
text. (1)
Practical Insight Meditation. Basic and Progressive Stages. (1)
Practical Vipassanæ Meditational Exercises. (2)
Purpose of Practising Kamma¥¥hæna Meditation. (2)
The Wheel of Dhamma (Dhammacakappavattana Sutta). (2)
(1) Buddhist Publication Society, Kandy, Sri Lanka.
(2) Buddha Sæsana Nuggaha Organization, 16 Sæsana Yeiktha Road,
Yangon, Myanmar.
 
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