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  2. Heart Sutra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_Sutra

    The Heart Sutra: A Comprehensive Guide to the Classic of Mahayana Buddhism: ... Egaku, the protagonist of the film, also chants the Heart Sūtra in Japanese.

  3. Heike Nokyo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heike_Nokyo

    Heikenoukyou. The Heike Nōkyō 平家納経, is a collection of Buddhist religious texts in Japan from the late Heian period.These texts include 33 scrolls of the Lotus Sutra, one Amitabha Sutra scroll, one Heart Sutra scroll and one prayer scroll dedicated to the Itsukushima Shrine. [1]

  4. Maka hannya haramitsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maka_hannya_haramitsu

    The Heart Sutra, seen here in a 12th-century manuscript, is the subject of Dōgen's essay and is heavily referenced. Although Dōgen's writing usually references other Buddhist works with heavy frequency, Maka hannya haramitsu only references the Heart Sutra, the Mahaprajnaparamita Sutra, and a poem about a wind bell by his teacher, Tiantong Rujing.

  5. Inari Shingyō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inari_Shingyō

    The Inari Shingyō (稲荷心経; lit. "Inari Heart Sutra") is an apocryphal sutra compiled in Japan and recited as a form of worship to the kami Inari.Before the Meiji period, Buddhism and Shinto in Japan were not mutually exclusive religions, which allowed the recitation of this text to become an established practice at shrines such as Fushimi Inari-taisha.

  6. List of National Treasures of Japan (writings: others)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_National_Treasures...

    34 handscrolls: 28 Lotus Sutra, 1 Samantabhadra Contemplation Sutra, 3 Sutra of Immeasurable Meanings, 1 Amitabha Sutra, 1 Heart Sutra, ink on paper decorated with mist and clouds in gold and silver foil, width: 28.5 cm (11.2 in) Hase-dera, Sakurai, Nara: Maharatnakuta Sutra (宝積経要品, hōshakukyō yōhon) Musō Soseki —

  7. Mindar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mindar

    Mindar (Japanese: マインダー), also known as Android Kannon Mindar, is an android preacher at the Kōdai-ji temple in Kyoto, Japan. The humanoid robot regularly gives sermons on the Heart Sutra at the 400-year-old Zen Buddhist temple. It was created to represent and embody Kannon, [a] a bodhisattva associated with compassion.

  8. Eleven-Faced Avalokitesvara Heart Dharani Sutra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eleven-Faced_Avalokitesva...

    Inside, during the repentance ceremony, eleven monks invoke the Bodhisattva and repeat the Eleven-Faced Avalokitesvara Heart Dharani Sutra for several hours, six times a day. The text introduces the heart dhāraṇī of the Bodhisattva, Avalokitesvara, as the following lines, translated by Prof. Abe indicate: [3] 世尊我此神咒有大威力。

  9. Hiromi Itō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiromi_Itō

    A common theme in these books, especially The Heart Sutra Explained, Reading the Lamentations of Divergences Falteringly Out Loud, and the 2014 book A Father's Life (父の生きる, Chichi no ikiru) about the slow decline and death of Itō's father, is the question of how life changes as one grows older and faces death.