Chao-hwei
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shih Chao-hwei | |
|---|---|
釋昭慧 | |
| Born | Lu Qiongzhao 28 May 1957 |
| Citizenship | Taiwan |
| Alma mater | National Taiwan Normal University |
| Occupation | Nun |
| Years active | 1980–present |
| Organization | Hongshi Buddhist Academy |
| Honours | Niwano Peace Prize (2021) |
Chao-hwei (Chinese: 釋昭慧; pinyin: Shì Zhāohuì; born 28 May 1957) is a Taiwanese nun. Born Lu Qiongzhao (盧瓊昭; Lú Qióngzhāo) to Chinese parents living in Burma, she and her family moved to Taiwan in 1965. While studying Chinese literature at National Taiwan Normal University, she became ordained as a Buddhist nun, receiving the Dharma name Chao-hwei.[1] Chao-hwei has gone on to become actively involved in various social movements in Taiwan, including publicly supporting feminism and same-sex marriage and opposing the legalisation of gambling; she has also called for the reform within Buddhism, including the abolition of the Eight Garudhammas.[2] In 2021, she received the Niwano Peace Prize.[3] She is currently a professor of religious studies at Hsuan Chuang University.[1]
Chao-hwei was born on 28 May 1957 in Yangon in what was then the Union of Burma. She was the second of four children born to ethnic Chinese parents Lu Huangming and Liang Renyun. In 1965, due to a rise of anti-Chinese sentiment in Burma during the rule of Ne Win, Chao-hwei and her family moved to Taiwan.[4]
After graduating from Zhongshan Girls' High School, Chao-hwei began studying Chinese literature at National Taiwan Normal University in Taipei. During her second year of study, she participated in a summer camp organised by Fo Guang Shan, a Buddhist community, following which she began reading books about Buddhism. During the summer holidays of her third year, Chao-hwei trained as a nun under Master Xiangyun at the Xiangguang Hermitage in Banqiao. Chao-hwei graduated university in 1979, following which she began teaching at a high school in Taoyuan.[1]
As of 2021, Chao-hwei is a lecturer of religious studies at Hsuan Chuang University in Hsinchu.[1]
Theology
As a nun, Chao-hwei was a disciple of Yin Shun, becoming an important member of his Buddhist school of thought. An analysis of Yin Shun's philosophy in The Dictionary of Taiwanese Buddhism identified Chao-hwei as represented one of the three main branches of thought within the Yin Shun School, alongside two other branches represented by Master Shi and Master Hongyin. Chao-hwei went on to establish the Buddhist Hongshi Academy, which teaches this branch of thought; notable disciples of Chao-hwei have included Xingguang, Chuanfa, Qingde and Jian'an.[5]