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A statue of Daoji
'Daoji' () (
1130 –
1207), commonly known as 'Ji Gong' (, Master Ji) or (, Living Buddha Ji Gong), was a
Buddhist monk during the
Southern Song Dynasty in
China. He was born with the name of 'Li Xiuyuan'. (李修元) Dao Ji was also called ''Hu Yin'' (Recluse from the Lake) and Elder ''Fang Yuan'' (Square Circle). Dao Ji was a monastic in the
Linji Ch'an school.
History
Born Li Xiuyuan to a former military advisor, Li Maochun, Daoji was born after his parents, who could not have children, entered a temple. Upon reaching the Hall of the Five Hundred
Arhats, the statue of
Mahakasyapa was knocked off its lotus throne, a sign that the arhat had descended to earth.
After his parents' death, he went to
Hangzhou and became a monastic at the famous
Ling Yin Temple near
Hangzhou. Even though his eccentric behavior broke the rules of the
vinaya (traditional code for monastics), it is said that Daoji was kind hearted and was always ready to lend a helping hand to ordinary people. Unlike a traditional Buddhist monk, he ate meat and drank wine. The monks, bewildered and fed up with his behavior, Daoji was expelled from the monastery. From then on, Daoji roamed the streets and helped people whenever he could.
According to legends, while cultivating in the Buddha's teaching, Daoji was said to attain magical powers. Many who noticed his eccentric yet benevolent and compassionate nature began to thing that he was an incarnate of a
bodhisattva, or as a reincarnate of an
arhat. He was recognized by the public as the incarnate of the
Taming Dragon Arhat (), one of the eighteen legendary arhats.
When Daoji died at the Jing Ci monastery on the 14th day of 5th Lunar month (17 June 1207),
Syncretic Taoism began to revere Daoji as a god from heaven and later adopted him as a
deity. Not long after that, even Buddhism began to respect his benign and compassionate nature and is involved in many classic
koans from Zen Buddhists.
The
I Kuan Tao has also adopted him into their pantheon of deities.
Depiction
Daoji can usually be seen smiling in his tattered monastic robes, and usually carries a bottle of wine in his right hand, and a fan (believed to be magical) in his left hand. He wears a hat with the Chinese character ''Fo''(佛), meaning "Buddha". He can also be seen holding his shoes in his right hand.
Daoji in popular culture

Cover to one of the ''Ji Gong'' Chinese television series.
★ The life of Daoji has also been popularized in a TV series which aired in 1993 called (in English) "Legends of Ji Gong."
★ Comedic actor and director
Stephen Chow portrayed Ji Gong in his 1993 movie “
The Mad Monk”.
External links
★
a site on Jigong
★
a review on a book on Daoji
★
Jigong features in a game
★
Website about a Jigong statue that wears the world's largest pair of sunglasses
★
The Legend of Ji Gong Television series (1997)