Jee Sin Sim See
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (November 2014) |
至善禪師 | |
Gee Seen Sim See | |
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Pinyin: | Zhì Shàn Chán Shī |
Cantonese Yale: | Ji3 Sin6 Sim3 Si1 |
Literally | "Gee Seen, Zen teacher" |
Jee Sin Sim See, Gee Seen Sim See or "Monk Zhi Shan" (pinyin: Zhì Shàn Chán Shī; Cantonese Yale: Ji3 Sin6 Sim3 Si1; lit. 'Gee Seen', 'Zen teacher') is said to have been one of the legendary Five Elders, survivors of the destruction of the Shaolin Temple by the Qing Dynasty (1644–1912). He is linked to many southern Chinese martial arts including the five major family styles of Hung, Lau and Choy gar, Lee gar and Mok gar, Ng Ga Kuen/Ng Gar King and Wing Chun.
The stories disagree as to whether Gee Seen was a survivor of the destruction of the original Shaolin Temple in Henan or the Southern Shaolin Temple in Fujian. In what may be an attempt to reconcile this discrepancy, some stories say that, when the Henan temple was destroyed, Gee Seen fled to the Fujian temple, only to have to flee again when the latter was destroyed as well.
Others say that Gee Seen and the other Five Elders escaped the burning of the temple at Quanzhou in Fujian. They went their separate ways and Gee Seen built the second southern temple at Jiulian Shan (Nine Lotus Mountain), also in Fujian. Gee Seen was a revolutionary who planned to overthrow the Qing Government. However two of the Five Elders, Pak Mei and Fung Dou Dak joined forces with the Qing army and destroyed the second southern Shaolin Temple with a huge army outnumbering the monks 10 to 1. Gee Seen, the Abbott of the temple was killed by Pak Mei in a duel during the attack. [1]
See also
References
- ^ "Answers to Readers' Questions and Answers — February 2001 (Part 3)". shaolin.org. Retrieved 20 January 2016.