Gido Sushin
Gido Sushin, leading light of the Zen Rinzai sect, was a master of poetry and prose.
He came from Tosa on the island of Shikoku where he began traditional studies of Confucian and Buddhist literature.
His devotional inclinations were motivated when he saw the brutal death of a clan member.
Like others, he took his first vows on Mount Hiei.
Gido's life was changed forever by a visit to the preeminent Zen master Muso Soseki in 1341. He became the master's assistant after his own fruitless pilgrimage to China.
In 1380 Gido was invited by the reigning shogun, Yoshimitsu, to live in his household in Kyoto. Gido's last years passed instructing Yoshimitsu in Confucian and Buddhist disciplines.
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