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Features: Levy County History
August 21st, 2003

Features: A Celebration of Life
August 21st, 2003

Features: Colonel Maurice "Buzz" Healy Retires from Cedar Key School
August 19th, 2003

Features: Local Society to Compile Pictorial History of Levy County and it`s People
August 19th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
August 14th, 2003

Features: The Symbiotic Relationship of Art and Artist - Kevin Hipe
August 13th, 2003

Features: World Wide Genealogy Resources Will Be Presented at the Levy County Quilt Musuem
August 12th, 2003

Features: Railroad Exhibit Opens at Museum
August 10th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
August 7th, 2003

Features: The Symbiotic Relationship of Art and Artist - Kevin Hipe
August 6th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
August 1st, 2003

Features: Trains and Seminole Indians Presentation at the C.K. Historical Society Museum
July 29th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
July 24th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
July 17th, 2003

Features: Living History Will Be Presented at Levy County Quilt Musuem
July 14th, 2003

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Zen Moment

Zen Moment

Robin McClary

Publishing the Sutras

Tetsugen, a devotee of Zen in Japan, decided to publish the sutras, which at the time were available only in Chinese. The books were to be printed with wood blocks in an edition of seven thousand copies, a tremendous undertaking.

Tetsugen began by traveling and collecting donations for this purpose. A few sympathizers would give him a hundred pieces of gold, but most of the time he received only small coins. He thanked each donor with equal gratitude. After ten years Tetsugen had enough money to begin his task.

It happened that at the time the Uji River overflowed. Famine followed. Tetsugen took the funds he had collected for the books and spent them to save others from starvation. The he began again his work of collecting.

Several years afterwards an epidemic spread over the country. Tetsugen again gave away what he had collected, to help his people.

For the third time he started his work, and after twenty years his wish was fulfilled. The printing blocks, which produced the first edition of sutras, can be seen today in the Obaku monastery in Kyoto.

The Japanese tell their children that Tetsugen made three sets of sutras, and that the first two invisible sets surpass even the last.

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