The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (790 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
7.07Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Five houses
.
Five schools of Ch’an Buddhism (Tsung-men shih-kuei lun) during the later T’ang period and under the ‘five dynasties’—though the roots of each are usually older:
(i) 
Ts’ao-tung
(Jap.,
S
t
);
(ii) 
Lin-chi
(Jap.,
Rinzai
);
(iii) Yün-men (Jap.,
Ummon
);
(iv) 
Kuei-yang
(Jap., Igy
;
(v) Fa-yen (Jap.,
Hogen
)
.
The term was first used by
Fa-yen Wen-i
(885–958), who described (i)–(iv).
Five impediments
(Buddhist)
:
see

NA
.
Five Ks
,
Pañj Kakke. Sikh symbols.
Kh
ls
Sikhs, male and female, are identifiable by five emblems which they wear. These are called the five Ks because their Pañj
b
names all commence with ‘kakk
’ (k).
1. Ke
, uncut hair.
2. Ka
gh
, a small comb, usually of wood or ivory. This keeps the hair neat and so symbolizes controlled spirituality. Often a miniature kirp
n (see below) is embedded in the ka
gh
.
3. Kirp
n, steel sword. The kirp
n signifies courage in defence of right.
4. Ka
, steel bangle, worn on the right wrist.
5. Kachh, long shorts. These replaced the ‘dhot
’, customarily worn by men, enabling swift action in war.

Other books

On the Fence by Kasie West
An Honest Ghost by Rick Whitaker
T*Witches: Split Decision by Reisfeld, Randi, H.B. Gilmour
The Secrets of Midwives by Sally Hepworth
Turtle Terror by Ali Sparkes
The Demon's Grave by E.M. MacCallum