#Hawk Mission to Spread the Concept of Freedom Red Envelopes 🧧🧧🧧🧧🧧🧧🧧🧧🧧🧧🧧
The popularity of the term 'freedom' in Chinese is attributed to the prevalence of Buddhist texts translated into Chinese, and there are also many related expressions and anecdotes in ancient literature and philosophy. Below is an example regarding freedom:
In the Buddhist classics, the 'freedom': In the "Sutra of the Prince of Mourning" translated by An Shigao during the Eastern Han Dynasty, it mentions 'to be born into poverty, or to be a servant, wishing not to be free', referring here to personal freedom. In the "Sutra of the Six Perfections" translated by Kang Senghui of Eastern Wu, it states 'When the king governs his country, at sunrise he distributes alms, within four hundred miles, people, carts, horses, and treasures have the freedom to eat and drink, the benefits are spread in all directions', which refers to the freedom of wealth. In the "Sutra of the Buddha's Nirvana" translated by Bai Fazhu during the Western Jin Dynasty, it is recorded that after the Buddha's nirvana, a monk said 'Now that the World Honored One has passed away, we are free, is this not joyful?', where freedom refers to breaking away from the constraints and control of others. $BTC