Jiānuòjiā 迦諾迦 (Kanaka / Kanakavatsa)
Indian Buddhist arhat, the sixth of the Shíbā lóuhàn 十八羅漢 (Eighteen Arhats) in the standard Chinese Buddhist enumeration. The Sanskrit name corresponds to Kanakavatsa (one of the sixteen-arhat group) or Kanaka in shorter form.
In Chinese Buddhist hagiography Kanaka is best known through the Cíbēi shuǐchàn 慈悲水懺 legend: he appeared to 知玄 Zhīxuán in a vision and used sānmèi fǎshuǐ 三昧法水 (“samādhi-Dharma-water”) to release the karmic debt that had manifested as a rénmiàn chuāng 人面瘡 (“human-face boil”) on Zhīxuán’s thigh. The episode is the precipitating frame-story of KR6k0199 Cíbēi shuǐchàn fǎ.