Monday, December 12, 2011

Thw World of Buddhism: Unity in Diversity

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Professor Y. Karunadasa delivered an erudite lecture on the 3rd of November 2011 on the topic ' THE WORLD OF BUDDHISM: UNITY IN DIVERSITY' to mark the occasion of the commemoration of the 112th birth anniversary of Professor G.P. Malalasekara, eminent Buddhist Scholar, in the Auditorium of the All Ceylon Buddhist Congress. The function was organized by the World Fellowship of Buddhists, Sri Lanka Centre. The WFB was founded by Professor Malalasekara in 1950.

Prof. Y. Karunadasa graduated with First Class Honours from the University of Ceylon in 1958 and obtained his Ph.D. from the University of London in 1963. He is a Profesor Emeritus of the University of Kelaniya and a former director of its Postgraduate Institute of Pali and Buddhist Studies. He has served as a Visiting Professor at the University of London's School of Oriental and African Studies, as Numata Chair Professor at the University of Calgary, and as Visiting Professor at the Universtiy of Toronto. Currently he is a Visiting Profesor at the University of Hong Kong.
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THE WORLD OF BUDDHISM: UNITY IN DIVERSITY

The vision that inspired Professor G. P. Malalasekara in establishing

the World Fellowship of Buddhists

by

Professor Y. Karunadasa

As we all know, during its long history of over 2500 years, Buddhism gave rise to a large number of schools and sub-schools, sects and sub-sects. Today we find them all comprised within three great Buddhist traditions prevailing in three major regions in the continent of Asia: Theravada Buddhism in South Asia, Vajrayana Buddhism in North Asia, and Mahayana Buddhism in East Asia.

It is worth examining why what the Buddha taught gave rise to a wide variety of Buddhist schools and sects? One reason that comes to mind is the clearly expressed idea that the Dhamma, the corpus of the Buddha’s teachings, is a means to an end and not an end unto itself. In his well known discourse on the Parable of the Raft, the Buddha compared his Dhamma to a raft. It is for the purpose of crossing over and not to be grasped as a theory. The Dhamma has only instrumental value. Its value is relative, relative to the realization of the goal.

As an extension to this idea, it also came to be recognized that the Dhamma as a means can be presented in many ways, from many different perspectives. There is no one fixed way of presenting the Dhamma which is valid for all times and climes. The idea behind this is that what is true and therefore what conforms to actuality need not be repeated in the same way as a holy hymn or a sacred mantra. The Dhamma is not something esoteric and mystical. As the Buddha says, the more one elaborates it, the more it shines (vivato virocati).

In connection with this what we need to remember here is that the Dhamma is not actuality as such. Rather, it is a description of actuality. It is a conceptual-theoretical model presented through the symbolic medium of language. There can be many such conceptual-theoretical models depending on the different perspectives one adopts in presenting the Dhamma. However, the validity of each will be determined by its ability to lead us to the goal: from bondage to freedom, from ignorance to wisdom, from our present human predicament to full emancipation.

We find this situation beautifully illustrated in a Chinese Buddhist saying that the Dhamma is like a finger pointing to the moon. This analogy has many implications. One implication is that any finger can be pointed to the moon. What matters is not the finger as such but whether it is properly pointed so that we can see the moon. Another implication is that if we keep on looking only at the finger we will not see the moon. Nor can we see the moon without looking at the finger, either.

We can therefore approach different schools of Buddhist thought as different fingers pointing to the same moon. If we approach them in this manner then we need to identify their common denominator, the most fundamental doctrine that unites them all? This is a matter on which we don’t have to speculate. For the Buddha himself as well as all schools of Buddhist thought identify it as the Buddhist doctrine of the denial of soul/self/ego (anatta).

From its very beginning Buddhism was fully aware that the doctrine of the denial of soul was not shared by any other contemporary religion or philosophy. We find this clearly articulated in an early Buddhist discourse. Here the Buddha refers to four kinds of clinging: clinging to sense-pleasures, clinging to speculative views, clinging to mere rites and rituals in the belief that they lead to liberation, and the clinging to the notion of self. The discourse goes on to say there could be other religious teachers who would recognize only some of the four kinds of clinging, and that at best they might teach the overcoming of the first three forms of clinging. What they cannot teach, because they have not comprehended this for themselves, is the overcoming of clinging to the notion of self, for this, the last type of clinging, is the subtlest and the most elusive of the group. The title given to this discourse is the Shorter Discourse on the Lion’s Roar. Clearly it is intended to show that the Buddha’s declaration of the denial of soul is “bold and thunderous like a veritable lion’s roar in the spiritual domain” (Ven. Bhikkhu Nanamoli).

That the notion of no-self is the most crucial doctrine that separates Buddhism from all other religions came to be recognized in the subsequent schools of Buddhist thought as well. Acarya Yasomitra, a savant of the Sautrantika School of Buddhism (5th c. C. E.) categorically asserts: “In the whole world there is no other religious teacher who proclaims a doctrine of non-self”. We find this same idea echoed by Acariya Buddhaghosa, the great commentator of Theravada Buddhism when he says: “The knowledge of non-self is the province of none but a Buddha” (Vibhanga Commentary, 5th c. C. E.).

If there is one doctrine which is unique to Buddhism, it is the doctrine of non-self. If there is a doctrine which is unanimously accepted by all Buddhist schools, whether they come under Theravada, Vajrayana, or Mahayana, it is the doctrine of non-self. If there is a doctrine which, while uniting all schools of Buddhist thought, separates Buddhism from all other religions and philosophies, it is again the doctrine of non-self. The whole world of Buddhist thought is, in fact, a sustained critique of the belief in self, the belief that there is a separate individualized self entity which is impervious to all change.

If we can thus establish the transcendental unity of Buddhism on the basis of the Buddhist doctrine of non-self, we can also establish it on the basis of Buddhism’s final goal as well. When Maha Pajapati Gotami, the foster mother of the Buddha, wanted to know how one could separate the Dhamma from what is not the Dhamma, the Buddha said: Whatever that leads to the cessation of greed (raga), aversion (dosa), and delusion (moha) is the Dhamma, and that whatever that leads away from it is not the Dhamma. The Buddha compares greed, aversion, and delusion to three fires with which the unenlightened living beings are constantly being consumed. In point of fact, the final goal of Buddhism, which is Nibbana, is not some kind of ineffable mystical experience, but to lead a life free from greed, aversion , and delusion.

This, in fact, is the goal common to all schools of Buddhist thought, although it came to be described in different ways and from different perspectives.

What we have observed so far should show why what the Buddha taught gave rise to a wide variety of Buddhist schools and interpretative traditions in the continent of Asia. Another question that arises here is why what the Buddha taught came to be communicated through many Asian languages and dialects. Apart from the well known classical languages such as Pali, Prakrit, Sanskrit, Chinese, Tibetan and Mongolian, in the lost civilization of Central Asia alone Buddhist manuscripts in about twelve indigenous languages have been discovered. The reason for this “multi-lingualism” is that from its very beginning Buddhism did not entertain the notion of a “holy language.” In point of fact, when it was suggested to the Buddha that his teachings should be rendered into the elitist language of Sanskrit, the Buddha did not endorse it and enjoined that each individual could learn the Dhamma in his/her own language (sakaya-nirutti).

From the Buddhist perspective, thus, the Dhamma as well as the language through which it is communicated, are both means to an end, not an end unto itself. The net result of this situation is what we would like to introduce as Buddhist pluralism, a pluralism that we can see whether we examine Buddhism as a religion, as a philosophy, or as a culture.

One area where we can see Buddhist pluralism is in the very idea of the Buddhahood. According to Buddhism there had been a number of Buddhas in the remote past and there will be a number of Buddhas in the distant future. The idea behind this is that Buddhahood is not the monopoly of one individual, but is accessible to all. What is more, the idea of a number of Buddhas ensures continuity of the opportunities for emancipation for all living beings at all times. Buddhism recognizes the immensity of time and the vastness of space and the existence of an countless number of world-systems. Considered in this cosmic context, to speak of one Buddha for all time and space is, to say the least, extremely parochial.

Another area where we can see Buddhist pluralism is in the Buddhist canonical literature (Tripitaka). If a Buddhist were asked, where do we get the teachings of the Buddha, he would say it is in the Buddhist Canon (Tripitaka). Since there are four Buddhist Canons, one in Pali, one in Chinese, and one in Tibetan, and one in Mongolian, he will have to specify to which Buddhist Canon he is referring. If he were to say, for example, it is the Pali Canon, again the reply is not specific enough because the Pali Canon has many volumes containing the teachings of the Buddha. If he is asked to specify one particular volume or book in the Pali Canon which contains all Buddhist teachings in a summary form he will fail to identify such a volume or book. Buddhism could be the only religion with no single canonical work which contains all what the Buddha taught.

Another aspect of Buddhist pluralism we can also see in the Sangha, the fraternity of monks and nuns. The Sangha, as we all know, is the Buddhist monastic organization. It could perhaps be the oldest social organization in the world, having the oldest constitution. If the Buddhist monastic organization exhibits many elements of pluralism the reason for this is that it was not intended to be a pyramid-like organization, a hierarchical organization, where at the top you find a supreme head. It is not centralized. Its principle of organization is not perpendicular and vertical, but horizontal and linear. This allows for diversity within the Sangha organization as we find it in Japan, China, Tibet, Mongolia, Sri Lanka and other Theravada countries.

The best example of what we call Buddhist pluralism we can see in Buddhist culture. What we want to stress here is that when Buddhism was introduced to a particular country it did not level down that country’s cultural diversity in order to develop some kind of mono-culture. The various Buddhist countries in the continent of Asia bear evidence to this. The Buddhist culture in Japan, for example, is different from the Buddhist culture in Thailand, and both from that of Sri Lanka.

What we need to remember here is that Buddhism is not a culture-bound religion. Like a bird that leaves one cage and flies to another, Buddhism can go from one country to another leaving behind its cultural baggage.

If Buddhism did not level down cultural diversity, the main reason for this is that Buddhism’s social philosophy does not unnecessarily interfere with the personal lives of its followers. We never hear of a Buddhist Food, a Buddhist Medicine, a Buddhist Dress, or a Buddhist Marriage, or a Buddhist way of disposing the dead. Why? Because these are things that change from time to time and from country to country. Therefore Buddhism does not superimpose on the individual a rigid and totalitarian social philosophy which is valid for all time.

In concluding this speech we would like to draw your attention to another important aspect of Buddhist thinking. It is that as a religion Buddhism does not say that what is good and noble is confined to the words of the Buddha. In this connection a Mahayana Buddhist book says: “What is said by the Buddha is well-said. What is well-said is said by the Buddha.” The first sentence is clear. What the second sentence means is that if there is anything well-said in any other religion, philosophy, or ideology, that too is said by the Buddha, in the sense that Buddhism endorses all that is good and noble from wherever it comes.

End


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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

The Five Buddhist Precepts

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Buddhist precepts and Mindfulness Trainings have been circulated by a Sri Lankan Catholic named Kingsley Abraham who is currently studying the Buddhist Teachings.

May he realize the Noble Dhamma and become free of all suffering as soon as possible.

With Metta,
Mahinda


From Kingsley Abraham:


The five precepts (pansil) are a condensed form of Buddhist ethical practice.


They are often compared with the ten commandments of Christianity. However, the precepts are different in two respects:

First, they are to be taken as recommendations, not commandments. This means the individual is encouraged to use his/her own intelligence to apply these rules in the best possible way.

Second, it is the spirit of the precepts -not the text- that counts, hence, the guidelines for ethical conduct must be seen in the larger context of the Eightfold Path.


Here are the five precepts:

I undertake to observe the precept to abstain from ...

1. ...harming living beings.

2. ...taking things not freely given.

3. ...sexual misconduct.

4. ...false speech.

5. ...intoxicating drinks and drugs causing heedlessness.

(The above is from the book The Word of the Buddha, authored by Nyanatolika Maha Thera, The Buddhist Publication Society, 1971)


The Five Mindfulness Trainings -

(By Thich Nhat Hanh Thero, European Institute of Applied Buddhism)

(1) First Training-

Aware of the suffering caused by the destruction of life, I am committed to cultivating compassion and learning ways to protect the lives of people, animals, plants, and minerals. I am determined not to kill, not to let others kill, and not to condone any act of killing in the world, in my thinking, and in my way of life.

(2) Second Training-

Aware of the suffering caused by exploitation, social injustice, stealing, and oppression, I am committed to cultivate loving kindness and learn ways to work for the well-being of people, animals, plants, and minerals. I am committed to practice generosity by sharing my time, energy, and material resources with those who are in real need. I am determined not to steal and not to possess anything that should belong to others. I will respect the property of others, but I will prevent others from profiting from human suffering or the suffering of other species on Earth.

(3) Third Training-

Aware of the suffering caused by sexual misconduct, I am committed to cultivate responsibility and learn ways to protect the safety and integrity of individuals, couples, families, and society. I am determined not to engage in sexual relations without love and a long-term commitment. To preserve the happiness of myself and others, I am determined to respect my commitments and the commitments of others. I will do everything in my power to protect children from sexual abuse and to prevent couples and families from being broken by sexual misconduct.

(4) Fourth Training-

Aware of the suffering caused by unmindful speech and the inability to listen to others, I am committed to cultivate loving speech and deep listening in order to bring joy and happiness to others and relieve others of their suffering. Knowing that words can create happiness or suffering, I am committed to learn to speak truthfully, with words that inspire self-confidence, joy, and hope. I am determined not to spread news that I do not know to be certain and not to criticise or condemn things of which I am not sure. I will refrain from uttering words that can cause division or discord, or that can cause the family or the community to break. I will make all efforts to reconcile and resolve all conflicts, however small.

(5) Fifth Training-

Aware of the suffering caused by unmindful consumption, I am committed to cultivate good health, both physical and mental, for myself, my family, and my society by practising mindful eating, drinking, and consuming. I am committed to ingest only items that preserve peace, well-being, and joy in my body, in my consciousness, and in the collective body and consciousness of my family and society. I am determined not to use alcohol or any other intoxicant or to ingest foods or other items that contain toxins, such as certain TV programs, magazines, books, films, and conversations. I am aware that to damage my body or my consciousness with these poisons is to betray my ancestors, my parents, my society, and future generations. I will work to transform violence, fear, anger, and confusion in myself and in society by practising a diet for myself and for society. I understand that a proper diet is crucial for self-transformation and for the transformation of society.

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Monday, November 28, 2011

UT: Dec 1 & 2 "Toru Funayama Lectures"

In case you are interested:

The University of Toronto / McMaster University Yehan Numata Buddhist Studies Program

Presents

Tōru Funayama (Kyoto University)

Professor Tōru Funayama has been described as a Buddhological renaissance man because of the breadth of his knowledge about Buddhism in India, Tibet, China and Japan. He has published six books and more than 50 articles or book chapters dealing with Indian philosophy, the linguistic features of texts translated from Sanskrit into Chinese, Chinese biographies of Buddhist monks, lay Buddhist practice in China, and Chinese philosophy in the fifth and sixth centuries. He has taught at various universities in Japan (including Koyasan University, Kyushu University, Otani University, Ryukoku University, University of Tokyo, and Tsukuba University) and abroad (including Harvard, Heidelberg, Leiden, and Stanford).

“Kamalaśīla's View on Yogic Perception and the Bodhisattva Path"

Thursday, December 1, 3-5 pm

University of Toronto Reading Group Session

Department for the Study of Religion (170 St George St.), Room 317

“Mahāyāna Vinaya? Aspirations for the composition of a Vinaya for bodhisattvas in India and China”

Friday, December 2, 4-6 pm

University Hall 122, McMaster University

ABSTRACT: As is clearly evident from Chinese Buddhist catalogs, medieval Chinese Buddhists accepted the view of a "Mahāyāna Vinaya" (dasheng lü). On the other hand, we know that such a vinaya never existed in the history of Indian Buddhism. Is this idea a result of Chinese misunderstanding? Naturally this question is also concerned with Sinification of Buddhism. In this talk, I will attempt to explore the origin and development of this notion with a special focus on the Scripture of Brahma's Net (Fanwang jing). By referring to internal evidence, I want to point out that this well-known apocryphal sutra played a critical role for the establishment of the term dasheng lü in China. Further, I want to verify that basically the same idea, if not entirely identical, is found in the Skt. Bodhisattvabhūmi, the most significant text for bodhisattva precepts in India, in order to claim that early Yogacarins wished to establish a Mahāyāna equivalent of the orthodox Vinaya in India and that such an intention was more emphasized by the composition of the Scripture of Brahma's Net in China.


For reading group materials and questions, please contact frances.garrett@utoronto.ca


------------ The content of this message does not represent the views or opinions of the University of Toronto.---------------

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Wednesday, November 2, 2011

UT: Numata Buddhist Studies Events with Michelle Wang, Nov 10-11

In case you are interested:


The University of Toronto/McMaster University Numata Buddhist Studies Program

Presents

Michelle Wang, Georgetown University

Reflections of the Garbhadhātu Maṇḍala at Dunhuang



Thursday, November 10, 4-6 pm

University Hall 122

McMaster University



ABSTRACT: To date, much of the scholarship on esoteric Buddhist art at Dunhuang has privileged iconographical elements that are associated with the Vajradhātu Maṇḍala. While there are good reasons for this, what I propose to do in my paper is to consider as well iconographical elements that are associated with the Garbhadhātu Maṇḍala, in particular, those that may be observed in mural and portable paintings dating to the Tang Dynasty. One portion of the Mahāvairocana Sūtra exists from the Dunhuang manuscripts. What I propose, however, is not that there is evidence of a full Garbhadhātu Maṇḍala in Dunhuang of the type seen in Heian Japan, but rather selective assemblages of deities that represent the three families of the Garbhadhātu Maṇḍala.



“Changing Conceptions of ‘Maṇḍala’ in Tang China: Ritual and the Role of Images"

University of Toronto Reading Group Session

Friday, November 11, 3-5 pm

East Asian Studies Department, Robarts Library



For reading group materials and questions, please contact

frances.garrett@utoronto.ca or see http://buddhiststudies.chass.utoronto.ca/


------------------------- The content of this message does not represent the views or opinions of the University of Toronto. ------------------------------------------

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Tuesday, November 1, 2011

UT: Nov 4: Lecture on “Buddhism Under Pol Pot”

In case you are interested:

Date:
Friday, November 4, 2011
Time: 7:00 – 9:00pm
Location: Arts & Administration Building, Room AA 112 (map)
University of Toronto Scarborough
1265 Military Trail
Scarborough, ON M1C 1A4


The Department of Humanities at the University of Toronto Scarborough, in partnership with Tung Lin Kok Yuen will host a free public lecture by Dr. Ian Harris entitled “Buddhism Under Pol Pot” as part of the Tung Lin Kok Yuen Perspectives on Buddhist Thought and Culture series.

The public lecture given by Dr. Harris will examine a modern experience of Buddhism encountering political conflict. Dr. Harris will look at the struggles of Buddhist monks in the face of a violent and repressive regime in Cambodia in the 1970s. He will consider the regional variations in the Khmer Rouge’s treatment of religion, the number of monks that perished, monastic survivors, the re-establishment of Cambodian Buddhism, and the development of Cambodia’s violent communist movement after the fall of Pol Pot.

Dr. Ian Harris is Professor Emeritus at the University of Cumbria. His current research interests focus on the modern and contemporary history of Cambodia, Buddhism and politics in Southeast Asia, Buddhist environmentalism, and landscape aesthetics. Dr. Harris has held previous visiting professor positions at the University of Oxford, the University of British Columbia, the National University of Singapore, and the Documentary Center of Cambodia in Phnom Penh. His most recent books are Cambodian Buddhism: History and Practice and Buddhism Under Pol Pot.

Admission to the lecture is FREE. To reserve your spot, please contact Arts & Events Programming at aep-rsvp@utsc.utoronto.caor at 416 208 4769. Please note that for those travelling from downtown Toronto, a free shuttle bus will depart from Hart House Circle at 5:30pm and will return once the lecture is over at 9:00pm. To RSVP for the bus, please email aep-rsvp@utsc.utoronto.ca.

For more information on Arts & Events Programming, including a calendar with our upcoming events, please visit our website.

Thank you for taking the time to read this email.

Cheers!

The AEP Team




-------------------------------- The content of this message does not represent the views or opinions of the University of Toronto. -----------------------------------

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Monday, October 31, 2011

2011-12 Numata Buddhist Studies Lecture Series

In case you are interested:


FALL 2011

MICHELLE WANG (Georgetown University)

LECTURE: “Reflections of the Garbhadhātu Maṇḍala at Dunhuang”

Thursday, November 10, 4-6 pm, McMaster, University Hall 122

READING GROUP: “Changing Conceptions of ‘Maṇḍala’ in Tang China: Ritual, Image-Making, and the Limits of Visual Representation"
Friday, November 11, 3-5 pm, U of T, East Asian Studies Department, Robarts Library

TORU FUNAYAMA (Kyoto University)

READING GROUP: “Kamalaśīla's View on Yogic Perception and the Bodhisattva Path”

Thursday, December 1, 3-5 pm, U of T, Jackman Humanities Building, Room 317

LECTURE:
"Mahāyāna Vinaya? Aspirations for the Composition of a Vinaya for bodhisattvas in India and China"
Friday, December 2, 4-6, McMaster, University Hall 122

UPCOMING IN WINTER/SPRING 2012


LARA BRAITSTEIN (McGill University)

LECTURE: Thursday, January 26, 4-6, McMaster, University Hall 122

READING GROUP: Friday, January 27, 3-5, U of T, Jackman Humanities Building, Room 318

PIERCE SALGUERO (Penn State University, Abington College)

READING GROUP: Thursday, March 1, McMaster, University Hall 122

LECTURE: Friday, March 2, U of T, Jackman Humanities Building, Room 318

COLLETT COX (University of Washington)

LECTURE: Thursday, March 22, McMaster, University Hall 122

READING GROUP: Friday, March 23, U of T, Jackman Humanities Building, Room 318

JOHANNES BRONKHORST (University of Lausanne)

READING GROUP (Co-hosted by the Hindu Studies Colloquium): Greater Magadha and Buddhism in the Shadow of Brahmanism
Tuesday, March 27, U of T

CHRISTINA SCHERRER-SCHAUB (University of Lausanne)

READING GROUP: Thursday, April 5, 4-6, McMaster, University Hall 122

LECTURE: Friday, April 6, 3-5, U of T


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Thursday, July 28, 2011

Thich Nhat Hanh: Suffering in Ourselves, Suffering in Other: Question and Answer Session

Dear Friends,

Thich Nhat Hanh offered very good answers to questions, which you may be of interest.

The episode is called "Suffering in Ourselves, Suffering in Other: Question and Answer Session" and may be viewed at

http://blip.tv/pvom/suffering-in-ourselves-suffering-in-other-question-and-answer-session-5412902

With Metta,
Cecilia


The link plays a video which needs the Flash Player from Adobe.

Search for that and install the appropriate version for your computer.

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Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Burke Lecture: Buddhism in a Global Age of Technology

Sharing the following email with you:


Lewis Lancaster on Buddhist philosophy, perception and cognitive neuroscience

Dear Piyal,

Appreciate your sharing this useful narrative of the aspects of the Buddha Dhamma which is only now being investigated by modern day scientists.

The URL given by you covers only a segment of the talk given by Prof. Emeritus Lewis Lancaster at the Berkeley University.

I am sharing it with other Buddhist friends who I am sure would be just as grateful as myself.

The URL for the entire 50 plus minutes talk is as follows:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cX2f6QHkU-I&feature=related

With warm regards,
Mahinda



P.S. The shorter version, i.e. 10 minute talk could be accessed by clicking the following:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rTBzU_HvwpM&feature=youtube_gdata_player

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Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Youtube: 2012 - A Message of Hope

Sharing the following email with you:

2012 - A Message of Hope

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_YOG3jMlV4

21 December 2012 seems to be a significant date worldwide. Many meditations will be performed at this date. So if anything, write down this date, and join the meditating masses on this date! This is a date that is now being seen as one critical for the survival of humanity and it will be the dominant thoughts or vibrations at this time that will determine our future. There are other dates also that are said to be significant. We suggest meditating on all of them! To be on the safe side… ;)


According to quantum physics our thoughts are always beaming out into the “quantum field”, that is “the world”, and we are always influencing both our self, each other, the nature and even the weather (!) by what and how we think and feel. Coming together on one day and conciously thinking positive thoughts and “beaming love” out in the world will make a huge difference. Or simply just calm your mind and find your inner peace and bliss. And the more people doing it, the better the effect. This is a worldwide meditation creating positive energetic waves of Love surrounding the planet.

We recommend that you form a group to meditate with. Invite them into your home, or do the meditation on some other suitable place, like in a church, a mosque, a classroom or maybe outside! If you for some reason can’t form a group, or be with your group, you can do the meditation by your self, wherever you are.

Just know that the more people meditating at the same time, the better it is. This will make a “tidal meditation wave” that flows across the planet from time zone to time zone, influencing both the meditating and the non-meditating, creating a world of joy and happiness, peace, health and prosperity.

We get more of what we focus on. So don’t focus on what you don’t want. Accept everything that is here in this world, even the “bad” things, love it, cherish it for giving you a contrast, and pick what you want more of, and keep that focus. Beware that everything has to be loved to both stay here and to go away. What you resist, persists. What you love, you release.

There is no time left to be complacent. The world is changing now. Not tomorrow. Be part of the change for good. The love. Not the fear. Let go your attachment to the old world and embrace the new.


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Friday, April 1, 2011

YouTube - Speech By S N Goenka in U.N. Peace Summit ( Part 1 & 2)

Dear friends,

I would like to share this speech with you all.
Charmaine
With Metta

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Dear Charmaine,

Thank you for kindly sharing this wonderful talk delivered by Mr. S.N. Goenka who provides training in the practice of Vipassana Meditation as taught by the Buddha at his centres numbering around 120 located all over the world.

May you be well and happy.

With boundless metta,
Mahinda & Mali

P.S. We were able to access the second part of his talk at the conclusion of part one of the same video.

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Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Synopsis of February 27, 2011 Living Chan Retreat

Synopsis of February 27, 2011 Living Chan Retreat:

Memory affects how we perceive things. But actually there is no self (subject) in the memory. We feel pains/emotions (object) through our senses and through the working of the Five Skandhas (or Five Aggregates of Form, Sensation, Perception, Violation and Consciousness). I (the subject) can sense and think (because I have the ability to do so), but the sensation or thought (the object) does not contain "I" (it has no ability).

However, most people are fooled by our emotions/senses and are adversely affected by them. Mistakenly, we perceive our sensation and thought to contain "I" (the subject). With this incorrect view, our mind is distorted and leads us into wrongful actions or behaviours.

If we can understand that when "I" feel the pain, there is no subject in the pain, we can more readily understand the situation/pain and take the proper actions/reactions, instead of being carried away by the situation/pain.

When the mind is not settled, we will be easily carried away by our emotions.

With relaxation, it is easier to settle the mind and stay focused, so we can be in control of instead of being controlled by our emotions.

The method: firstly, understand the correct view about "I", secondly, stay calm and focused through relaxation. Then our mind will be more settled.

How to apply the method into daily life?

* Try to be aware of our thoughts and sensation at all times, know what we are doing or thinking, stay alert.
* Stay calm and relaxed using the 90% body 10% external awareness.
* Self reflection - try to change our perception (what we can control) instead of changing the external attributes (what we may not be able to control).
* Do not be tangled up by the past memories or the future anxiety, stay in the present.
* Stabilize the mind with practice of meditation or direct contemplation.

When we are good at stabilizing the mind then we can handle both the daily grind and unexpected situations with ease.

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Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Zero Limits

An email from Ling:

Dear friends,

Wish all of us have a great leap on the path to Buddhahood in the new year of Rabbit, 2011.

I'd like to share the book of "Zero Limits" (零極限) attached for your convenience. Please do not re-forward the attached copy to others due to unclear copyright but can refer your friends to go visit the following website to download if so desired:
1. http://www.konghi.org/
2. click 图书
3. click 深入零极限

Honestly speaking, reading the translated copy in Chinese is not as clear as its original book in English. Nevertheless it is still worth reading from my personal view. At least, I get to see a living Arhat (Dr. Hew Len) in my lifetime. Dr. Hew Len emphasizes "Clean" which has been translated into "歸零".

To me,
"歸零" = "銷歸自性" (就是「朝朝暮暮在逢春」) in Buddhist term, also
"歸零" = "此是普賢行, 此是普賢境" in 華嚴 term ,
實屬知易行難之事. But Dr Hew Len has been practicing it, which is so amazing to me!!!!

If interested, you can watch "Interview of Dr Hew Len" on youtube. Be patient to view thru the clips in the hope you may find something inspired:
Dr Hew Len, ho'oponopono (1/9 - 9/9)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OL972JihAmg&playnext=1&list=PL9D9F3A6E131A2249

Best of Wishes,
Ling

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Thursday, January 6, 2011

A New Year’s message from Swami Satyanand

A New Year’s message to my fellow Brothers and Sisters

My new year’s message to all of you is “Love all and keep total faith in God”. This has done wonders for me when this beautiful Ashram was created; why it cannot do for you?

The blessings of the Lord will transform our lives, but remember that the plant of love will not survive without the water of patience. Just as by lifting one flower of a garland, the whole garland is uplifted, so by lifting the flower of love the whole garland of virtues will come to us. Such blessings are the product of surrender.

See everyone as the manifestation of God and an extension of yourself. Then you will understand that each person is a fellow soul rather than a body or a mind. If we cannot love the person whom we see how can we love God, whom we cannot see? Love and surrender is only found in the heart. Usually someone is considered to be dead if he has stopped breathing. But if someone has no love in his heart, even if he is still breathing he is one of the living dead.

Love is a divine quality that pervades everything. Remember that if you spend your time judging other people, you will have no time to love them. Only love can take us to God. Devotion to God is a cure for, and a release from, the disease of samsara. Only when body and mind are purified we will come to know His presence.

God is All, and everything exists in God. But just as ghee is hidden in milk, so also is God hidden in the universe. Similarly, just as the microbes in our body cannot see us, so it is that we who are wrapped in the cosmic body of God cannot see Him. He will remain a mystery until we search Him out in a spirit of devotion and surrender. Even the highest stage of Samadhi is attained through devotion to God.

Ghee is obtained by transforming milk into yogurt, churning it, taking out butter and finally heating the butter to obtain the ghee. Similarly, we can come to know God and experience the Divine presence through the transformation and purification through the disciplines of Yoga.

The Existence of God is authenticated by the ancient Sages, who were
scientists as well as Yogis. An authentic scripture known as the Yoga
Sutras was written in ages past by Sage Patanjali. He describes God in
this way: “God is a special kind of Being, untouched by ignorance and afflictions, and not subject to Karmas, Samskaras (subtle desires) or the Karmic results of actions.”

According to Vedanta Philosophy, God is the supreme ruler of the universe: He is the Creator, Sustainer and Dissolver. He is Brahman. God, the underlying and ultimate Reality, is immortal, immutable, omniscient, and omnipresent. God is both within and without, infinitely present and instantly everywhere. He dwells in the atom and yet He is the abode of all creation. He is the seed of whole universe and the store-house of all knowledge. He is the source of all knowledge and is without beginning or end. God within creation is the individual Soul known as Atman or Purusha. God is the True Self that exists within us all.

Then how should we pray such God? The singular representation of God is the sound OM. It is the backbone of the practice of Yog and the Symbol of cosmic energy. Words and ideas are inseparable. You cannot have the idea of God without the word which expresses God. In the Rig Veda it is said: “In the beginning was Brahman, with whom was the word; and the Word was truly the supreme Brahman.” Similarly, it is said in the Gospel of John the Apostle: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.”

Here it may be understood that all believers,regardless of religion, are worshiping the same God, the same Divine Source, whether He be called Supreme Being, Ishvara, Allah, Ultimate Reality, Supreme Truth, or give it any other name.

Albert Einstein said: “Everyone who is seriously involved in the pursuit of science, becomes convinced that a Spirit is manifest in the laws of the universe- a Spirit vastly superior to that of man and One in the face of which we, with our modest powers, must feel humble.”

The modern mystic Pierre Teilhard de Chardin said: “Neither in its impetus nor in its achievements can science go to its limits without becoming tinged with mysticism and charged with faith.”

My Guru Swami Rajarshi Muni has seen God and conversed with God. He described this sublime event in this way:

“I experience an extraordinary thrill in my body, mind and heart every time I recall these Divine events. Whenever I have the desire to cast some light upon them I find myself unable to describe them appropriately. Proper expression fails me; I am unable to find the right words, and whatever I am able to express remains comparatively unclear.

“Under the sheer force of emotion neither my thoughts nor my expression can create an adequate representation of these experiences. It may just be that they were different from normal worldly events. It is not impossible, but it is certainly very difficult, to completely and satisfactorily describe divine events.

“All I have to say here is this: my eyes have seen, and intently beheld, both the gross and the subtle luminous forms of Lord Lakulish. I have heard his loving words and my heart was drowned in a vast ocean of feeling. I have seen his smile and was thrilled with joy. I have peered into his compassionate eyes and seen vast tides and waves of love.

“I have no recollection now whether my heart ceased to beat at all, or if it beat with a new and unknown quickness in those exciting moments. But, yes, on both occasions, when bowing at his holy feet to pay my respects with faith and devotion, I experienced the touch of his hand upon my head. His divine touch has blessed my life. With that touch, the purpose of my life has been served. I have experienced his divine power, unfathomable peace, and divine inspiration through these two events, and new life has been poured into my sadhana.

With authentications such as these, never be in doubt about the existence of God. I have not seen God but I do feel the presence of God here in this Ashram.

Never forget to love Him; see Him in every being and serve Him by serving others.

Never waste time in making judgments because life is short and time of death is uncertain. Learn to love every human being, for we are all manifestations of the Divine and the very children of God.

Our life is a boundary-mark whence one may take an upward or downward path. Our present time is the most precious time, wherein each of us must make our decision for lasting good or lasting ill.

Let us forget the past, and start afresh in this remarkable new year with a commitment that will bring us closer to God and remind us of our oneness with
the community of man. Let us together make this vow: “I will think thrice before hurting anyone.”

God bless you, love to all,

Jai Bhagwan

Satyanand

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