Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Buddhist way of overcoming the cycle of birth and death ( Reincarnation )


S.M. Wijayaratne
Kurunegala “Daily News” Corr.

All human beings face and share the same fate. Due to ignorance of the true nature of life, we often weep and wail and sometimes even smile and weep again. When once we realise the true nature of life, we can face the impermanence of all component things and seek liberation.

“Life is uncertain, death is certain”
- The Buddha

Everyday we hear of deaths all over the world. Many deaths are caused due to various reasons such as natural disasters, accidents, diseases, war and violence. Are we ready to face death fearlessly?

Once life is launched, like a bullet it must reach its destination which is death.

All of us have to face this inevitable, natural phenomenon whether we like it or not. The sooner this truth is accepted, the better we will be able to direct our lives for a good purpose. Actually, we are disturbed not so much by death itself, but by the wrong view we hold of it. Death in itself is not that terrible; what is terrible is the fear of death that prevails in the mind.

Biological clocks

Our lifespan is controlled by our biological clocks which are continuously ticking away. When they run out, sooner or later, there is little we can do to gain extra time.

Once our time is up, we must be prepared to go through the natural process of death. All human beings, irrespective of sex, or race, creed, will have to come to terms with death. There is no alternative escape. Death is an inevitable process of this world.

It is not often that we are brave enough to come face to face with the thought of our own mortality. Yet, man is not free in life unless he is also free from the fear of death.

Attachment

It is hard to bear the loss of people whom we love because of our attachment to them.

This happened to Visakha, a well-known lady devotee during the time of the Buddha. When she lost her beloved granddaughter, she visited the Fully-Awakened One to seek advice in her great sorrow. “Visakha, would you like to have as many sons, daughters grandsons and granddaughters as there are children in this town?” asked the Buddha.

“Yes, Sir, I would indeed!”

“But how many children die daily in this town?” The Buddha questioned “Several, Sir. The town is never free from children dying, Sir,” Visakha replied.

“Then, Visakha, in such a case, would you cry for all of them? Visakha, those who have a hundred things beloved, they have a hundred sorrows. He who has nothing beloved, has no sorrow.

Such persons are free from sorrow.” The Buddha mercifully enlightened Visakha over the death of human beings.

When we develop attachment, we also must be prepared to pay the price of sorrow when separation takes place.

The love of life can sometimes develop a morbid fear of death. We will not take any risks even for a rightful cause. We live in fear that illness or accident will put an end to our seemingly precious permanent worldly life.

Realizing that death is a certainty, we hope and pray for a survival of the soul in heaven for our own security and preservation. Such beliefs are based on strong craving for continued existence.

Mental stress

According to psychological studies, much mental stress is caused by our refusal to face facts and accept life’s realities. This stress, if not overcome can eventually lead to grave physical illness. Certainly, worry and despair over illness will make it worse.

We cannot pick and choose the kind of illness we desire, nor can we choose the suitable or auspicious time to die. But we can certainly choose to face illness and death without fear.

People are frightened of dead bodies, but in the true sense, the living are in fact far more dangerous and brutal than dead bodies.

Dead bodies do not harm us, but the living are capable of doing enormous harm and could even resort to murder. So, is it not a stupid belief, for people to be afraid or frightened of dead bodies?

Each and every individual should be aware of the role of death in his or her destiny.

Whether royalty or commoner, rich or poor, strong or weak, a man’s final resting place within this life is either in a coffin lying buried six feet underground or in an urn or strewn over the sea.

Fate

All human beings face and share the same fate. Due to ignorance of the true nature of life, we often weep and wail and sometimes even smile and weep again. When once we realise the true nature of life, we can face the impermanence of all component things and seek liberation.

Until and unless we achieve our liberation from worldly conditions, we will have to face death over and over again. And in this respect, too, the role of death is very clear. If a person finds death to be unbearable, then he should make every effort to overcome this cycle of birth and death.

May you have wisdom to realise the Four Noble Truths. May you be well and happy.

Vasala Sutta The way to know an outcast

A good deed never makes anyone repent. Therefore, the noblest of all is the service rendered towards the progress of mental and moral discipline in the conduct of life. The Buddha wanted to liberate man from the chimeras and myths, under whose mystification he is pining away.


“Excellent, O Venerable Gotama! Excellent! It is as if O Venerable Gotama, a man were to set upright that which was overturned or were to reveal that which was hidden, or were to point out the way to one who has gone astray, or were to hold a lamp amidst the darkness, so that whoever has eyes may see, even so has the Dhamma been expounded in various ways by the Venerable Gotama.”


An outcast is a person who is driven away from home friends or society or who has no place in society.

The following ethos is applicable to the whole field of moral science. Behaviour is a mirror in which every one displays his own image.

A good deed never makes anyone repent. Therefore, the noblest of all is the service rendered towards the progress of mental and moral discipline in the conduct of life. The Buddha wanted to liberate man from the chimeras and myths, under whose mystification he is pining away.

* A man who is irritable, rancorous, vicious, detractive perverted in views and deceitful know him as an outcast.

* Whoever in this world harms living beings - in whom there is no compassion for living beings - know him as an outcast.

Whoever destroys and besieges villages and hamlets, and is known as an oppressor - know him as an outcast.

* Whether in the village or in the forest whoever appropriates by theft what belongs to others, or what is not given - know him an an outcast.

* Whoever having really taken a debt, flees, when pressed, saying,” There is no debt to you.” - know him as an outcast.

*Whoever desiring some trifle, kills a man going along the road, and pillages something - know him as an outcast.

* Who for his own sake, or for the sake of others, or for the sake of wealth, utters lies, when asked as a witness - know him as an outcast.

* Whoever by force or with consent is seen transgressing with the wives of relatives or friends - know him as an outcast.

* Whoever being rich, does not support his aged mother and father who have passed their youth - know him as an outcast.

* whoever strikes, or by speech, annoys his mother, father, brother, sister or mother-in-law - know him as an outcast.

* Whoever, when questioned about what is good counsels what is wrong and teacher in a concealing way - know him as an outcast.

* whoever having done an evil deed wishes that it may not be known to others, and is concealed in actions - know him as an outcast.

* Whoever, having gone to another’s house and partaken a choice food, does not honour him in return when he comes - know him as an outcast.

* Whoever deceives by falsehood a Brahmana or an ascetic or any other mendicant - know him as an outcast.

* Whoever by speech annoys a Brahmana or ascetic when meal-time has came and does not give food - know him as an outcast.

* Whoever in this world shrouded in ignorance, predicts what is not, expecting something. - know him as an outcast.

* Whoever exalts himself and despises others and is debased by his pride. - know him as an outcast.

* Whoever is annoying, avaricious of base desires, selfish, deceitful, shameless and fearless in evil action - know him as an outcast.

* Whoever reviles the Buddha or a disciple of his, be he a recluse or a householder - know him as an outcast.

Whoever without being an arahant claims to be an arahant is a thief in the whole universe he is the lowest outcast.

Those whom I have described to you are indeed called outcasts.

* Not by birth is one an outcast, not by birth is one a Brahmana, by deeds is one a Brahmana.

* Know that by this: Just as this example given by me; Sopaka the son of an outcast was well known as Matanga: He reached the highest fame.

Know it as such by this illustration. There was a son of an outcast known as Matanga.

* This Matanga attained to the highest glory difficult to obtain. Many warriors and Brahmana’s came to minister unto him.

* Mounting the celestial vehicle along the passionless highway he soared the Brahma, realm having discarded sense-desires. Birth did not prevent him from being reborn in the Brahama realm.

* There are Brahmins born in the family of preceptors, kinsmen of (veda) hymns. They too are frequently seen addicted to evil deeds.

* In this life itself they are despised; in the next they get a woeful state. Birth does not preclude them either from a woeful state or from condemnation.

* By birth one is not an outcast. By birth one is not a Brahmana. By deeds is one an outcast, By deeds is one a Brahmana.

When this was spoken the Brahmana Aggika Bharadvaja addressed the blessed One as follows:

“Excellent, O Venerable Gotama! Excellent! It is as if O Venerable Gotama, a man were to set upright that which was overturned or were to reveal that which was hidden, or were to point out the way to one who has gone astray, or were to hold a lamp amidst the darkness, so that whoever has eyes may see, even so has the Dhamma been expounded in various ways by the Venerable Gotama.”

“And I seek refuge in the Venerable Gotama, the Dhamma, and the order of disciples. May the Venerable Gotama receive me as a follower who has taken refuge from this very day to life’s end.

Follow and practise Buddha’s teachings

S.M. Wijayaratne
Kurunegala Daily News Corr.

One will never reach the destination if one just looks at the map, enjoys its fine printing, but never determines the direction that leads to the destination; or after finding out which direction to go, never lets the car start moving. Buddha is a teacher. He uses His finger to point out the moon to us. But if one just looks at Buddha’s finger, one cannot see the moon. The finger serves simply to point us in the right direction. Once one follows that direction and sees the moon, the finger should be forgotten.

The most suitable way to pay tribute to the Fully-awakened One is to strive to realise his noble teachings and to put those teachings into practice. His noble message for the suffering humanity is an eye-opener and our prime duty should be to work with total dedication to achieve the wholesome results by following the path as shown by the Buddha to us summoning all our courage and might. It is natural that there may be a lot of obstacles and hindrances for us to undergo while we are treading on the path.

Our friends will sometimes laugh and ridicule at us saying that we are lunatics. But we should have complete confidence in ourselves and unshaken faith in Triple Gem if we are to achieve success at the end.

Truth

The truth that the Buddha realised is universal. In Buddhist terminology, it is known as Dharma, or Dhamma in Pali. The realisation of the Dharma was the result of a long and arduous spiritual quest. The Buddha attained supreme enlightenment through his own efforts, without any help from a teacher. His knowledge was full and complete, ultimate and perfect in all respect.

Buddhism teaches man to depend on himself, to be courageous and confident in his own ability. Buddhist philosophy places man at the centre of all things, it advises man to strive and work hard to achieve his goals, material or spiritual, through his own efforts, not through prayer or mere wishful thinking.

Because Buddhism is a religion of self-help, it is suitable for the strong-minded. Since it encourages free thinking, it enjoys a special place in the hearts of modern free thinkers.

As its teachings are scientific, it is highly respected by the intellectuals. The Buddhist emphasis on peace and loving-kindness makes

the religion appealing to peace loving men the world over.

Road map

The teachings of the Buddha that we find in printed books or magazines can serve only as a road map does for an automobile driver. One has to study the map, digest the information therein, and above all, start the engine and go.

One will never reach the destination if one just looks at the map, enjoys its fine printing, but never determines the direction that leads to the destination; or after finding out which direction to go, never lets the car start moving. Buddha is a teacher. He uses His finger to point out the moon to us. But if one just looks at Buddha’s finger, one cannot see the moon. The finger serves simply to point us in the right direction. Once one follows that direction and sees the moon, the finger should be forgotten.

Determination

A nice prayer is given below for you to recite everyday early in the morning.

”May we reaffirm the determination of our ancestors; we shall strive to sail across the vast ocean of hatred, discrimination, selfishness; and arrive on the other shore of loving-kindness, compassion, joy, and equanimity.

May we reaffirm our determination to extend our love of brotherhood to all people on earth and may we be guided by the collective wisdom of all world religions to save ourselves from self-destruction. Today our greatest fear is not of nature. Our greatest fear is of ourselves”.

We should constantly ponder over the following meaningful utterances by the Buddha.

”All the world’s phenomena and ideas.
Are unreal, like a dream,
Like magic, and like a reflected image.
All the world’s phenomena and ideas.
Are impermanent, like a water bubble,
Like dew and lightening,
Thus should one observe and understand
All the world’s phenomena and ideas.

“We human beings can send ourselves to the moon, but we still cannot eliminate the horrors of concentration camp or the need for prisons.

Motivations

We spend billions and billions of dollars to eliminate the diseases that kill us, but we pay little attention to routing out the motivations that cause us to kill each other.”

These are words that a very reputed scholar of Buddhism spoke addressing a large gathering of American Buddhist devotees in America.

For thousands of years, we human beings have been unable to liberate ourselves from fear! Why?. Because we cannot rid ourselves of hatred, discrimination, selfishness and desire. But why can we not eliminate these evils that almost everyone knows are destructive? The answer is that we human beings have such a great desire to possess.

Possession

The desire for possession creates attachment. Basically, attachment is due to the concepts of self and possession as when we say,” This is mine”.

This concept of self is strengthened by the belief that both “I” and the ‘world” are real; not only real but also permanent, although we know that is wishful thinking. Surely we realise that no one can live forever and that no one carries money, power or beauty with him or her at death.

Therefore, to recognise that all phenomena and ideas of the world are unreal like a dream , and impermanent like lightning, is to cause desire and the concept of ego to diminish. When ego is subdued, hatred, discrimination, selfishness, and desire are also diminished.

May all have faith and wisdom to see the Fully-Awakened One through His noble teachings.

Sunatha, Dharetha, Caratha Dhamme ( Part II )

Sunatha, Dharetha, Caratha Dhamme

Listen to, bear in mind and abide by the Dhamma

There are certain feelings of human beings that even a number of words may fail to express. Love, sympathy and happiness gained through either material pleasures or spiritual attainments are some of them. Negative feelings or evil states of mind like anger, hatred and revenge can also be inexplicable at times. However, a musician might be able to compose a melody, a song or set a rhythm; an artist might express it through a picture, a painting, a diagram or a graph; a writer might succeed in presenting a literary description or a story and a poet would create a poem to bring such feelings to light.

Contineud from 20.10. 2011

AAs a result of studying the function of the human mind and behaviour patterns, one might notice how either a particular picture, word, idea, view or opinion can be seen or interpreted from various angles by each individual. For instance, something which is good for one person might not be good for many others. At the same time, there are the less fortunate and helpless ones who are unable to communicate properly. The deaf, dumb, blind, disabled and the abnormal fall into this category. However, even among them you find those who are talented in certain fields like Music, Art and Literature.

Sympathy

There are certain feelings of human beings that even a number of words may fail to express. Love, sympathy and happiness gained through either material pleasures or spiritual attainments are some of them. Negative feelings or evil states of mind like anger, hatred and revenge can also be inexplicable at times. However, a musician might be able to compose a melody, a song or set a rhythm; an artist might express it through a picture, a painting, a diagram or a graph; a writer might succeed in presenting a literary description or a story and a poet would create a poem to bring such feelings to light. As such, the advances in music, art and literature have paved the way for people to think and look at life in a more creative and meaningful manner. It has also given vitality to one’s leisure time.

Now, let me narrate another story that took place during the Buddha’s time. It is with regard to a particular Brahmin named ‘Udaya’. One day, early in the morning, rising from His meditation the Blessed One happened to see through His Divine Eye that the Brahmin had already acquired the capacity to realise the sublime truth. So, wearing the robes and bowl in hand, the Buddha visited the Brahmin Udaya’s house in quest of alms.

Seeing the Buddha standing in front of his house the Brahmin welcomed Him and placed some delicious food in the Blessed One’s bowl. Having received the food in silence, the Enlightened One made His way back to the monastery. The following morning too, the Buddha visited Udaya Brahmin’s house on His alms-round. Then also the Brahmin served Him with some food. When the Buddha visited the same house on the third day, a particular unwholesome thought happened to occur in the Brahmin’s mind: ‘Having become attached to taste this recluse is coming again and again.’ The Blessed One could read his thought immediately.

Thereupon the Buddha addressed the Brahmin Udaya in this manner:
Again and again the farmers sow seeds,
Again and again showers the rain,
Again and again the country folk harvest cereal and grain.

Again and again the beggars beg,
Again and again the donors practise charity,
And thereby become born in heaven again and again.

Again and again the cows are milked,
Again and again the calf, the offspring approaches its mother,
Again and again living beings get terrified and frightened
(by decay, old age, illness and death),
The ever ignorant is conceived in a mother’s womb again and again.

Again and again revolve birth and death,
Again and again the carcass is carried away to the cemetery,
There’s no more rebirth to one who has realised the path,
Thus, the wise one is not subject to existence

Again and again

Accordingly, the Brahmin ‘Udaya’ grasped the essence of the Exalted One’s Words and became extremely happy and content over it along with the acquisition of a higher stage of mind. He happened to express his joy of realising the Truth to the Blessed One in the following manner:

Darkness

”It is excellent, Sir, as one might set upright what has been upside down, or disclose what has been covered, or show the way to one who had gone astray, or bring an oil lamp into the darkness so that those with vision might see visible shapes, even so in many a technique have the teachings been made clear by the Lord. Hereupon I seek refuge in the Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha.

May the Blessed One nominate me as an ‘Upasaka’ from today onwards right throughout”. (Sn 335)

the Brahmin Udaya’s conviction and the complete transformation attributing to the ‘Great Compassion’ of the Buddha are depicted in the story. It also reveals to us the power of words explicitly.

After all, we should pay heed to the advice, instructions and criticisms of other people as it would give us a clue to correct our own faults or mistakes and to broaden our knowledge little by little. And it is depicted in one of Sir William Shakespeare’s sayings ‘Give every man your ear, but few your voice’, So, let’s join hands to live up to this ideal from this moment itself.

‘Sunatha Dharetha caratha Dhamme’
Listen to, bear in mind and abide by the Dhamma’.

Sunatha, dharetha, Carartha Dhamme Listen to, bear in mind and abide by the Dhamma

Ven. Kumbuke Visuddhi Citta

Raddolugama

(8. Sahassa Vagga - Thousands - 1st verse - Dhammapada)
‘Sahassamapi ce vaca – anatthapada samhita
Ekam atthapadam seyyo – yam sutva upasammati’

‘One line of a verse, hearing which a person becomes pacified, is better than thousand speeches which conduce to degeneration of man.’

Words are used in a language to communicate and express views, opinions and ideas. In each country there is an official language and it is known as the ‘mother tongue’ of the majority of inhabitants in that country. However, in most of the countries, the people belong to several nationalities speaking different languages. For instance, there are Sinhalese, the majority, Tamil, Muslim, Malay, Hindu and Burgher people in Sri Lanka. The Tamils, Muslims, Malays, Hindus and Burghers belong to the minority.

Buddhist monks follow the ten precepts whereas lay Buddhists observe the five precepts. The observance of this moral code enables the individual to restrain the mind, body and speech and thereby discipline himself or herself. According to the Buddha’s teachings there are four ways of guarding one’s speech, that is, by not telling lies, by not using abusive language, by not talking gossip or engaging in frivolous talk and by not backbiting and slandering. It would be a good habit if one could always speak the truth. Nobody would be deceived and misled by the words used by such a person. And if one wishes not to be deceived or cheated and misled by others, one should be determined to be truthful. The Buddha has ennobled us in this regard by saying that ‘one reaps what one sows’. Therefore, it is the responsibility of a genuine Buddhist to refrain from telling lies. Once a word is uttered through the mouth making it to be heard or listened to by another, it cannot be easily changed, corrected or renewed in the next moment.

Let me quote a verse of the Dhammapada here (10. Danda Vagga - The Rod or Punishment - 6th verse)

‘Sace neresi attanam – kamso upahato yatha
Esa patto’si nibbanam – sarambho te na vijjati’

The meaning of the verse is as follows:

‘If you can silence yourself like a cracked gong, you have attained Nibbana. Thereafter, vindictiveness will not find a place in you.

Speech

Further, this reminds us of the saying ‘Think twice before you leap’. And one should take care to refrain from harsh speech or using abusive language that would hurt the feelings of the listener. So, the honest and devout person should make haste to avoid wrong ways of speech and be mindful, watchful and willing to speak words that can be useful and beneficial to oneself as well as others. In this way, one’s speech becomes pleasant and attractive, which in turn would make a good impression on society.

One day the Buddha emphasised the importance of speaking the truth to His son Rahula who was a novice at that time. As the Buddha was advancing towards the chamber, the little monk prepared a bucket of water to wash the Blessed One’s feet and also arranged a suitable chair for the Buddha to be seated. Having washed His feet with some water, the Blessed One sat down in the appointed seat. Then He addressed the novice pointing at the remaining water in the bucket, “Rahula! Do you see the little water in this bucket?”

The little monk answered, “Yes, Venerable Sir!”. Then the Blessed One further explained, “The priesthood or livelihood of a monk who is shameless to tell lies intentionally or knowingly is also of little value just like the little amount of water in the bucket.” Thereafter the Englightened One happened to throw away the remaining water in the bucket. Then the Buddha compared the water that was thrown away to the futility of a monk’s life who is in the habit of telling lies.

Character

Next, the Blessed One turned the bucket upside down. This indicated the concealed or closed nature of the disposition or character of such a monk. The mind of this person would also not be open and pure. Thereafter He took the comparison of the empty bucket to the empty or, in other words, the fruitless life of a monk who speaks falsehoods. This simile of the bucket filled with water and the empty one makes it clear to us the fact that one should always be mindful and aware of one’s speech.

The proper usage of words becomes powerful and effective when they are used to show noble qualities like kindness, compassion and patience. The mark of a good impression and a kind word might do wonders in the process of curing patients. Pleasant speech would give solace and relief to mentally as well as physically ill patients. For instance, a counsellor should have the patience to be able to listen and pay attention to the patient who is in distress. Parents, teachers and elders advise little children and young ones when they do something wrong or make mistakes.

These words of advice would be beneficial and effective only if elders themselves pay heed to practise what they ask their children or young ones or what they expect from them to do. This point is illustrated in the Dhammapada through the following simile. The well-spoken word which is not put into practice can be compared to a flower that is beautiful and colourful but scentless. And the well-spoken word which is also applied to one’s life can be compared with the flower that is beautiful and colourful, and also emanates a pleasant fragrance around. Therefore, it is a timely need for elders to set an example to the younger generation. As the saying goes, ‘Example is better than advice.’

Evidence

There is evidence to mention that some of our ancestors belonging to certain tribes had made use of pictures in order to exchange their ideas with each other. However, this method had not been successful in denoting abstract ideas and expressing certain ideas to the point.

In the modern world, the depth of meaning or the definition of a particular word is taken into consideration so as to introduce novel concepts and even to convey and exchange ideas, views and opinions. For example, you find a vocabulary or a set of terms peculiar to subjects such as Mathematics, Science, Logic and Philosophy to name a few. And psychologists study human behaviour by observing the bodily movements and facial expressions of a person. This is known as Body Language which is in fact used to judge the character and attitudes of a human being.

To be continued

A Buddist millionaire reveals hissecrets

My radio is playing a golden oldie. It is sung by Andrews Sisters.

“Money is the root of all evil
Money is the root of all evil
Won’t contaminate myself with it
Take it away, take it away, take it away...”

Can I afford to do that? Does my Buddhism encourages me to do that? Is money really evil? Well, I do not think so. Money is evil only to the foolish. Money can destroy them.

The Buddhists of olden days did not seem to have believed in total rejection of money. The Buddha is reported to have associated frequently by very rich people. One was so rich that he could cover the park of an aristocratic prince with gold coins. Only those who renounced the lay life to become monks have given up all their money and wealth in the hope of attaining Nibbana. The laymen were known for generosity, and the same time, managed their wealth skilfully and were finance savvy. The Buddha has given positive guidelines to them on how to earn money and how to get the best use of it.

In order to appreciate the Buddhist attitude to money and wealth I decided to interview a millionaire. Though he was not as fortunate as Bill Gates with a lot of media blitz, Prof Ananda Guruge tells me that Americans today are very much interested in his biography. I met him in Benaris, India, the cradle of Buddhism and was fortunate to have an upfront chat with this extraordinary person.

“Good morning.”

Insight

Having greeted him formally, I told him my purpose of visiting him. “I wish to get some insight from you on the way you became a millionaire. I want to share your economic and managerial wisdom with my readers, especially Sri Lankan Buddhists.”

“Of course, I may enjoy sharing my secrets with you. As a matter of fact they are no secrets to Buddhists. The Buddha has taught all of them very clearly in a few suttas, which your monks keep on repeating almost every day. But I know that the Sri Lankans do not give a heed to them. They read my biography with delight, I know. But it is only to have a good laugh. Anyway, as you have met me here today, I will definitely share the way I became rich in no time.”

“I am glad you consent to be interviewed by me. Tell me, how much was your initial investment?”

“Well, to be honest, I had nothing to invest, so to speak. My path was not rosy at all. You may not believe, but to tell you the simple truth, I started with zero investment. However, I was fortunate to have encouraging and positive advice from a very wise and rich person. That time I did casual work and rich people only gave me something to eat. I had not even a single cent in hand, to be honest. People called me a pauper then. I could not even dream of a rosy destiny.”

“Absolutely interesting! I have heard of some who were given initial finance by philanthropists or generous relations, and building on that, later became millionaires. But you were only given know-how. And you built on that!”

“Exactly. With a casual piece of advice given to me, I thought of entering the world of business. Just a fantasy for any pauper, you may say, but not for me. I was determined and became proactive,” he said with nostalgic joy.

Adventures

Unravelling his adventures in the difficult voyage to riches, he continued, “I had to find something that I can sell to get initial investment. My first principle I will share now with you. You have to be innovative. Find something to sell and get a few coins. I did exactly that. I sold something that no one would think selling. I got a few coins out of that. At that moment of delight my imagination and hope sizzled up. Instead of spending my lovely coins for consumption I thought of a way to invest it. I thought inventing a commodity, to be more factual.”

“Tell me, how did you do that? What was your invention?”

“Please allow me to keep myself abstract for some more time. I know that you are from Sri Lanka. Most people in your country are foolishly arrogant when they come to start a business. They want to ride clouds even when they cannot afford a bicycle. So, let me avoid a showdown at this juncture.”

His comment was a bit offensive, I thought. Yet he really seems to know the mentality of some Sri Lankans. No matter how many stories of millionaires who had very humble beginnings are told, some never get inspiration. I remember a story told by the famous Dutch artist Jean Picasse. During his stay in Sri Lanka, he had a poor young person always pestering him for a few rupees. Thinking that giving a fishing rod is better than giving a fish for a poor fellow (it is a wise saying of Jesus Christ), he gave the young man a recipe of a delicious Dutch soup and promised to buy him plastic cups for packing and a bicycle to transport them. He even told him that he would provide initial capital.

The young man had responded, “Who do you think I am to sell soup? I would rather starve to death than become ridiculed by selling damn soup.” And he never came back for his usual begging. The most interesting part of the story is not this. When the same artist moved to live in another South Asian country, he happened to get there too, a young person coming to him for a few rupees time to time. Picasse dared to extend to him also his kind offer. The young fellow was excited and accepted the offer, which was immediately granted. In two years time, to the amazement of the artist, the young man had become an owner of a thriving business with many people working under him. The soup is now delivered not on two wheels but four wheels. He has made a respectable brand name of the soup as well.

Invention

So, I decided to listen to the millionaire not insisting that he should reveal what his invention was.

“I am sorry, please continue.”

“As a matter of fact, I created a new commodity out of something that was never sold before. I combined it with another thing and made it saleable. So it was my product idea. I created a demand for my new product. I went to the promising market I thought where I could create a demand. So both the commodity and the market was my brainchild.”

“Very interesting” I nodded, highly inspired.

“And the most interesting thing is that I even resorted to bartering. I found it was easier and more profitable to barter in that particular market. I resold the goods I got from them at a different time at a better price. I made friendship with many people too.”

“So you won some good friends. As a matter of fact, some customers like a bit of personal touch. That is the secret that even in the presence of prestigious supermarkets some customers patronise their usual corner shop as well. Some personal goodwill is essential in doing business, isn’t it?”

“Well, there is more to that. The Buddha has taught that Kalyana Mittata is an essential resource for success in business. I strongly believed in that. So, I had made friendship with some street boys too and when I was in need of some manpower they helped me in a big manner.”

Wealth

“Very wise indeed. Some people when they acquire a bit of wealth become ‘big heads’ and forget their good friends. So, tell me, how many years it took for you to make your first million.”

“Not very long, about three months.”

“That is incredible. May be your commodity was a miracle product.”

“Not really. It was a very humble thing. But I was very positive and imaginative. I did not stagnate in one position. I took the risks and moved on to import trade and even became a wholesale dealer in no time.”

“So fast! You became a wholesaler of imported goods in three months and earned a million? It is like having Aladdin’s lamp! That is miraculous, I must say.”

“Well, yes, it is a miracle of strategy. To enter into wholesale business you need an impressive office with staff, clothes that show status, classy vehicle and such. I had none.

So, I hired all of them. Spruced up in hired clothes and riding a hired vehicle I approached the cargo people and reserved all what they had on ships by paying advances. When retailers came to the ports they all had to come to my hired office and buy through me. So from their money I released the stocks and made a good profit. This was the way I entered import market and believe me, in the first three months I had earned my first million.”

American business

“Born in India, you seem to have had a super American business brain. Very smart I must say. How did your adviser feel about it?” “Well, I visited him with an expensive gift. He was absolutely impressed. I was given red carpet treatment. To cap it all he gave me his daughter in marriage. He even recommended me for a ‘state recognised millionaire’ title.” “You told him all about your journey from poverty to riches and the ways and means you earned your first million?” “Yes sparing no secret I revealed him the entire scenario, how I got encouraged by his remark that he made looking at the dead rat seen at the roadside. I told him that I purchased some jaggery with the few coins I got from the owner of the cat I fed and combined jaggery and water to create my first commodity. He listened with curiosity that, I asked grass cutters and flower pickers to give me some grass and flowers, instead of money for the water and jaggery I gave them, and made profit by reselling. And he had a good laugh on how my friendly lads helped me in collecting fallen trees and branches in the royal park, to be dried and sold for firewood again to the royal kitchen. What really impressed him most was that instead of stagnating at small business I moved to wholesale and imported goods.” Thanking this enterprising young millionaire who was feeling jaded about his life I closed my book of Jataka stories in which I found his biography as Culla Setthi Jataka. I wrote this report of his upbeat views not only for your reading pleasure but hoping some of our readers may get lifted up for a better approach to money.

The Buddha decried disputation and treated silence as sacred

Meditation means silent concentration to gain insight. Thus silence is noble and noise is incompatible with spiritual progress.

Unkind people spread malicious tales, and well-intentioned people remain silence. That makes the difference between disciplined and undisciplined people.

The Vedic word ‘Muni’ stood for one who had made the vow of silence; it is connected with Mukkha, mouth. Thus even before the Buddha, Munis valued silence. The Buddha was more emphatic on silence. He decried the current habit of philosophical disputation and counselled avoidance of challenges to wordy combat.

Thus upon more than one occasion, the Buddha advised his followers ”when you meet together monks, you should do one of two things, discuss the Dhamma or maintain the noble silence”.

If one looks at the advice given to Kalamas, as appearing in the Vimamsaka Sutta, an advice unique in the history of religions, one would not be easily driven to accept wild rumours such as those about “Grease Yakas”. Unfortunately these rumours were able to shock society because people believed them without a proper enquiry.

“Now look you Kalamas, do not be led by reports, tradition or hearsay. Be not led by the authority of religious texts, nor by mere logic or inference, nor by considering appearances, nor by the delight in speculative opinions, nor by seeming possibilities, nor by the idea: ‘this is our teacher’.

But O Kalamas, when you know for yourselves that certain things are unwholesome (akusala) and wrong, and bad, then give them up. When you know for yourselves that certain things are wholesome, (kusala) and good then accept them and follow them. Surprisingly, the Buddha went even further. He told the Bhikkhus that a disciple should examine even the Tathagata (Buddha) himself so that he (the Disciple) might be fully convinced of the true value of the teacher whom he followed.

Verification

This illustrates the importance of verification before one believes a thing to exist. To any progress, whether it is spiritual or otherwise, doubt (vicikiccha) is one of the five hindrances (Nivarana) to the clear understanding of truth. Doubt exists as long as one does not understand clearly, whether it is one’s religious teachings or mere spread of gossips in the society. It was not only in the public preaching-hall that the Aryan Sage was to gourd his tongue. Even in the fastness of the jungle, or upon the high mountains, the Muni having apprehended the importance and valued of silence, took it with him like a mantle and regarded it (silence) as golden.

Learn this of the waters’ said the Buddha: Loud splatters the streamlet, the ocean’s depths are silent. The Emptiness is loud, fullness calm. The prattling fool is like a half-filled pot, the wise man like a placid lake. It is also said that one who knows much says little, that is the character of the sage with true wisdom.

Meditation means silent concentration to gain insight. Thus silence is noble and noise is incompatible with spiritual progress.

Unkind people spread malicious tales, and well-intentioned people remain silence. That makes the difference between disciplined and undisciplined people.

Truth

The Buddha laid great emphasis upon Truth and that is reflected in his insistence on the Right Speech, samma vaca is, as we have seen, the third section of the Noble Eightfold Path. We find the Buddha setting the example: tales of war, of terrors, of battles, tales about relationships, town, cities and countries, tales about women, about heroes, gossips at street corners, or near wells, ghost stories, aimless chatter or about existence and non-existence. Gotama, holds aloof from such idle conversation.

Whereas, some continue addicted to the use of wrangling phrases, such as: “You don’t understand the doctrine and discipline, but I do”.

“It I who am in the right, you are not”. The wise refrain from the use of such wrangling phrases. In everyday life, Right Speech often means less speech. ‘Only, when he knows does he say that he knows; only when he has seen does he say that he has seen.

Whatsoever, the word is pleasant to the year, blameless, lovely, reaching to the heart, urbane, pleasing to the people – such are words, wise-men speak. Thus the Buddha’s teaching is strongly against frivolous talk and the spread of vulgar rumours.

Sri Lankan Buddhism: Mahindian hybrid of pre-Buddhist religion?


Reproduced below is an excerpt, from an article written by Professor M.M.J. Marasinghe, a former Head of the Department of Pali and Buddhist Studies; Vice Chancellor, University of Kelaniya.

“It is difficult to understand why the Mahinda Thera introduced rituals to Sri Lankan Buddhists when such practices did not form part of the Pali canonical texts the teachings of which his tradition claimed it adhered to.

It is not difficult to find the answer to this question if we take a close look at the massive religeo-ritualistic syncretism which was taking place in and around the border regions of the Mauryan empire in India at the time.”

The learned professor suggests that Buddhism gifted to Sri Lankans by the Venerable Thera Mahinda is a hybrid of pre-Buddhist religion. This is a revelation, by an authority on the subject, that deserves serious attention of scholars and students of history of Buddhism, in Sri Lanka. I am a student of history of Buddhism. Can someone who is an authority on the subject enlighten us.

By rituals, the Professor means Bodhi poojas and offerings to relics of the Buddha. In Professor’s own admission, Bodhi pooja was introduced by a monk called Ariyadeva. When Venerable Thera Mahinda got down the sapling of the Bodhi tree from India, in all probability, he might have expected the Sri Lankan devotees to pay homage to the Buddha and not to treat the Bodhi tree itself as an object of veneration.

Perhaps he may have reckoned the Bodhi tree as a symbol that helps the devotee to kindle piety (Shraddha) in the triple gem. However, it does not necessarily mean that a symbol is a must for a devotee to gain confidence (shraddha) in the Triple gem.

Benefits

It is true that the Bodhi poojas of the present day, at times are ritualistic in character, where devotees make offerings to the Bodhi tree and pray worldly benefits in return. Paying homage to the Buddha-the primary objective - is completely forgotten.

However, the presence of ritual practices should not be an obstacle for the diligent devotee to pursue the Noble Eightfold Path, in his quest for emancipation. In my view, it is difficult to surmise that Thera Mahinda recommended Bodhi poojas as an extension of the pre-Buddhist tree-worship practice, which is quite contrary to the teachings of the Buddha.

According to the Professor’s analysis, even paying homage to the Buddha at the Three Cetiyas Stupa (where Buddha’s relics are enshrined), Bodhi tree (under which the Buddha attained Enlightenment) and Vihara-Shrine room (where the Buddha’s statues are housed) - amounts to indulging in pre-Buddhist ritual practices, which did not form part of the canonical texts.

After introducing the Buddha’s doctrine, Thera Mahinda was instrumental in getting down the sapling of the Bodhi tree and the relics of the Buddha, says the learned Professor. In other words, it is Thera Mahinda who paved the way for the present day worship of the three Cetiyas, which is not found in the canonical texts, according to him.

That is perhaps why the Professor was prompted to label Mahindian Buddhism as a hybrid of pre-Buddhist religion. In my view, ‘hybrid’ is too harsh a word to describe the Mahindian gift of non-hybrid Theravada Buddhism, purely because of his initiative to get down the sapling of the Bodhi tree and the relics of the Buddha, to enable the Sri Lankan devotees to pay homage to the Buddha.

Analysis

According to the scholarly analysis of the Professor, should the Buddhists interpret even the practice of ‘paying homage to the Buddha at the three ‘cetiyas’-stupa, Bodhi tree and shrine- as an indirect influence of the religeo-ritualistic syncretism, which the Professor claims, was taking place in and around the border regions of the Mauryan Empire in India, at the time of Mahindian expedition to Sri Lanka?

The three Cetiyas and their surroundings are ideal resorts for the devotees who practise meditation. Thera Mahinda has made a mistake by causing the Sapling of the Bodhi tree and the relics of the Buddha to be brought here for veneration by the Sri Lankan Buddhists, the would be followers of a hybrid religion, according to the learned Professor.

Academics are generally theorists and perfectionists. Perhaps they do not require serene surrounding for meditation. Even a room of the house is ideal for the purpose. Even disturbances around the place will not shake their gritty determination.

They are able to cultivate ‘saraddha’ in the triple gem without objects of veneration. Pristine pure Dhamma is there for their guidance. Perhaps Thera Mahinda, influenced by the religeo-ritualistic syncretism taking place in and around the border regions of the Mauryan empire, erred by not sticking to the canonical texts, according to the Professor.

The Professor sums up his view point thus:

“The hybrid version of the Sri Lankan Buddhism of today has to be thoroughly cleaned and purified if it is to be Buddhism, lest some country in the Western world will become the centre of pure Buddhism and we be labelled as holders on to a primitive form of the religion which it has become today.”

Coming from an authority on the subject, the view point cannot be discarded easily.

The lay society is keenly looking forward to the response of the very reverend Buddhist Prelates, the gurdians of the religion who have protected the religion over the centuries. Things are said easily than done.

Vipassana meditation: Essence of Buddhism

Vipassana is the oldest of Buddhist meditation practices. The method comes directly from the Satipatthana Sutta, a discourse attributed to the Buddha Himself. Vipassana is a direct and gradual cultivation of mindfulness or awareness. It proceeds piece by piece over a period of years. The pupil’s attention is carefully directed to an intense examination of certain aspects of his own existence.

Gauthama Buddha who was born into this world 2,635 years ago made the most exciting revolution in the way of thinking of man. We celebrate the 2,600th anniversary of this greatest psychologist’s attaining perfect Enlightenment this year.

He showed the human beings and deities the way to liberation from never-ending birth and death cycle. Although 2,555 years have passed after His passing away, still millions of devotees all over the world honour Him with great devotion for His right vision and wisdom that led His followers towards perfection.

The Buddha was the first to discover the Vipassana meditation. Vipassana means ‘insight” in the ancient Pali language of India. It is the essence of the teaching of the Buddha, the actual experience of the truths of which He spoke.

The Buddha Himself attained that experience by the practice of meditation, and therefore meditation is what he primarily taught. His words are records of his experiences in meditation, as well as detailed instructions on how to practice in order to reach the goal He had attained, the experience of truth.

Instructions

This much is widely accepted, but the problem remains of how to understand and follow the instructions given by the Fully-Awakened One. While His words have been preserved in texts of recognised authenticity, the interpretation of the Buddha’s mediation instructions is difficult without the context of a living practice. But if a technique exists that has been maintained for unknown generations, that offers the very results described by the Buddha and if it conforms precisely to His instructions and elucidates points in them that have long seemed obscure, then that technique is surely worth investigating.

Vipassana is such a method. It is a technique extraordinary in its simplicity, it’s lack of all dogma and above all in the results it offers.

Mindfulness

Vipassana is the oldest of Buddhist meditation practices. The method comes directly from the Satipatthana Sutta, a discourse attributed to the Buddha Himself. Vipassana is a direct and gradual cultivation of mindfulness or awareness.

It proceeds piece by piece over a period of years. The pupil’s attention is carefully directed to an intense examination of certain aspects of his own existence.

The meditator is trained to notice more and more of his own flowing life experience. It is an ancient and codified system of sensitivity training, a set of exercises dedicated to becoming more and more receptive to your own life experience. It is attentive listening, total seeing and careful testing. We learn to smell acutely, to touch fully and really pay attention to what we feel. We learn to listen to our own thoughts without being caught up in them.

Ego

Through the process of mindfulness, we slowly become aware of what we really are down below the ego image. We wake up to what life really is. It is not just a parade of ups and downs, lollipops and smacks on the wrist. That is an illusion. Life has a much deeper texture than that if we bother to look, and if we look in the right way.

Vipassana is a form of mental training that will teach you to experience the world in an completely new way. You will come to know for he first time what is truly happening to you. around you and within you.

Self discovery

It is a process of self-discovery, a participatory investigation in which you observe your own experiences while participating in them, and as they occur. The practice must be approached with this attitude. From the Buddhist point of view, human beings live in a very peculiar fashion. We view impermanent things as permanent, although everything is changing all around us. The process of change is constant and eternal. As you read these words, your body is ageing. But you pay no attention to that.

The newspaper in your hand is decaying. The print is fading and the pages are becoming brittle. The walls around you are ageing. The molecules within those walls are vibrating at an enormous rate, and everything is shifting, going to pieces and dissolving slowly. You pay no attention to that, either.

Then one day you look around you. Your body is wrinkled and squeaky and you are hurt.

So, you pine for lost youth and you cry when the possessions are gone. Where does this pain come from? It comes from your own inattention. You failed to look closely at life. You failed to observe the constantly shifting flow of the world as it went by.

Symphony

You set up the collection of mental constructions, “me”, “the newspaper’, “ the building” and you assumed that those were solid, real entities. You assumed that they would exist forever. They never do. But you can tune into the constantly ongoing change. You can learn to perceive your life as an ever - flowing movement, a thing of great beauty like a dance or symphony.

You can learn to take joy in the perpetual passing away of all phenomena. You can learn to live with the flow of existence rather than running perpetually against the grain. You can learn this. It is just a matter of time and training.

May you all be well and happy!

Going for refuge


If you sincerely wish to follow the Buddha’s teaching, it is best to do so by undergoing this ancient ritual and receiving the three refuges from a qualified Buddhist teacher. When you are convinced that you want to commit yourself to the Buddhist path, you should discuss your intentions with your teacher and fix a day for the ceremony.

When people ask, “What do you have to do to become a Buddhist?” we say that we take refuge in Buddha-Dhamma-Sangha. When superstitious people would come to my teacher Ajahn Chah wanting charmed medallions or little talismans to protect them from bullets and knives, ghosts and so on, he would say, “Why do you want things like that? The only real protection is taking refuge in the Buddha.”

As we begin to realise the profundity of the Buddhist teachings, it becomes a real joy to take these refuge; even simply reciting them inspires the mind. When we say, “I take refuge,” what do we mean by that? How can this simple phrase become more than a repetition of a few words but something that truly gives us direction and increases our dedication to the path of the Buddha?

Buddha is a lovely word; it means “the one who knows”. When we take refuge in the Buddha, it doesn’t mean we take refuge in some historical prophet but in that which is wise in the universe, in our minds, and not separate from us. Taking refuge in the Buddha, in wisdom, means we have a place of safety. The future remains unknown and mysterious, but by taking refuge in the Buddha we gain presence of mind in this moment, learning from life as we live it.

The second refuge is in the Dhamma, in ultimate truth or ultimate reality. We may think that Dhamma is “out there”, something we have to find else where. Really, it is immanent, it is here-and-now. One does not have a personal relationship with Dhamma; one cannot say “I love the Dhamma!” or “The Dhamma loves me!” We only need a personal relationship with something separate from us - like our mother, father, husband or wife. But we don’t need to take refuge in someone to protect us and say, “I love you no matter what. Everything is going to be all right.” The Dhamma is a refuge of maturity in which we don’t need to be loved or protected anymore; now we can love and protect others. When we take refuge in the Dhamma, we let go of our desire to have a personal relationship with the truth. We have to be that truth, here and now.

The third refuge is Sangha, which refers to all those who live virtuously. Taking refuge in the Sangha means we take refuge in that which is good, virtuous, kind, compassionate and generous - doing good and refraining from evil with bodily action and speech. The refuge of Sangha is very practical for day-to-day living within the human form, within this body, in relation to the bodies of other beings and the physical world we live in. When we take this refuge, we do not act in any way that causes division, disharmony, cruelty, meanness or unkindness to any living being, including our own body and mind.

So reflect on this - consider and really see Buddha-Dhamma-Sangha as a refuge. It’s not a matter of believing in Buddha-Dhamma-Sangha as concepts but in using them as symbols for mindfulness, for awakening the mind here and now.

Adapted by permission from Now Is the Knowing (Amarawati Publications, 1989).

About the Author: Ajahn Sumedho was born in Seattle in 1934 and has been a monk for over forty years. He established Wat Pah Nanachat (International Forest Monastery) in Thailand and Amaravati and Chithurst Buddhist monasteries in England. He retired as abbot of Amarawati in 2010.


We can think of the Buddha’s teaching as a building with its own foundation, storeyes, stairs and roof. Like any other building the teaching also has a door, and to enter it we have to enter through this door. The door of entrance to the Buddha’s teaching is the going for refuge to the Triple Gem: to the Buddha as the fully enlightened teacher, to the Dhamma as the truth and path taught by Him, and to the Sangha as the community of His noble disciples. From ancient times to the present, the going for refuge has served as the entrance to the path, giving admission to the rest of the teaching from its basement to its pinnacle. All those in the past who embraced the Buddha’s teaching did so by passing through the door of taking refuge, and anyone today who wants to follow the teaching should make the same threefold affirmation:

Buddham saranam gacchami I go for refuge to the Buddha,

Dhammam saranam gacchami I go for refuge to the Dhamma,

Sangham saranam gacchami I go for refuge to the Sangha.

If you sincerely wish to follow the Buddha’s teaching, it is best to do so by undergoing this ancient ritual and receiving the three refuges from a qualified Buddhist teacher. When you are convinced that you want to commit yourself to the Buddhist path, you should discuss your intentions with your teacher and fix a day for the ceremony. When the auspicious day arrives, you should come to the monastery or center, bringing such offerings as incense, fruit and flowers and a small gift for the teacher. After making the offerings, with joined palms, you should bow down three times before the image of the Buddha, thereby paying respects to the Three Jewels. Then, kneeling in front of the shrine, you should request the refuges. The teacher will recite each line of the formula and ask you to repeat each line. The procedure is repeated three times.

Following the declaration of the refuges, the teacher will usually administer the Five Precepts, the ethical code of abstaining from killing, stealing, sexual misconduct, false speech and intoxicants.

The ritual of going for refuge, if sincerely undertaken, is not a blind and empty convenation but the outward expression of an inner, spiritual process by which we commit ourselves to the Triple Gem as our supreme resort. By inwardly turning to the Triple Gem, the going for refuge becomes an act of self-surrender. Simultaneously, we drop our defences before the objects of refuge and open ourselves to their capacity to help, to guide us to release from confusion, turmoil and pain.

The going for refuge should not be an event that occurs only once and then fades into the background of our lives. This little ritual is in reality a method of cultivation, a practice that should be undertaken regularly. The act is a complex process involving intelligence, volition and emotion. First, as an act of intelligence, the going for refuge is guided by a clear understanding that protects us from the dangers of dogmatism and blind emotion. The faculty of intelligence steers the act of refuge toward the realization of its inner urge for liberation. It distinguishes the goal from any distractions and prevents us from wandering in pursuit of futile ends. The faculty of intelligence involved in taking refuge comprehends the basic satisfactoriness of life, our vulnerability to suffering. We further see that the cause of our suffering lies within ourselves - in our clinging, craving and delusion - and that to win freedom from suffering we must follow a course of practice that can effectively extinguish its causes. The growth of understanding brings a deeper commitment to the refuges, and the deepening of the inner refuge facilitates the growth of understanding.

The going for refuge is secondly an act of volition, a free act reflecting a personal decision. The ritual, if done mindfully, radically reorients the will. It brings about a harmonization of values, which now converge on the fundamental aspiration for awakening and liberation as the chief purpose guiding one’s life. Before refuge is taken, the will tends to move outwardly, pushing to extend the bounds of self identity. We seek to gain increasing territory for the self, to widen the range of ownership, control and domination. With the act of taking refuge, this pattern is undermined and reversed. Our will starts to move in the opposite direction, toward renunciation and detachment. We see that true liberation lies not in the extension of the ego to the limits of infinity but in the utter abolition of the ego-delusion at its base. We thus begin to relinquish the objects of clinging and the notions of “I” and “mine” from which attachment originates.

The third aspect of going for refuge is the emotional. The emotions entering into the refuge ritual are principally three: confidence, reverence and love. Confidence (pasada) is a feeling of serene trust in the protective power of the refuge-objects based on a clear understanding of their qualities and functions. Confidence gives rise to reverence (garava) - esteem and veneration born from a growing awarencess of the lofty nature of the Triple Gem. As we experience the transforming effect of the Dhamma in our lives, reverence awakens love (pema), which adds the element of warmth and fervour to the spiritual life. Love kindels the flame of devotion, which is expressed in dedicated service by which we seek to extend the protection of the threefold refuge to others and share with them its potential for wisdom and liberation.

Inquiring Mind

About the author Ven. Bhikkhu Bodhi has been a Theravada Buddhist monk for over thirty-five years. A translator of the Pali Nikayas, he lives and teaches at Chuang Yen Monastery in Carmel, New York, and at Bodhi Monastery in Lafayette, New Jersey. He is the founder and chairman of Buddhist Global Relief.

Illustrious Bhikkhu who illuminated Buddha Sasana


Madihe in Matara produced an illustrious disciple of the Buddha who made an outstanding contribution to the Buddha Sasana of Sri Lanka. He is none other than Ven. Madihe Pannasiha Maha Nayaka Thera who passed away on September 8, 2003.

His parents were James Carolis Poojitha Gunawardena and Bella Angolina Dheerasekera of Madihe, a hamlet of Matara.

He was the youngest in a family of two boys and three girls and was named Benson Wilmot. His father was the head teacher of the Methodist Mission School in Matara. He had to embrace Christianity conforming to the requirements of the school. The mother however was a devout Buddhist. His parents had no religious conflict and lived in harmony. Bhikkhus and Christian priests frequently visited their home.

Young Benson Wilmot was educated at St. Thomas’ Girls School in Matara until he was 10 years of age. Thereafter, he was admitted to the St. Thomas’ Boys’ High School in Matara. He was a brilliant student and a good cricketer.

Turning point

A turning point in Benson’s life came at the tender age of 13. The boy wanted to lead a Buddhist way of life. One day he told his parents that he would like to enter the Buddhist Order of Monks. His mother approved his suggestion and visited Ven. Weragampita Revatha Maha Thera of the Devagiri Vihara in Kamburugamuwa and informed him of her son’s intention to enter the Buddhist Order.

Benson Wilmot was duly ordained by the learned monk on June 24, 1926 and was named Madihe Pannasiha. Thereafter, Madihe Pannasiha was in reality very fortunate to come into contact with Ven. Palane Sri Vajiragnana Maha Nayaka Thera who brought him to the Vajirarama in Bambalapitiya.

At Vajirarama, the young monk was fortunate to listen to the Ven. Narada Maha Thera who was competent in English as well, in his Dhamma discourses and discussions, which he had with local and foreign scholar monks who very frequently visited the Vajirarama.

On June 19, 1933 Ven. Madihe Pannasiha Thera received his Higher Ordination (Upasampada) at a ceremony at the Polwatuganga Seema Malaka at the Gangarama under the tutelage of Ven. Palane Sri Vajiragnana Maha Nayaka Thera.

Then on November 27, 1955, with the demise of Ven. Palane Sri Vajiragnana Maha Nayaka Thera, Ven. Madihe Pannasiha Maha Thera was appointed as Maha Nayaka of the Mihiripenne Sri Dharmarakshita Sect. of the Amarapura Nikaya at a special meeting conducted by all the Nikaya Monks at the Vajirarama, Bambalapitiya.

The first United Vinaya Karma of the Untied Amarapura Nikaya after its amalgamation, was held at the Sri Varjiragnana Dharmayatanaya Seema Malaka at Maharagama on July 13, 1969 and it was at this site that Ven. Madihe Pannasiha Maha Nayaka Thera was appointed the Head of the United Amarapura Nikaya.

Amidst the many accolades the Maha Nayaka earned from foreign countries, he was awarded the title of Panditha in 1987, the title of “Sahithya Chakrawarthi” in 1991, the title of Agga Maha Panditha by the Burma Sangha Sabha and the Burmese Government in 1996, and the title of Doctorate from the Thailand Government in 1999.

The Maha Nayaka Thera was a very active member of the Buddha Sasana Commission appointed by the then government and also worked hard in the Assisted Schools take over by the Government.

The Maha Nayaka Thera succeeded in getting the four Poya Days declared as holidays in 1960 and 1961.

He was instrumental in composing and publishing a booklet titled “Seela Bhavana” which ran into millions of copies and distributed freely. It was a book that contained a full day’s religious activity program that could be followed by lay persons both young and old who observed Sil on Poya Days. Commencing at Vajirarama and Maharagama Vajiragnana Dharmayathanaya, he designed two Sil campaigns one for the old and the other for the young lay persons in the same temple. Ven. Ampitiye Rahula Maha Thera always assisted the Maha Nayaka Thera in the projects. After the demise of the Ven. Narada Maha Thera Vajiraramadhipathi, Ven. Madihe Pannasiha Maha Nayaka Thera became Head of the Vagirarama Temple at Bambalapitiya. He was the founder patron of the Sri Vajirarama Dharmayathanaya at Maharagama, founder patron of the Sasana Sevaka Samithiya, the Buddhist Information Centre in Colombo, and the Dharma Vijaya Foundation respectively as head of the Vajirarama, the Maha Nayaka Thera had

very cordial relations with the Board of tTustees chaired by Dr. P.R. Anthonis, the late V.T. And D.H. Panditha Gunawardena former Supreme Court Judge and District Judge respectively the late B. Winman Soysa and the late G.J. Silva and actively supported by the management working committee comprising the late Willie Fernando D.D.W. Kannangara, the late D.L.F. Pedris, Ananda Pereira eminent lawyer, Olcot Gunasekera and myself. The Maha Nayaka Thera in concurrence with the late Ven. Narada Maha Thera established the publication of a Buddhist Monthly Magazine in Sinhala titled the Baudha Lamaya which was managed by the late Willie Fernando and P.P. Karunaratna. Another English Buddhist Magazine titled the “Bosath” was also a Vajirarama publication, managed by the late J.S. Gomes. The Ven. Maha Nayaka Thera contributed many articles of Buddhist interest, to the two publications. The Ven. Maha Nayaka Thera together with the late Ven. Narada Maha Thera approved the setting up of two sections at the Vajirarama Sunday Dhamma School, one in English and the other in Sinhala, which was managed by Willie Fernando and the late Sirimevan Piyasingha, in the English and Sinhala sections respectively. At a later date, the Ven. Maha Nayaka Thera appointed Ven. Gangodawila Soma Maha Thera as the Principal of the Vajirarama Sunday Dhamma School. He pioneered the establishment of branches and had Vihara not only in the Western countries, but in the cities in Australia.

Being mindful of the immense contribution made by the late Ven. Narada Maha Thera Vajiraramadipathi in dedicating his life to missionary work both locally and internationally, Ven. Madihe Pannasiha Maha Nayaka Thera worked hard to establish the Ven. Narada Maha Thera International Buddhist Centre presently called the Narada Centre, situated at the Bauddhaloka Mawatha, Colombo 7. It serves not only Buddhists, but non-Buddhists as well who visit the Centre frequently. The Ven. Prof. Dhammavihari Maha Thera currently is Head of the Centre.

I was privileged to associate with the Ven. Madihe Pannasiha Maha Nayaka Thera for over 50 years and residing in close proximity to Vajirarama. The Ven. Maha Nayaka Thera together with the Ven. Dhammavihari Maha Thera delivered a series of Dhamma talks at the Amarawathi Buddhist Monastery in London.

The death of the Thera was left a void which is unlikely be filled in the foreseeable future.

May Ven. Madihe Pannasiha Maha Nayaka Thera attains the Bliss of Nibbana!

Buddhism shows the path to happiness


Buddha extols simple living as being more conducive to the development of one’s mind. A society

progresses to the extent the mind of the individual is developed. Through Buddhism it was possible to

disentangle this tangle of views and to reduce this confusion. Today too, in ‘This Confused Society’ it is generally believed that Buddhism could again help in lighting a path through the darkness of this confusion.

In recent times, many books have been written on the subject of economics and economic theory, all of them either from the capitalist or socialist point of view.

Neither of these systems pays attention to, nor considers the inner development of man as an important factor in the growth of society. Hence there has been a rapid deterioration in human values and standards of behaviour in all classes of society. Science and technology have taken gigantic strides forward to send man to the moon, and it will not be long before he visits other planets.

But fears are expressed that if the present trend towards moral degeneration continues, before long it would be impossible to differentiate human action from that of the animal. This fear is not baseless. It would be a great tragedy indeed were man to turn beast even in one of the many beastly aspects of behaviour belonging to the lowest animals. Thus what the world requires today is a socially stable economic system which yields the highest place to man’s moral development and cultivation of human values.

Divergent views

The Buddha lived in a society entangled and confused by sixty-two divergent views and one hundred and eight types of craving. There were hundreds who went about in search of an escape from this entanglement of views. Once the Buddha was asked the question: (Jata Sutta)

”The inner tangle and the outer tangle
This world is entangled in a tangle.

Who succeeds in disentangling this tangle?

The Buddha who explained that all these tangles have mind as the fore-runner, answered thus-

”When a wise man, established well in virtue,
Develops consciousness and understanding,
Then as a bhikkhu ardent and sagacious
He succeeds in disentangling this tangle”.

External factors

Realising the importance of the external factors in man’s endeavour towards disentangling himself from the inner tangle, the Buddha gave many discourses on the ways and means of overcoming the outer tangle. Some of these teachings were meant only for Bhikkhus. Others were only for laymen. The rest were meant for both bhikkhus and laymen, although in the latter case, the discourses were mainly directed to the Bhikkhus.

In one such discourse, he approved the acceptance by bhikkhus of the four requisites namely robes, food, shelter and medicine. Man could live without all other modern contraptions but for life to go on, these four requisites are essential. Wealth is required by man to obtain these four requisites and to meet his other needs.

Noble Eightfold Path

The Noble Eight fold Path that would be classified under right values and right action, enables man to achieve the highest ends. For economic stability and well-being, the Buddhist system stresses three factors in the Vyaghapajja Sutta.

1. Uththana Sampada – Production of wealth through skilled and earnest endeavour.
2. Arakkha Sampada – Its protection and savings.
3. Samajivikata – Living within one’s means.

4. Uththana Sampada - The Buddha who encouraged the production of wealth makes special reference to six

ranges prevalent at that time.

(1) Agriculture
(2) Trade
(3) Cattle breeding
(4) Defence Services
(5) Government Services and
(6) Professional services

India was predominantly an agricultural country. Hence many references in the discourses were made to agriculture.

For example’ in the “Sadapunnappavddhana sutta” it is mentioned that providing of irrigation facilities results in yielding continuous merit.

In the ‘Samyutta Nikaya’, it is mentioned that the greatest asset for agriculture is cattle, while in the ‘Sutta Nipatha’ cattle from whom man obtains milk, gee, curd, butter, and whey, of much nutritious value are described as the best friends of a country.

In developing countries, water and draught power provided by cattle are basic needs for agriculture.

2. Arakkha Sampada

This means the worldly happiness derived from constant protection of one’s wealth (that has been righteously obtained) from burglary, fire, floods etc.

As the Buddha has extolled the virtue of savings, this factor too could be considered in this context.

3. Samjivikata

This is the third of the three basic principles in the Buddhist Economic System. A person should spend reasonably in proportion to his income, neither too much nor too tittle.

The Buddha has preached on how one must spend his wealth, as follows.

1. Expenditure on food and clothing and other needs.
2. Maintenance of parents, wife and children and servants.
3. For illness and other emergencies
4 for charitable purposes.
5 For the performance of the following

(a) Treating one’s relatives
(b) treating one’s visitors
(c) Offering alms in memory of the departed.
(d) Offering merit to the deities
(e) Payment of State taxes and dues in time.

Simple living

Buddha extols simple living as being more conducive to the development of one’s mind. A society progresses to the extent the mind of the individual is developed. Through Buddhism it was possible to disentangle this tangle of views and to reduce this confusion. Today too, in ‘This Confused Society’ it is generally believed that Buddhism could again help in lighting a path through the darkness of this confusion. May all be well and happy.

Let’s heal the wounds of the world The Buddha’s message for the next century


P.D. Areyaratne.

To keep the Dhamma alive through the coming generations, it is most essential to find ways to make the teaching meaningful to the younger generation. Given the way Buddhism in Sri Lanka exists today, it seems to me that an educated young person will see in it little more than a system of rites and rituals, useful perhaps as a reminder of one’s ancient cultural and ethnic identity, but with very little relevance to their present concerns. The youth are the ones who will have to see that Buddhism serves the next century and that it will be able to offer its rich insights and spiritual practices to the global community.

When we look at the way of life gaining ascendency in this country today, it seems that the true Dhamma is rapidly losing its influence. There are plenty of temples; gigantic Buddha images looking out on us from the hills and roadways, and “Pirith” chanting is broadcast daily in all the major towns.

But life inspired and guided by the Dhamma, based on moral rectitude, on loving kindness and compassion, on respect and care for others, is on the decline.

To prevent the Dhamma from disappearing, radical and far-sighted steps will have to be taken, and I believe the main responsibility for this falls on the Sangha. If the Sangha has the insight and courage needed to take the steps required, the sasana can recover its strength. If it does not act boldly, with wisdom and courage, the decline is likely to continue.

It is futile, to keep on harping back to the injustices committed against Buddhism during the colonial period, or to indulge in the fantasy that the rest of the world is involved in a conspiracy to undermine the Sasana. Most of the measures recommended by the Buddhist Commission in the late 1950s have been implemented, and today Buddhism enjoys a favoured place in the life of the nation.

To keep the Dhamma alive through the coming generations, it is most essential to find ways to make the teaching meaningful to the younger generation. Given the way Buddhism in Sri Lanka exists today, it seems to me that an educated young person will see in it little more than a system of rites and rituals, useful perhaps as a reminder of one’s ancient cultural and ethnic identity, but with very little relevance to their present concerns. The youth are the ones who will have to see that Buddhism serves the next century and that it will be able to offer its rich insights and spiritual practices to the global community.

Success in keeping Buddhism alive will require that the true spiritual essence of the Dhamma be extracted from its often constricting institutional embodiments. Above all, this task demands that the Dhamma be treated not as a basis for ethnic identity or cultural pride but as a living path of spiritual development and personal transformation that touches our most fundamental attitudes, goals, and values. It is only where the Dhamma is appropriated in such a way that it will serve to heal the wounds in our own minds and hearts the deep hidden wounds of greed, hatred, and delusion. And it is only by healing the wounds within, that we can face the momentous task of helping to heal the wounds of the world.

Dancing in the dark fields: the teachings of illness

When death comes, we give up all our responsibilities, no matter how deep. Illness, too, can make it no longer possible to be “the responsible one.” Illness reminds us that we don’t have forever to take care of what most matters to us. I didn’t want to find myself on my deathbed still longing for those dark woods.

First is knowing an illness to be an admonition to virtuous action.
Second is knowing an impediment to be the divine chosen deity.
Third is the patient’s awareness of intrinsic awareness.
-Ko-brag-pa Bsod-nams-rgyal-mtshan
(from The Hermit of Go Cliffs, Cyrus Stearns, trans.)

I have a chronic, painful illness,. Actually, to call the illness an “it” is a bit off the mark. It’s an event in the body, an event of the body. It’s my dancing partner, my teacher, my enemy, my friend, my curse, my blessing. It constantly surprises me, sometimes shocks me, and continues to shape my like life a river shapes the land.

Until I was thirty-five, I was strong and capable. I walked the sagebrush hills of eastern Washington as a field botanist, I kayaked in the green waters of Puget Sound, I sat in meditation all night listening to the frogs. I loved Dharma practice and long silent retreats. I was a hard worker and proud of my contributions to the natural world and my community. I was also, I see now, strikingly oblivious to my body – I didn’t need to pay attention: it was always reliable. Then I contracted mononucleosis, a debilitating viral disease with a long recovery period. Illness, pain and weakness were suddenly the stuff of my life. As the months passed, there were days or weeks when I thought I was recovering, but then the symptoms would return, fierce as ever. I never knew when the illness would hit or how long it would last. I say “knew,” but really it’s “know.” Gradually it began to dawn on me that this thing had moved in and taken up residence in the household. Every time I had a period of weeks without symptoms I would think, “All right, it’s gone. Hallelujah!” Then, when it struck again, I would be devastated.

Nine years later it’s still with me, coming and going in much the same form. After a few years, I discovered that what I had was actually several autoimmune diseases, perhaps triggered by the virus that caused the mononucleosis. At times I’m completely free of symptoms; at other times I lie in bed curled in a ball around the pain and feel nausea so persistent that food – and life- loses all savour and joy. Every plan is subject to the body’s unpredictability; tea with a friend, a hike in the mountains, a retreat with a favourite teacher – all may seem reasonable when first imagined, impossible when the time arrives. When the symptoms return, life becomes very small and narrow – the width of a bed, the space between one aching limb and another. And I feel grief. It’s hard to hurt, again; it’s hard to have to put one’s life on hold, again; it’s hard to be back in the place of illness.

This is the territory of the dark fields.

Human condition

I’ve cried a lot of tears of self-pity in the last few years, and I wonder why self-pity is such a pejorative term. To feel pity for the person in pain – me – has been the first step toward really understanding that this is the human condition. I’m getting a taste of it a little sooner than most, a little later than some. I know a sweet little girl who developed a rare autoimmune illness just before her sixth birthday, and I watched her parents suffer as she struggled for breath. My friend Michael lies in his bed with Parkinson’s, not able to speak, his eyes locked on mine. Our tears mingle together, a big invisible river circling around the world, and through my tears of self-pity I join everyone who cries.

The most difficult teaching of illness has been unlearning my old deep habit of obliviousness to the body. If I’m feeling well and then begin to experience subtle signals – a little tiredness, a little weakness, a little pain – I may be able to stop the descent into illness. Ignoring those signals is a recipe for trouble. But oh. I’m such a slow student. Even though I know that the road of ignoring the body leads to pain, I forget, over and over again.

I find this just a little bit humiliating. I’ve been practising mindfulness for more than twenty years. This is illness in its guise as fierce Rinzai Zen master: The student forgets her bowls. The teacher, out of compassion for her stupidity, whacks the student over the head. The student bows deeply, fails again the next day, gets whacked again. Maybe one day the student remembers her bowls. The next day, she forgets, and once again: whack! The word that comes to mind here is restraint. I’ve had to learn both to pay attention to the body and to allow its dictates to take precedence over my will, my pride or my excitement.

Meditation practice

Ironically, in my early years of mediation practice, before I was ill, I learned with gratitude that I didn’t need to be subject to every whim of the body and mind. And yet, and yet: there is a fine line between non gratification of the body’s desires and suppressing the body’s needs. I’ve had to learn to respond with compassion to the requests of the body, to treat the body as a partner in the dance. This is most true when the lights go dark and we are once again whirling into the territory of pain and weakness. It’s easy to fight and resist, but I’ve learned the hard way how resistance increases the suffering. Instead there has to be a kind of surrender. The body is firmly in the lead, and my job is to follow it. That’s what this dancing partner has taught me.

I wouldn’t have said this about myself a few years ago, but I now recognize that pride is a big part of my personality. There’s nothing like a good illness to help you release a little excess pride. Proud of your dependability? Illness makes you undependable. Proud of your self-sufficiency? Illness forces you to ask for help. Proud of your career? Illness may very well undermine whatever career you have. We’re taught in Buddhism that the degree of suffering is directly related to the degree of holding on. Despite this teaching, most of us don’t let go of anything very easily. Illness, like a new puppy who chews anything and everything in sight, helps us get rid of things we thought we needed but really didn’t.

Another side of pride is shame. After becoming sick, I thought I couldn’t do meditation retreats because I was ashamed to ask for an easier schedule. When I could finally ask, and sit retreats again, it was like coming home after years of unnecessary exile.

Impressive

Somehow, miraculously, every time I lose some part of my self-image, something fresh and beautiful comes my way. Because of this illness, I’ve gone from being a well-respected conservation botanist to a wanderer, retreat junkie and sometime house and animal caretaker. I’m way less impressive, but there’s more room for grace. I have time for everything: for a friend in pain, for the light on the river, for my own wild mind shyly peering from the undergrowth.

A subtle part of the dance is knowing and remembering that although the body may be hurting, the heart and mind have a different kind of freedom. The most important thing I’ve learned in the last nine years is that even in the midst of physical suffering, there can be happiness, even joy.

In the last week I’ve been very sick, but I’ve been caring for a house (and a cat and two dogs) on the banks of the Chama River in northern New Mexico.

When the early evening light illuminates the bare trunks of the cottonwoods across the river and catches the first faint spring blush of green in the branches, my heart soars with the beauty of it. I’ve found that happiness is often just right nearly, half-hidden, and part of the practice of illness is learning to recognize and rejoice in it: the forsythia in the window, the taste of persimmons, the joy of a good conversation.

I’ve learned from long retreats that happiness is truly less about external circumstances as it is an inherent quality of the mind.

Happiness is a sort of resonance that I can tune into if I quiet down and listen. If I’m blocked from that natural connection, I can consciously call up times of past happiness – my first Zen practice period at Tassajara, deep in the winter mountains, or the way it felt to gallop a white pony over the wast open moors of western Ireland. Mysteriously, the feeling of happiness in the body, sometimes from many years ago, arises again. It doesn’t have to be transcendent joy; simple, humble pleasure is an enormous gift when the body hurts, as Zen teacher Darlene Cohen teaches in her book on practising with pain, turning Suffering Inside Out.

Gift of illness

Now I get to the tricky part: illness as blessing, as gift. It’s taken me a long time to see this face. I can remember snarling at someone, years ago, when they suggested that my illness might be a gift. Folks, a word of advice here: however much you may want to, refrain from making this suggestion to a sick person. They won’t thank you. Finding the gift of illness can only come from some genuine place far within. From without it feels like a way of minimizing the tremendous suffering of the person who is sick.

I couldn’t call it a gift, not for years. It felt like a curse, actually, something entirely undeserved, unwarranted and unnecessary. I have to say that it still feels like a curse some days, but there are gifts there too. And the greatest and hardest gift? The visceral, direct knowledge that life is not limitless, that tomorrow is completely unknown, and that, literally, there is no time to waste.

As long as I can remember I’ve felt a call to deep spiritual practice, even before I know such a thing was possible. But for most of my adult life, there was always something that seemed more important, and that called to me for care – a husband and partner, animals, work, activism, household, land. I did my best to integrate times of retreat with an ordinary life, but I was like a tamed wild animal, always looking longingly toward the dark woods.

When death comes, we give up all our responsibilities, no matter how deep. Illness, too, can make it no longer possible to be “the responsible one.” Illness reminds us that we don’t have forever to take care of what most matters to us. I didn’t want to find myself on my deathbed still longing for those dark woods. Even my dreams began to tell me that it was time to let the spirit go where it needed to go. And so, years after first becoming ill, I turned the corner and asked for the impossible: a year’s leave from my work to do what I loved and was called to while I still could. I wandered, I did long retreats, I spent time with beloved friends, I lay on my back in the desert and watched the endless blue sky, and I stumbled into happiness that I would not have believed possible. I chose not to return to my work, and in these years of simplicity and wandering, my life has opened up like a flower and grace has come in a thousand ways like a cloud of butterflies on a summer’s morning.

So, illness is a dance, an admonition, a curse, a blessing, the divine chosen deity. I would not wish it on anyone:it’s a rough, cruel road. Nonetheless, here I am. How can I not bow down to it? It has humbled me and stripped me bare; it has given me my true life.

(Courtesy: Spring 2009. INQUIRING MIND)

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