Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

Upaya Buddhist Chaplaincy Program Invites New Applicants

This from Maia Duerr at the Upaya Zen Center:

    The Upaya Buddhist Chaplaincy Training is a visionary and comprehensive two-year certificated program for a new kind of chaplaincy intended to serve individuals, communities, the environment, and the world. The program focuses on altruistic and compassionate leadership and service, and on social transformation from a systems perspective. It is intended to prepare people to have the skillful means to transform all forms of suffering, including suffering induced by structural violence.

    Faculty for 2009 will include Roshi Joan Halifax, Margaret Wheatley, Fleet Maull, Stephen Batchelor, Richard Davidson, and many more. Upaya is now accepting applications for the 2009 training cohort. For more information, contact Maia Duerr, chaplaincy@upaya.org, and see http://www.upaya.org/training/chaplaincy.php

His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s Message for China’s Earthquake Victims

Via The Interdependent: His Holiness the Dalai Lama offers this message for China’s earthquake victims:

    I am deeply saddened by the loss of many lives and many more who have been injured in the catastrophic earthquake that struck Sichuan province of China. I would like to extend my deep sympathy and heartfelt condolences to those families who have been directly affected by the strong earthquake on 12 May 2008. I offer my prayers for those who have lost their lives and those injured in the quake.

    The Dalai Lama

    May 13, 2008

How You Can Help Victims of the Sichuan Earthquake in China

Via Shanghaiist:

    For those who are looking to contribute to current aid efforts underway, you can now donate money to the Red Cross Society of China which has formed a disaster relief working group to be dispatched to the earthquake-stricken Wenchuan County in Sichuan.

    They have also published an emergency relief hotline, along with bank account information to receive donations to assist their cause:

    Account name: Red Cross Society of China
    开户单位:中国红十字会总会

    For those who want to donate in RMB: you can send money to the RMB account at the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China branch below:
    人民币开户行: 中国工商银行 北京分行东四南支行
    人民币账号: 0200001009014413252

    For those who want to donate in foreign currency, you can send money to the foreign currency account at the CITIC Bank branch below:
    外币开户行:中信银行酒仙桥支行
    外币账号: 7112111482600000209

    Hotline: (8610) 65139999
    Online donations: Red Cross Society of China website: www.redcross.org.cn
    Click the tab for online donations

Also, keep an eye on the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies’ web page on the earthquake here. I suspect they will suggest more ways to be helpful in the days to come.

Tell H.E. Ambassador Wang Guangya that China Must Support the Immediate Delivery of International Aid to Myanmar

Please take a moment to send the following message to H.E. Ambassador Wang Guangya regarding China’s role in ensuring the immediate delivery of international aid to those in Myanmar effected by Cyclone Nargis:

    The situation inside Burma is extremely critical right now, with at least 100,000 dead and millions affected by the destruction cyclone Nargis caused. Disease is beginning to spread rapidly and many are at risk from cholera, malaria, as well as starvation. The Burmese military regime’s response to this crisis has been too ineffectual and if large-scale aid delivery does not happen soon the catastrophe could multiply to unimaginable and beyond tragic degrees.

    The people of Burma cannot wait anymore, please immediately support a UN Security Council resolution that would allow aid to be delivered without the long waiting process of government approval.

    On May 9th you said “China also hopes that the Myanmar government strengthens dialogue and consultation with all the parties concerned and provides them with necessary assistance and facilitation in connection with the international humanitarian relief activities, so as to ensure speedy transportation and distribution of relief materials to those hit by the disaster to meet their urgent needs.” However the government of Burma has demonstrated that they do not care about ensuring speedy distribution of relief.

    There is no time to wait. Please support immediate aid going into Burma now!

Send your message here.

AP: Monks Back on Front Lines to Aid Cyclone Victims

Take a look at the Associated Press‘ story today about the relief work of Buddhist monks in Myanmar following Cyclone Nargis:

    The saffron-robed monks who spearheaded a bloody uprising last fall against Myanmar’s military rulers are back on the front lines, this time providing food, shelter and spiritual solace to cyclone victims.

    The military regime has moved to curb the Buddhist clerics’ efforts, even as it fails to deliver adequate aid itself. Authorities have given some monasteries deadlines to clear out refugees, many of whom have no homes to return to, monks and survivors say.

    “There is no aid. We haven’t seen anyone from the government,” said U Pinyatale, the 45-year-old abbot of the Kyi Bui Kha monastery sharing almost depleted rice stocks and precious rainwater with some 100 homeless villagers huddled within its battered compound.

    Similar scenes are being repeated in other areas of the Irrawaddy delta and Yangon, the country’s largest city, where monasteries became safe havens after Cyclone Nargis struck May 3 — and the regime did little.

    “In the past I used to give donations to the monks. But now it’s the other way around. It’s the monks helping us,” said Aung Khaw, a 38-year-old construction worker who took his wife and young daughter to a monastery in the Yangon suburb of Hlaingtharyar after the roof of his flimsy house was blown away and its bamboo walls collapsed.

    One of the monastery’s senior monks said he tried to argue with military officials who ordered the more than 100 refugees to leave.

    “I don’t know where they will go. But that was the order,” he said, asking for anonymity for fear of reprisals.

    The government has not announced such an order, which appeared to be applied selectively. Other monasteries in Yangon have been told to clear out cyclone victims in coming days, the monk said, but in the delta, refugees were being allowed to remain or told they could come to monasteries for supplies but not shelter.

    “They don’t want too many people gathering in small towns,” said Hla Khay, a delta boat operator. The regime “is concerned about security. With lots of frustrated people together, there may be another uprising.”

    Larger monasteries were being closely watched by troops and plainclothes security men — “invisible spies” as one monk called them.

    Such diversion of manpower at a time when some 1.5 million people are at risk from disease and starvation reflects the regime’s fear of a replay of last September, when monks led pro-democracy demonstrations that were brutally suppressed.

    Monks were shot, beaten and imprisoned, igniting anger among ordinary citizens in this devoutly Buddhist country. An unknown number remain behind bars, and others have yet to return to their monasteries after fleeing for fear of arrest.

    “I think after the September protests, the government is afraid that if people live with the monks in the monasteries, the
    monks might persuade them to participate in demonstrations again,” said a dentist in Yangon, who also asked that his name not be used for fear of reprisals.

    Newspapers have been ordered not to publish stories about monks aiding the people, and at least one monastery and one nunnery in Yangon were prohibited from accepting any supplies from relief organizations.

    “The government is very controlling,” said U Pinyatale, the abbot at the Kyi Bui Kha monastery. “Those who want to give directly to the victims get into trouble. They have to give to the government or do it secretly. (The military) follows international aid trucks everywhere. They don’t want others to take credit.”

    It appears unlikely that foreign aid organizations seeking to enter Myanmar will be allowed to use monks as conduits for relief supplies as many had hoped.

    “One of the best networks already in place in the country are the monks,” said Gary Walker of PLAN, a British-based international children’s group, speaking from Bangkok. “So we’ll be exploring ways in which we can see whether the monks can start distributing supplies throughout the country.”

    At the Kyi Bui Kha monastery, located on the banks of the Pyapon River deep in the delta, U Pinyatale glanced anxiously at the remaining 10 bags of rice.

    “At most, we have enough for the week. We will have to find a way to get more food,” he said as monks and villagers worked together to try to dry the sodden rice, even as rain clouds gathered above the largely roofless monastery.

    In Yangon, monks have been able to go out on their traditional morning rounds to accept food donations from the faithful and then share these with refugees at their monasteries. But in devastated areas of the delta that is not an option.

    About 90 of the 120 houses in Kyi Bui Kha have been totally destroyed. Gaps in the monastery’s storm-riddled wooden walls revealed a 360-degree view of ravaged rice fields.

    U Pinyatale said the sanctuary’s two dozen monks and nuns were also trying to offer spiritual comfort to the traumatized villagers.

    “We pray with them. We pray for the dead to go to the peaceful land of the dead and for the living to rebuild their lives,” he said.

    “When the cyclone came, all of us hid in the rice warehouse. I saw one person holding tightly onto a tree but he did not make it,” the abbot added. “After the storm, there were dead bodies floating everywhere. Some people get nightmares. Some hear voices at night that their dead children are calling for help. Some haven’t spoken since.”

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