Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

Burma News (9.13.08)

Here are a few Burma-related items to take note of:

  • The Agence France-Presse is reporting today that Nobel Peace laureate and Prime Minister-elect Daw Aung San Suu Kyi will soon submit her “first-ever personal appeal” for release to the military junta that has kept her under hourse arrest for well over a decade.
  • The Daily Telegraph profiles two Burmese monks who participated in last year’s “Saffron Revolution” and are now living in exile in Utica, NY.
  • On the one-year anniversary of the Saffron Revolution, a Burmese citizen offers personal recollections of the uprising for Radio Free Asia.

  • The Omega Institute: Jon Kabat-Zinn on "As Good As It Gets"

    Reuters: Nepal to Deport Illegal Tibetans Back to Tibet

    Via Phil Ryan over at the Tricycle Editors’ Blog: In a move interpreted by many as their way of putting a stop to anti-Chinese protests, Nepal’s announced Thursday that they would begin to deporting Tibetan exiles living illegally in their country, Reuters reports. More than 20,000 Tibetans presently live in Nepal. Home Ministry Spokesman Modraj Dotel told Reuters that Nepalese police has already detained 106 Tibetans to see if they had necessary papers to establish their refugee status. While most long-standing exiles have been granted refugee status in Nepal, most new refugees are now sent on to India. This new action would send Tibetans back to Tibet, where, as Phil says, they would almost certainly be “condemned to imprisonment and torture.”

    The Washington Post: 9/11, Iraq and the Desensitization of the Victimized

    Via the Allen Ginsberg Library at Naropa University: In a piece for his Department of Human Behavior column in the Washington Post, author Shankar Vedantam writes about “9/11, Iraq and the Desensitization of the Victimized.” Here’s a striking chunk:

      Reminders of the Sept. 11 attacks seem to dull the responsibility that Americans feel for the harm caused by the botched U.S. war in Iraq, according to controlled experiments by social psychologists Michael J.A. Wohl and Nyla Branscombe.

      In research published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Wohl and Branscombe randomly divided volunteers into groups. One group was reminded of the terrorist attacks, while another was told about Nazi atrocities in Poland during World War II. A third group was reminded of the 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The volunteers were then quizzed on their views about the Iraq war.

      Volunteers reminded about the Sept. 11 attacks were less likely to perceive the distress the war has caused many Iraqis, and less likely to feel collective responsibility, compared with volunteers told about the tragedy in Poland.

    The Omega Institute: Pema Chödrön on "A Beautiful World Covered in Leather"

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