Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

Burma News (3.26.09)

Here’s the latest on Burma:

  • The BBC reports that the UN’s working group on arbitrary detentions has said that the detention of Nobel Peace laureate and Prime Minister-elect Daw Aung San Suu Kyi “violates both international legislation and the laws of Burma.” The group further called for her immediate and unconditional release.
  • The Associated Press reports that the National League for Democracy has asked the US to open talks with the junta, while the Agence France-Presse has reported that they have “issued a fresh appeal for permission to see Aung San Suu Kyi and other detained leaders.”
  • The New York Times Stephen Blake, the director of the Office for Mainland Southeast Asia at the U.S. State Department, visited with both government and opposition leaders in Burma this week.
  • Reuters has the news that the European Union is considering whether or not to extend sactions against Burma.

  • Ask Your Representative to Cosponsor the Department of Peace Act

    This from the NASW Advocacy Blog:

      Background

      Social work members of Congress, Reps. Barbara Lee, Susan Davis, Ed Towns and Luis Gutierrez are original co-sponsors of the Department of Peace Act H.R. 808. The act would establish a Department of Peace headed by a Secretary of Peace. The mission of the department is to (1) cultivate peace as a national policy objective; and (2) develop policies that promote national and international conflict prevention, nonviolent intervention, mediation, peaceful conflict resolution, and structured conflict mediation.

      While previous iterations of the act ran into trouble citing duplication with the State Department responsibilities, the current version was revised to have an emphasis on domestic rather than international conflict.

      Action Requested

      Contact your member of Congress and ask them to become a cosponsor of H.R. 808 and work towards its passage. If your member of Congress is already a cosponsor we have a letter thanking them for their cosponsorship.

    Contact your member of Congress here.

    Arrest Yourself for Aung San Suu Kyi

    Sign up now for Arrest Yourself 2009.

    "Advice for the Dark Ages" – A Message to the American Buddhist Shambhala Community about the Financial Crisis from Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche

    Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche recently offered the following statement at Shambhala.org:

      This is a very difficult time. The upheavals in the financial world are causing widespread distress, as are fears about climate change, intensified political polarization, and rising aggression. It is what the Buddhist teachings call a “dark age.” We experience the darkness as confusion, unhappiness, and lack of purpose.

      It was for times like these that the Buddha gave the teachings on enlightened society to King Dawa Sango, the first sovereign of Shambhala. At present, the truth of those teachings is clear. For a society to be truly harmonious, it cannot be based on greed and anger. When we understand this, we see that what is happening around us is literally caused by the absence of [enlightened] vision [meditation practice, compassion and aspiring to work toward a peaceful society].

      Uplifting our minds and increasing our life-force energy begins with that vision. So I am asking all of you, as citizens of [enlightened society], to rise to this occasion.

      First, take these precious teachings [meditation, compassion] to heart and practice them. That includes meditating for a short period every day to stabilize your mind and generate compassion. Contemplate your unshakeable karmic connection to the lineage [of brave, decent peaceful warriors who practice meditation and study peace] and reflect on your nature as the profound, brilliant [fundamentally good king or queen of your own world].

      Second, see fear for what it is: a lack of trust in your genuine being, which naturally radiates compassion and kindness. Take the big view of what is most important in this and future lifetimes: to become stronger and more realized in order to help others. Take care of yourselves, but don’t hide behind the false security of self-protection. From the ground of basic goodness, open your heart and serve others.

      Third, be generous. This is not a time to close down or hold on, but to offer from the natural well-spring of generosity. Be generous with those you love, but also with those you are tempted to blame or dislike. Be generous, too, within your community, which needs your support more than ever.

      Practicing, serving, and giving: this is the path of the warrior bodhisattva. It is both transcendent and earthy. When we orient our minds this way, we are creating a sustainable environment. The wealth that it generates is inexhaustible.

      I love you and am with you as we tread this golden path together.

    [Photo by the author.]

    A Tribute to Khenpo Kunga Wangchuk (1921-2008)

    Via Mahayana Student:

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