Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

The Green Lama Rules!

Over at the Tricycle Editors’ Blog, Aaron Lackowski points us to a ScrippsNews article about the “fascinating, Buddhist-inspired 1940s American comic strip called ‘The Green Lama.’” ScrippsNews writer Andrew A. Smith first points out the character’s similarities with other superheroes (such as Superman and Batman), and then notes:

But in other ways, the Lama was unique. For one thing, despite his regrettable name, Tsarong often acted more as an adviser than a sidekick — despite not being white. Plus, the Lama was drawn by the remarkable Mac Raboy (“Captain Marvel Jr.”), who was revered then and now for his graceful figures, clean embellishment, storytelling skills and breathtaking mastery of anatomy, foreshortening, design, perspective and rendering. Also, as his name implies, the Green Lama’s powers didn’t derive from the scientific and industrial prowess of the West — they came from, and practically idolized, Tibet and its Buddhist tenets.

But most importantly, “Green Lama” may be the most enlightened comic book I’ve read from the ’40s. For example, a full-page house ad in “Green Lama” No. 2 (February 1945) makes a plea — no, a demand — for tolerance. Under a stark image of a U.S. helmet next to a battlefield grave marker with no name, the text reads in part, “Let’s put an end to the foul prejudice fanned by our enemies … When you find anyone — yourself included — thinking, speaking, acting with racial or religious prejudice — STOP IT! If Smith, Kelly, Cohen or Svoboda is good enough to die for us, he’s good enough to live with us … as an equal. Be American!”

You’re not going to read that in “Sheena, Queen of the Jungle” in the 1940s!

Believe it or not, there are even more amazing stories about the comic book series’ progressive quality. Read the whole article here.

You can also order both volumes of The Complete Green Lama from Dark Horse Comics here and here. And you can read a past Tricycle article about the comic book character here.

Burma News (7.1.09)

[This post has been updated as 4:00 p.m. P.S.T. on 7.1.09.]

Here’s the latest Burma news:

  • Reuters reports that “U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will strongly urge [Burma]‘s ruling generals to release all political prisoners, including Aung San Suu Kyi, when he visits the country this week.”
  • Human Rights Watch urges the junta and the U.N. to make the visit “meaningful.”
  • The Irrawaddy reports, however, that National League for Democracy leader Win Tin sees “no hope” in Ban’s visit for Suu Kyi’s release from prison. The Nobel Peace laureate and Prime Minister-elect is currently standing trial before the junta on sham charges of violating the terms of her house arrest.
  • The Agence France-Presse reports that over 100 activists rallied in Japan, “calling on visiting UN chief Ban Ki-moon to press the junta to free political prisoners including democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.”
  • The UN Refugee Agency reports that Thailand has now resettled 50,000 refugees from Burma.
  • The New York Times offers a video report on three Burmese monks in exile in Utica, NY, “still campaigning for their country’s democracy”:

  • Droppin’ Science on the Sangha

    “CRASH COURSE: Jed Brody, a physics teacher from Emory College, lecturing to a class of Tibetan monks.” Photo by Ajay Pillarisetti for the New York Times.
    The New York Times reports on Tibetan monastics taking a four-week crash course in physics, biology, neuroscience, math, logic taught by faculty from Atlanta’s Emory University. Take a look.

    Michael Thaler’s Poems Along the Path

    Valerie Thaler, sister of our departed friend in the Buddhoblogsphere Michael Thaler of One Foot in Front of the Other, announces the publication of a posthumous anthology of his work at the blog. Get your copy of Poems Along the Path via Scribd and/or Lulu.