Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

Month: July, 2009

His Holiness the Dalai Lama Talks about Journalism and Marx in Warsaw

“The Dalai Lama said the global crisis could be a lesson to start thinking about values other than money.” Image via the Agence France-Presse.
The Agence France-Presse reports that His Holiness the Dalai Lama said recently while visiting Warsaw, Poland:

    I am always telling when I meet the press, media people, they should have long noses like elephants and that it should smell in front and also behind…In a totalitarian regime like China (there’s) too much censorship, no free information — it’s not only morally wrong but also practically is ultimately a source of poverty. All information (is) censored, all information stopped — how can you develop trust? Without trust, how can harmony, friendship develop? Impossible.

He also spoke about money, values, Marxism, and the recession, inspiring a thoughtful post from Jesse P. Hiltz at Shambhala Sun Space. Take a look.

[UPDATE: His Holiness was made an honorary citizen of the city today as well.]

"The Ethics of Being a Theologian"

There’s a new piece in the Chronicle of Higher Education on the differences in and relationship between the disciplines of theology and religious studies that I really appreciated, and encourage you to read. Here’s a choice snippet:

    The best theologians are scholars who have immersed themselves in many of the same academic disciplines favored by religion researchers. Like good religion research, good theology is generated by the application of sound reasoning to empirical evidence. But there is a crucial difference. The religion researcher evaluates that evidence from within a tradition of secular, academic “wisdom.” The theologian evaluates the same evidence from within a tradition of sacred, esoteric “wisdom.” The distinction is not trivial and ought to be recognized and honored by religion researchers and theologians alike.

The 2009 Volunteering in America Report is Now Available

Via the NASW Advocacy Blog: The 2009 Volunteering in America Report is now available at www.VolunteeringInAmerica.gov.

    Through this Web site, you will be able to access volunteering trends, statistics, tools, resources, and information for the nation, U.S. regions, states, and major cities . You will also be able to see how states and cities rank on different factors related to volunteering.

Esala Perahera

Via Barbara’s Buddhism Blog:

“The illuminated elephant is on parade in Kandy, Sri Lanka, in a photograph taken July 27, 2009. The parade is part of the Esala Perahera, the Festival of the Tooth, which honors a relic of the Buddha.” Photo by Mario Tama for Getty Images.
For more about Esala Perahera, follow this link.

Burma News (7.29.09)

Image via Al Jazeera English.
Here are today’s headlines about Burma:

  • The Irrawaddy reports on increased security in Burma ahead of the verdict in the sham military trial of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, the country’s Prime Minister-elect and Nobel Peace laureate.
  • Al Jazeera English reports that Suu Kyi herself has said “she expects the outcome of her trial will be ‘painfully obvious’ when judges deliver their verdict on Friday.”
  • The Associated Press reports that the ruling junta has warned Suu Kyi and others against predicting the outcome of the trial, saying, “biased writings about the trial in progress, writings about which side will win or lose in that trial, or predicting possibility of the defendants’ convictions amount to contempt of court.”
  • The AP also reports on John Yettaw, the American whose swim to Suu Kyi’s home started all the recent trouble.
  • The White House reports that President Obama has signed into law H.J.Res. 56, which renews the import restrictions contained in the Burmese Freedom and Democracy Act of 2003. The Irrawaddy reports further on this.
  • The editors of The Irrawaddy also sound off on U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s “flawed Burma message.”