Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

The Second Anniversary of the “Saffron Revolution”

20070924-rangoon-mizzima-1This week is the second anniversary of the “Saffron Revolution” in Burma.  Two years ago, the Buddhist sangha took to the streets calling for economic and political justice in the military-ruled country.  The U.S. Campaign for Burma elaborates:

In a setting where market prices had already tripled or quadrupled within the past year, in August 2007, the Burmese junta suddenly decided to lift fuel subsidies. As a result, fuel prices skyrocketed as much as 500% overnight, with food and other commodities’ prices following suit.  What didn’t happen was the same rise in income levels, leaving millions of people across the country unable to perform even the most basic functions such as buying food, traveling, and paying for children education.

On August 19th, Buddhist monks overturned their alms bowls, historically considered an act of defiance, and refused to receive alms from the Burmese generals. In other words, they stopped giving these generals Buddha’s blessings. They began to protest in the streets of major cities, and soon they were joined by pro-democracy activists, nuns, and local residents. In a matter of a few days, thousands of demonstrators from all walks of life were pouring into the streets across Burma, demanding the political and economic reforms from the military government.

On September 5th, troops broke up a demonstration in Pakokku, a town in central Burma, injuring dozens of monks. Members of the sangha, the Buddhist clergy union, delivered an ultimatum to the military government to be met by September 17th, demanding an apology. The junta never apologized.

On September 22nd, thousands of monks marched in cities across Burma. Ten thousand monks took to the streets in Mandalay alone, the second largest city in Burma. In Rangoon, monks chanting the Metta Sutta, a prayer of kindess and compassion, marched to the home of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi to honor the democracy leader. Daw Suu Kyi appeared before the monks and shed tears of gratitude.

Led by monks, the demonstrations multiplied and swelled in size over the next days. On September 24th, crowds filled the streets of more than 25 cities across Burma, with 100,000 peaceful marchers in Rangoon alone. The next day, machine-gun toting soldiers gathered ominously at intersections. Despite the backdrop of 8888 uprising when soldiers beat and gun down student protesters with no reservations, many local and international onlookers were convinced that the Saffron Revolution was different because of the concentration of Buddhist monks in the movement. Because Buddhism is the predominant religion in Burma, the role of monks is held in high reverence. And to touch or assault a monk, let alone kill, is considered one of the gravest sins any man can commit.

On the 26th of September, the landmark Shwedagon Pagoda was barricaded by troops, and a curfew was imposed by the military dictators. During the night, soldiers raided dozens of monasteries across Burma, beating and killing monks according to eyewitness accounts.

Unfazed by the night raids and the rumors of arrest, on the morning of September 27th, 50,000 courageous citizens gathered on the streets of Rangoon to demand freedom from fear. Soldiers opened fire on the crowds, killing at least nine unarmed protesters. One of these was Kenji Nagai, a Japanese journalist, whose murder was caught on video and beamed around the world.

With each passing hour, more monks were detained as more soldiers filled the streets. The Burmese junta shut down internet and cell phone service to stifle the flow of information to the outside world. Even so, accounts emerged of a crematorium burning day and night to destroy evidence of military brutality. A Burmese colonel defected after refusing an order to slaughter hundreds of monks.

Human Rights Watch reported this week that “[Burma's] Buddhist monks face continuing intimidation, repression and severe jail sentences [today--two years after] the junta’s crackdown.”

We must not forget Burma.  You can support the country’s brave monastics, democracy activists and others by joining the U.S. Campaign for Burma.

Discovering Meditation by Godwin Samararatne

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Godwin Samararatne.

I just blogged about my friend Dr. Miles Neale and some of the work he’s doing.  When Miles got in touch with me, he also mentioned something about a teacher he and I share:  the late Godwin Samararatne.  A new book of his teachings, Discovering Meditation, has been published.  You can download it here.

Godwin was my first meditation teacher.  I studied vipassana meditation with him and Anagarika Shri Munindra when I was a student on Antioch Education Abroad’s Buddhist Studies in India Program in 1999.  I don’t know that I will ever be able to fully convey the extent of his effect on me.  He was my “heart teacher,” and the most “awake” person I have ever known.  Perhaps Bhikkhu Bodhi captured him best in his eulogy:

What was so impressive about Godwin…was not what he did but what he was. He was above all a truly selfless person, and it was this utter selflessness of the man that accounts for the impact he had on the lives of so many people.

I use the word “selflessness” to describe him in two interrelated senses. First, he was selfless in the sense that he seemed to have almost no inner gravitational force of an “I” around which his personal life revolved: no pride, no ambition, no personal projects aimed at self-aggrandizement. He was completely humble and non-assertive, not in an artificial self-demeaning way, but rather as if he had no awareness of a self to be effaced. Hence as a meditation teacher he could be utterly transparent, without any trips of his own to lay upon his students.

This inward “emptiness” enabled Godwin to be selfless in the second sense: as one who always gave first consideration to the welfare of others. He was ready to empathize with others and share their concerns as vividly as if they were his own. In this respect, Godwin embodied the twin Buddhist virtues of loving-kindness and compassion, maitri and karuna. Even without many words, his dignified presence conveyed a quietude and calm that spoke eloquently for the power of inner goodness, for its capacity to reach out to others and heal their anxiety and distress. It was this deep quietude and almost tangible kindness that drew thousands of people to Godwin and encouraged them to welcome him into their lives.

Again, you can download Discovering Meditation here.

Dr. Miles Neale’s Sacred Pilgrimage to the Sacred Sites of Peru

milesOur friend Dr. Miles Neale writes to tell us about a spiritual pilgrimage to the sacred sites of Peru that he is leading this December.  It will involve daily guided meditation, yoga and Buddhist teachings as well as meetings with Shamans and a day of service with the local peoples.  For more information about joining the pilgrimage and to follow the adventures, visit http://milesnealeretreatandtour.blogspot.com.

Miles is a great guy, and very active on the American Buddhist scene.  Check him out http://www.milesneale.com.

Tibetan Nannies – The New Parental Status Symbol?

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This is more than a little icky…

When $800 strollers hit the market a few years ago, it looked as if baby status symbols had reached a new odd, capitalist apex. Now, according to a growing number of parents and experts, the primo credentials trade in a different kind of capital: nannies.

In American cities that draw domestic workers from around the world, the nanny pool is incredibly diverse, with women from the Philippines, Jamaica and the West Indies, Nepal, Russia, Poland and more. In some families, the ethnic background of a nanny carries a certain cachet — and entrenched stereotypes.

“Generally speaking, what is the difference between someone from the Philippines, Tibet and the Caribbean in terms of child-raising mentality, patience, education …?,” wondered a recent poster on the popular parenting site UrbanBaby.com.

Such posts — and parents — are not alone in voicing their wishes to hire nannies with the “right” socio-ethnic background for their children. For the past several years, Tibetan nannies have been all the rage in New York City. On message boards and playgrounds, some parents claimed Tibetan nannies were “very balanced and Zen” and aided in children’s “spiritual development,” whereas in areas such as Dallas, for example, Latino nannies have been more in demand for their Spanish-speaking abilities.

At the Diki Daycare Center in Astoria, N.Y., demand for Tibetan nannies became so great that the preschool began offering a Tibetan nanny referral service.

“Tibetan women are well known for being caring and loving nannies,” reads the promotional literature. “They are recognized for becoming ‘one of the family’ and offer the same compassion and quality of care for their charges as they do their own children.” Furthermore, it says, “Cleanliness, organization & dedication to education are values of Tibetan culture.”

In fact, Tibetan nannies have become so popular that they may have become victims of their own success as they’ve been able to request and get escalating salaries — much to the annoyance of some employers.

Read the rest here.

Support the Bicycle Pilgrimage Benefitting the Konchok Foundation and Shambhala Mountain Center

This from MahaSangha News:

This Friday, September 25,  Joshua Weinstein and his fellow mountain bikers will leave Boulder to begin their gallant  and inspired pilgrimage to the Great Stupa  to raise money for Konchok Foundation and Shambhala Mountain Center.  There will be a brief send off ceremony for them in Joshua’s yard  (2815 7th St. in North Boulder)  at 8:30 AM with Meditation and a Lhasang performed by Surmang Khenpo Tsering.

The route being taken to the Stupa is on mountain paths.  Here is Joshua’s blog entry from yesterday:

Monday September 21st only four days before our departure it is snowing over much of the route. Rollins Pass, the high point at 11,671 ft., may see 6 inches of snow.  We are packing some wool socks and hoping for those classic Rocky Mountain fall days with snow on the peaks and yellow aspen leaves waving up at them.  There are 9 of us riding to Vagabond Ranch and 4 continuing on to the Stupa for an estimated 166.5 miles and 20,800 ft. of ascent and 18,662 ft. of descent.

Please sponsor Joshua and his fellow bikers, and help them to meet their goal of generous donations for Konchok Foundation and Shambhala Mountain center.  (The donations will be divided 50/50)  Go to
http://www.konchok.org/mountainbikepilgrimagedonations.htm to find out more and to sponsor any biker you wish to support.

For more  detailed and intimate information about how the Pilgrimage is progressing, please go to Joshua’s blog at http://www.vagabondranch.org/

You can also go to http://www.vagabondranch.org/pilgrimage-fall-09 for information regarding their route.

For more information about the Konchok Foundation and Shambhala Mountain Center, visit http://www.konchok.org and http://www.shambhalamountain.org, respectively.

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