Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

A Gift of Dharma for 4.15.10

Today’s quote is from our friend and past interviewee the Venerable Kobutsu Malone, an American Rinzai Zen Buddhist priest, co-founder of the Engaged Zen Foundation, and author of Prison Chaplaincy Guidelines for Zen Buddhism: A Source Book for Prison Chaplains, Administrators, and Security Personnel.  This is it, from his teaching “Bodhisattva as Revolutionary”:

Engaged practice requires looking at the big picture, not just one little aspect. We cannot be concerned only about the few people sitting in meditation with us, while others, no less our brothers and sisters, are living lives of deprivation and neglect. Engagement involves dealing with the fundamental materialistic paradigms that exist at the foundation of the global socioeconomic system, which operates and propagates our society. To awaken means looking deeply into the practice of scapegoating whole classes of people – not only those of other races, but also those who may function with a different psychology than what has been defined as “mainstream.” Walking on the path of the awakening – the Bodhisattva ideal – requires insight into the quality of our community structures and social order. It requires a thorough examination of the physical environment, the psychological environment, and the political and governmental environments. Ultimately, the path of full awakening – the Bodhisattva ideal – involves revolution.

The awakened state of mind – the revolution of the Bodhisattva – calls for far more than personal enlightenment, more personal entitlement through a kensho experience, more than insight into our “true nature”, and more even than the complete experience of anatta – “no self.” It is more than transmission received from a teacher, and more than a title, clerical garb or a certificate on the wall. Our preconceived ideas of the nature of “enlightenment” delude us into thinking that, somehow, insight is the be-all-and-end-all and, once it occurs, all of life’s problems are magically solved. Hardly. The notion that there is some sort of instantaneous insight experience that does all of our work for us, leaving us completely free of all psychological and social baggage, is just another savior myth. It is more wishful thinking. Awakening is not like that at all.

Our responsibility in approaching this Bodhisattva ideal is heavily weighted with the need to question authority and to think for ourselves. Ultimately, we are responsible for our own choices and our own awakening. Nobody can do it for us – no teacher, no Bodhisattva. We are obliged to discard our preconceptions, toss our ideals into the trash can and continue on our own two feet. In time, we may come across that instant in our lives when our stress and loss are at just the right point for a breakthrough into genuine insight to be possible. Should that take place, we will have gone beyond foolish talk, and the gate of the oneness of cause and effect will be opened. Once true awakening begins, the “Bodhisattva ideal” becomes irrelevant.

The Tibet Fund’s Earthquake Emergency Relief

This from The Tibet Fund (by way of our friends at the Tricycle Editors’ Blog):

We are very sad to report that hundreds have died and an estimated 10,000 mostly ethnic Tibetans were injured and left homeless in near-freezing temperatures in the aftermath of the earthquake that struck a sparsely populated region of Tibet in the early hours of April 14. More than 85 percent of the houses in Jiegu, a town of 100,000 people nearest the epicenter, were destroyed.

Because solid information is still emerging from officials working in the area, it is difficult to know how many remain buried in the rubble. Most of the people in the region are Tibetan herders and farmers who are in immediate need of shelter, medicine, clothing and other necessities.

As we offer our prayers for the victims and survivors, The Tibet Fund has established an Emergency Earthquake Relief Fund and is working to ensure that resources reach those most affected by the quake and through channels that will provide meaningful assistance, both in the near term and as people begin to rebuild their community.

To donate to The Tibet Fund‘s relief efforst, just follow this link.

Want to Help Post-Earthquake Relief Efforts in Tibet? Check Out Shambhala Sun‘s “Helping Tibet” Page

This from our friends at Shambhala Sun Space:

In light of yesterday’s earthquake — see our report here — we’ve updated our special “Helping Tibet” page so that you can easily identify which organizations listed there are equipped to handle your donations to post-earthquake relief efforts.

See it, and join in, here.

Open Casting Call for Title Role in the Upcoming Epic Film The Buddha

This via our bud and editor Rod Meade Sperry at Shambhala Sun Space:

As I’ve reported here before, a new Buddha biopic was being planned, and then was shelved, by Indian filmmaker Ashutosh Gowariker. It was to be “the most expensive Bollywood movie ever made”; Will Smith’s son was rumored to be playing the young Siddhartha… then, it withered on the vine.

But now it’s back, a website has been launched, the Dalai Lama is reported to be a consultant on the film, and the lead role remains open.

Think you’ve got what it takes to play the Buddha? Happily, the filmmakers state they’re open to “a diverse ethnic-look and colour.” You just need to be “between 20 to 35 years of age.”

If so: submit your headshot, reel, and resume here.

Message from His Holiness the 17th Gyalwa Karmapa, Ogyen Trinley Dorje, in Response to the Devastating Earthquake in the Yushu Region of Tso-Ngön (Qinghai Province)

This from the Website of His Holiness the 17th Gyalwa Karmapa, Ogyen Trinley Dorje:

I was extremely saddened to hear of the catastrophic loss of human life and the severe destruction caused by the recent earthquake in the region of Yushu in Tso-ngön [Qinghai Province]. I am now leading a group of Kagyü monasteries in India, Nepal, Bhutan, and other areas in prayers and virtuous activities dedicated to the deceased, so that their fears of the transitions between life and death may be eased. Through traditional offerings of respect, I have also formally requested the prayers of great masters from the various Tibetan spiritual lineages.

I am holding the survivors of this tragedy in my thoughts as well, and I hope that aid quickly reaches them. By bearing witness to the harshness of cyclic existence and allowing this to broaden our hearts and minds, may we all be able to extend our effort in meaningful ways, for the sake of both the living and the dead. I offer my deeply heartfelt aspiration that all affected by this calamity will see the swift easing of the pain of separation from those they love.

The Karmapa, Ogyen Trinley Dorje
April 14, 2010

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 45 other followers