Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

Month: February, 2011

“Monks in the Movies”

Don’t miss this great post at Buddhist Art News.

A Gift of Dharma for 2.23.11

Today’s quote is from Robert A.F. Thurman, who is Jey Tsong Khapa Professor of Indo-Tibetan Buddhist Studies at Columbia University, co-founder and president ofTibet House U.S., prolific author and teacher, and translator. (For me, Thurman’s translation of theVimalakīrti Nirdeśa SūtraThe Holy Teaching of Vimalakīrti: A Mahāyāna Scripture, remains one of the richest and most rewarding English translations of, well, anything.) This is it – yet another one of Tricycle‘s Daily Dharma quotes this week:

“Practice” is not merely some form of meditation, some recitation of mantra, some belief system, or set of rituals. Practice includes the committed engagement in the politics of enlightenment, social actions aimed at perfecting and beautifying the “Buddhaverse,” which must be integrated with the internal actions of meditational transmutation. The noble Eightfold Path includes authentic speech, action, and livelihood along with the five other branches of intellectual and meditational development. People should be persuaded that things are workable, and enlightened leadership can make a difference.

Videos of His Holiness the Dalai Lama Teaching on “Blind Faith, Marxism, Healthy Society, and Worrying”

They’re at Tricycle – Awake in the World. Check ‘em out.

Council on Foreign Relations’ Asia Unbound Blog: “By the End of This Year, the Burmese Regime is Likely to put Aung San Suu Kyi Back Under House Arrest”

Myanmar's pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi speaks with youths at the National League for Democracy head office in Yangon

Read it here. Shambhala Sun Space has more as well.

A Gift of Dharma for 2.22.11

Today’s quote is from Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche, the young Buddhist teacher who has been dubbed “the happiest man in the world.” This is it – yet another one of Tricycle‘s Daily Dharma quotes this week:

Awareness is the basis, or what you might call the “support,” of the mind. It is steady and unchanging, like the pole to which the flag of ordinary consciousness is attached. When we recognize and become grounded in awareness of awareness, the “wind” of emotion may still blow. But instead of being carried away by the wind, we turn our attention inward: Oh, this is what I’m feeling, this is what I’m thinking.

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