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Transcript of Thich Nhat Hanh English Dharma Talks
31 Be Like the Earth
The Practice of Forbearance
Dharma Talk given by Thich Nhat Hanh
on July 23, 1996 in Plum Village, France.
Good morning, dear
friends.
Today is the
twenty-third of July, 1996, and we are in the Upper Hamlet.
Two days ago in a
Dharma talk in English, I asked the children to name that room in our modern
home where we can have peace, where we can practice peace, where we can restore
our peace. About fourteen years ago I called it a "breathing room,"
but there must be better names for that room. Of course in that room we can
practice breathing and restoring ourselves. But I guess that the children can
help propose a beautiful name for that room. Those who are new arrivals should
be told a little bit about that.
We said that in our
home there is a room for everything — like a guest room, a room for eating, a
room for playing, a room for sitting and watching television — but we need a
room where we can be really at peace. No one can shout at us when we go into
that room. When the atmosphere in the family is not light, is difficult to
bear, we can always have some place to go to be ourselves. No one can pursue us
into that room in order to continue asking questions, or saying things that we
don’t want to listen to. We may call it the "Embassy of the Buddha,"
where you can seek asylum. We can call it the "territory of peace,"
the "Pure Land," the "meditation corner." Please come up with
some better name that fits.
When we look at the village,
we see there is a church or a temple in the village. That church or temple
plays the role of spiritual leadership. It used to be a higher building than
the other houses, and it was surrounded with trees and so on. And we used to
think of it with love, with peace, because we knew that when we went there, we
could be rid of the annoying things of everyday life. But somehow the church or
the temple has lost the role of leadership. Many of us don’t feel comfortable
anymore when we think of the church or of the temple. Whose fault is that? We
should not blame anyone in particular. We are co-responsible for that. A church
not playing well the role of a church, a temple not playing well the role of a
temple, that is our responsibility. We have to restore the spiritual leadership
of a church, of the temple. But do we have the right and the power to do so? We
are not the church people. We are not the temple people. Can we decide how to
rearrange the church and the temple so that it will fit our spiritual need?
Because in our daily life we need peace, we need harmony, we need quiet, we
need communion — but they no longer provide us with that. Of course, we may
have the right to speak out, that we need this and that.
But in our home of
the twenty-first century — we still have four years to prepare for our modern
home. At least we have that room in our home to play the role of leadership. We
talked about the furniture in that room, we talked about a few cushions, we
talked about a little table with a little flower pot, we talked about a little
bell so that we can practice breathing and calming ourselves. To me, a
civilized home should have such a room. It is the heart of our home. Everyone
in the family has to sign an agreement, a treaty, that the space of the room
should not be violated by anyone, including the father, the mother. Once you
enter the room there is no right to shout, there is no right to have rough
words or gestures, because that is the territory of mindfulness, that is the
territory of peace, and everyone has to show his or her reverence, respect.
Because if we lose that respect and reverence, then there is nothing left. So
please help find a name that fits that room. It will play the role of the
church and the temple in our home. We will learn how to maintain that room, how
to arrange that room, how to practice in that room, so that peace and harmony
in our new home become something real — for the sake of all of us. The children
already have discussed this, and I ask you to continue it today.
We also discussed the
green space so that many houses in the area can profit — a kind of garden, a
kind of Buddha garden. You might like to call it a Sangha garden. Because the
central park is too big — the central park is for the whole city. We are
talking about a little park, for a group of houses only. Because if each house
has got to have a room that represents the territory of peace, then the hamlet
— a group of houses, like fifteen, twenty, or thirty houses — should possess a
space, green, natural, where the harmony of nature should be respected. I
propose that in that mini-park there is a playground for children, a space
where children can jump and run. Because we do need it, and it is a pleasure
for people like me to sit and watch the children running and shouting and playing.
We need that very much.
And then there should
be a path for walking meditation. Every home needs to have such a path. When
you are engaged on the path of walking meditation, you have the right to walk
slowly, and in silence. A group of houses should make a kind of agreement on
how to maintain and use that little communal park. I cannot survive without the
path of walking meditation, I am so used to it. It’s like food. If I have no
time, no chance, no place to practice walking every day, I don’t feel
completely happy. I can be happy, but my happiness is not perfect. The walking
has become part of my daily life. Every time I have five or ten minutes, I like
to use it for walking meditation. Each step brings me a lot of joy. During the
walk I pay attention to nature, to every creature that is there — a butterfly,
a snail, a little flower, a dry ripe leaf. I don’t want to call it a dead leaf.
I like to call it a "ripe" leaf.
And I like to see
mother taking the hand of daughter, practicing walking meditation, teaching
daughter to breathe in and out, to calm her emotions. I would like to see
father taking the hand of son, walking meditation. I would like to see them
sitting on the grass together, practicing looking at the blue sky, smiling. We
don’t need to be riding in a motor car very quickly in order to enjoy life. We
can just sit. I guess riding in a motor car is fine, but you might disturb
people if the sound of the motor car is too big. And you risk polluting the air
and you may reduce the happiness of other people, because you make the quality
of the air poorer. So we have to be mindful. In that space of nature, of
harmony, we should delegate members of the community who know how to maintain
the harmony and the beauty of the little park, for the pleasure of everyone. We
should make our walking meditation path beautiful, available to everyone. I
hope there are several paths for walking meditation because I do wish that
every house, every family, will at least have the opportunity to practice walking
meditation every day.
After having worked
for one hour, one hour and a half — whether manual work or intellectual work — I
always like and need walking meditation outdoors. Yesterday, I had one article
to edit. I like editing an article — I like words, I like grammar, I like
ideas, I like images, I like poetry — yes. But after about one hour of being
together with a pencil (I still don’t use a computer yet) and the sheet of
paper, I looked up through the window and I saw that young palm tree, so beautiful
it looks like it just came out fresh from paradise. It’s so appealing that I
said, "Although I like editing, the nature outside is so inviting."
So my heart vibrated with happiness — I saw that the Pure Land, that paradise,
is available. I was like a child. I wanted to come and touch the palm tree.
I have to tell you a
little bit of the story of that palm tree: I was in Germany and practicing
cleaning my intestines together with other friends. I was fasting several days,
just drinking herb tea. One night I saw myself practicing walking in a
beautiful park. I was made very mindful during the dream. I touched the bark of
the trees mindfully, and enjoyed every detail of the bark of the trees. At one
point, I was walking along a path where the vegetation is very green, very
young palm trees of this height on my left, and I stopped, and I looked, and I
said, "This green is so beautiful, so deep," and I was using my
finger and touching it, mindfully. You know something? Mindfulness is possible in
dreams. If you practice mindfulness, if you continue, there will be a time when
you also practice mindfulness in dreams. And you enjoy it.
I remember a Zen
master in China one day brought a number of visitors to visit the garden of the
temple and he pointed to a bush, and he told his visitors, "Ladies and
gentlemen: people of our time, when they look at these leaves and flowers, they
look at them as if they are in a dream." When I practice walking
meditation, especially in the woods, I practice touching and looking at the
vegetation in such a way that these things cannot be in a dream, should not,
could not, be in a dream. And I have succeeded. That even in a dream, the bark
of the tree, the palm tree, have become real also. So when I woke up I said,
"The young palm tree in my dream is so beautiful." I told myself that
when I go back to France I would like to plant a palm tree, plant it in my
garden. Three days after I return to France, I went to the nursery and I found
a very beautiful young palm tree, so I asked her to come to my garden.
[Bell]
I planted it in a
place where I can see it a lot of times during the day. Every time I stop my
work of editing, I look out and I see it. It is part of my Sangha, reminding me
to be happy, to enjoy every moment of my daily life. So in that park, in that
little park that belongs to the Sangha of new homes — about twenty or thirty
homes — we should have a palm tree like that, or any kind of tree that you like
to treat the way I treat my palm tree. You should rely on friends in the
neighborhood who know how to talk to trees, how to take good care of trees, how
to make trees into friends, members of our Sangha, how to arrange a beautiful
walking meditation path. And there should be a place where we can sit down — just
sit down. We don’t need to talk or anything. If you know how to sit down,
you’ll be happy enough. The other day I talked about Nelson Mandela a week ago
in the first Dharma talk of the summer opening. He was visiting France, and he
was asked by a reporter what he needed the most. And he said, "The thing I
need the most is to sit down. Since the time I got out of prison, I have had no
time to sit down." Poor man.
We have come to Plum
Village just to sit down. Don’t waste your opportunity to sit down. You know
how to sit down and not to worry, not to think about doing this or that, to lay
down your burdens, your worries, your projects. Just sit down and feel that you
are alive — with your son, with your daughter, with your partner, with your
Dharma brother or sister. That’s enough to be happy. Our sitting in the morning
is just for sitting down. Our eating lunch at noon is also for sitting down.
The Dharma talk is just an opportunity for us to sit down. So I am happy that
the very young people can follow this Dharma talk, because it is very deep.
It is also my desire
that in that little communal park, there is also something like a temple or a
church, but you don’t need to spend a lot of money building it. It must be a
place where you can go in and feel protected by the atmosphere and environment.
In fact, it is like the breathing room in your home. But now it is not for your
family only, it is for twenty or thirty families living in the same area. And
because it belongs to different spiritual traditions, that temple, that church,
or that meditation hall should not bear any symbol.
There are friends in
Florence, in Italy, who propose that they build a temple of peace on a hill of
the city. There will be a place without any symbols and people of different
spiritual traditions can come and sit together. No liturgy, no chanting,
nothing, no statue. But beneath, there may be several halls in where different
spiritual traditions can place their symbols — a Buddhist meditation hall, a
Catholic praying place, and so on. That is a good idea. But I think in order to
build a temple you need a lot of money and I’m not thinking of that. I’m
thinking of a beautiful, quiet, simple place where families can come in and sit
with other families and offer each other peace, quiet.
Talking about our home
in the twenty-first century, we have to be aware of our real need and have to
speak out about what we need. We have to talk to our architects, to our
government, to our city council for what we need. Imagine a neighborhood where
children have no place to go, where people only go to liquor shops and when
they go back home, get drunk and shout at each other. There’s no communication
between families. The black people in that house have no relationship with the
white people who live next door. When they meet each other, they don’t say
hello, there is no relationship at all. The children feel there’s no space, no
communication. Many children are delinquent, people are not happy with each
other in the family and they are not happy with neighbors and you don’t feel
safe living in such an area. So all these things should be discussed among us
who live in the area and we have to rearrange our way of life, as families and
as communities.
[Bell]
You may like to
discuss this in order to bring our collective insight to organizing our homes
in the twenty-first century. During the past week the children have been given
teachings on how to breathe, how to practice sitting meditation, practice
pebble meditation, and walking meditation.
Another practice we
have learned is the practice of calling the names of some people we love. We
select, say, five people that we love very much. We know that every time we
call his or her name we feel happy, we feel the freshness, we feel the love.
That practice is called "mindfulness of calling." For instance you
love David. David is very close to you. You know about David. You know about
his quality. You remember his smile. You remember his nice words. You remember
his tenderness. So in the sitting position, while you breathe in, you call his
name, "David." Mindful calling. You don’t have to call it out loud.
Just call him in your spirit, "David." Call his name in such a way
that he becomes very real to you in that moment. Even if he’s not there, if
he’s in North America, in Japan, yet he becomes very real to you in that
moment, just one in-breath. Your success depends on how concentrated you are,
how much you are interested in David’s presence. That is why I ask you to
select first the person you love the most. She may be your mommy, or your
brother, or your best friend. And then when you breathe out you smile and you
say, "Here I am." So in-breath is for calling him or her — to make
him or her be real in the present moment. And during your out-breath you smile
to him and you say, "Here I am." You bring yourself back entirely
into the present moment — you and he, you and she, are real in the moment. That
is the practice of mindfulness of calling.
There are those of us
who want to call the Buddha — mindfulness of the calling of the Buddha. Maybe
it is a little more difficult to call the Buddha if you are not very familiar
with the Buddha. There are ways of practice so that we can see the Buddha in a
very real way, as a person. Remember, Buddha is not a god. Buddha is just a
human person like us. Every time I call the name of the Buddha, I really touch
him, I really see him as someone very close to me. It’s like when I call your
name. The Buddha appears to me, very real, like yourself, like myself. It’s
like when I call the name of the full moon. When I look up at the full moon, I
know that the full moon is there. And I want only to focus my attention, my
whole attention, on the presence of the full moon. So I take an in-breath and I
say, "full moon." And then full moon suddenly reveals herself to me
very clearly. There’s only the full moon at that moment. And when I breathe
out, I smile and say, "Thank you for being there." So I and the full
moon were very real in that moment. And I repeat, I do it two, three, four
times, and my happiness increases all the time. I feel very alive in that
moment.
So in your sitting
meditation a time may be used just to call a few names in mindfulness. No
matter who the person is — the person whose name you call, no matter who he or
she is — mindfulness is always mindfulness. You might think that when you call
the Buddha your mindfulness is more mindful. That’s not true. Even if you call
the full moon, mindfulness is true mindfulness. And mindfulness — guess what it
is? Mindfulness is the Buddha. You don’t need to call the Buddha in order for
mindfulness to be the Buddha. Even if you call the snail or the dandelion or
the full moon, your mindfulness is still the Buddha. The energy of mindfulness
is the energy of the Buddha. So call your mother’s name, and the Buddha is
there with your mother at the same time. I said mother is a kind of Buddha and
Buddha is a kind of mother. Buddha is a kind of moon and moon is a kind of
Buddha. It’s wonderful! And there is the name of someone that you should try to
call sometime later. That person needs you very much and you have very often
forgotten her, forgotten him. And that person is yourself. Call your name and
smile to him, smile to her. It’s very important. You have neglected him, you
have been neglecting him a lot. He has suffered quite a lot. You have neglected
her very much. She has been suffering, she needs your attention, your
mindfulness, your embracing her with mindfulness. You’ve got to call her name,
with compassion, with love.
You are welcome to
stand up and to bow to the Sangha before you go out, but today I’m going to
tell a very beautiful story in the Dharma talk. If you are interested, you
might like to come back.
[Children leave Dharma hall]
Rahula is the son of
the Buddha. A few years after enlightenment, the Buddha went back to his
hometown, Kapilavastu, and visited his family. He was received by the king, his
father, Suddhodana. He came back with many of his disciples — monks (at that
time there were no nuns yet). He gave a beautiful Dharma talk to his father in
the palace. The Dharma talk was attended by several informed people in the
government, in the royal families, including his former friends. Siddhartha had
a lot of friends before he left home and became a monk. Rahula was eight and
Rahula was missing his father. That is why when the Buddha went back to his
quarters in the vicinity of Kapilavastu with his monks, Rahula wanted to
accompany him. Rahula loved the presence, the company of the Buddha, and he
didn’t want to go home. He wanted to stay in a monastery. One day he said,
"Buddha, I want to live with you, I don’t want to go home." Buddha
said, "Okay." He told his disciple Shariputra to ordain Rahula as a
novice. The grandpa was very angry because his son had become a monk, and now
his grandson also was made a novice. But little Rahula was so happy living
close to the Buddha and he practiced very well with the community of monks.
When Rahula was eighteen, the Buddha gave him a very beautiful Dharma talk. I
would like to share with you that Dharma talk today. The venerable Shariputra
was there, standing behind the Buddha, and he listened to the Dharma talk and
he received it very deeply, and he practiced it very deeply, even though the
Dharma talk was given to a very young monk — Rahula.
In that Dharma talk,
the Buddha advised Rahula to practice being the earth, the great earth. The
Buddha said, "Rahula, practice so that you’ll be like the earth."
People might throw on the earth things like perfume, excrement, urine, all the
dirty things, but the earth always receives all of that without anger. No
matter whether it is the perfume or jewels or gold or silver or flowers or
garbage or dirt or excrement or urine, the earth receives all of that without
any resentment, any anger, because the earth is great, is large. The earth has
the power to transform all these. You have a dead mouse in your kitchen. You
want to get rid of it — where do you put it? You throw it to the earth. In no
time at all, the earth transforms the dead mouse into something that you can
accept. The earth has a great power of transformation, because the earth is
great. So practice so that your heart becomes as great as the earth. You suffer
only if you are small, if your heart is small. But when your heart is expanded
you don’t have to suffer. You don’t need to make an effort to bear the
suffering.
The other day I
started with the image of a water container. It can contain something like
fifty liters and if you throw something dirty into that container then you
cannot drink that water any more — you have to throw the whole thing away. But
if you throw that dirt on a big river, the river is immense, and the river
water is still drinkable. In no time at all, the river with all the water and
the mud transforms the dirt you throw into it, and everything will be perfect
again. And the whole city continues to drink the water from the river. It’s not
that the river has to bear. We’re talking about forbearance, endurance — as a
boat to carry you to the other shore — shanti-paramita, "crossing to the
other shore," the shore of happiness, joy, and liberation by the boat of
forbearance.
If you make your
heart as large as the earth then you can accept anything people do to you and
say to you, without suffering. But if your heart is small, you suffer a lot. So
Rahula practiced to be like the earth. That is the practice of love called the
Four Immeasurable Minds. Because with the practice, your heart is growing and
growing and growing, larger and larger all the time. And your heart will
embrace everything, everyone — no enemy at all, there’s no enemy. Every time we
praise the Buddha, we say, "Dear Buddha, your heart is so big and you
embrace every living being with your heart, your compassion encircles the whole
of the cosmos." Whether you call them friend or enemy, it’s the same when
your heart is big, you embrace them all, you love them all — whether they are
cruel or less cruel, they are equally the object of your compassion.
So if you are a
student of the Buddha try to practice so that your heart grows larger every day,
and you won’t have to suffer. Even if they say very mean and very cruel things
to you, if they do cruel things to you, even if they try to suppress you and to
kill you. How can you kill a river? How can you kill the earth? It is so huge.
Some dirt cannot destroy the river because the river is so big. "Rahula,
practice so that you will be like the water. Whether people throw into the
water flowers, fragrance, food, milk, or urine or excrement or dead bodies of
animals, the water will receive all without rancor, without resentment, without
hatred; because the water has the capacity of washing everything. You can wash
the bowl of the Buddha with the water, but you can wash also the dirty cloth,
someone full of blood, the water receives everything and the water can wash
everything, transform everything. So Rahula, please practice so that your heart
will become something like water, you can receive everything without resentment
and rancor.
"Rahula,
practice like fire. Whether you throw into fire cloth or paper or flowers or
dirty things, the fire accepts all and burns all. Whether it is fragrant or
whether it stinks the fire accepts all and the fire reduces everything to ash
and smoke. Because fire has the power to transform. Rahula, practice being like
air. Whether you throw into the air something fragrant or something smelling
bad, whether you burn incense or whether you burn rubber, the air accepts all
because the air has the power to transform, because air is huge." The
Buddha was instructing the young monk Rahula. But Shariputra, the tutor of
Rahula, was standing there and absorbing every word of the Buddha and he was
practicing that teaching for many, many years.
[Bell]
With the practice of
mindful breathing, with the practice of looking deeply, you develop the four
elements of your heart. And these four elements of your heart will expand your
heart to infinity so that your heart will be like the heart of the Buddha,
capable of embracing the whole cosmos. The four elements are maitri, which is
loving kindness; karuna, which in English means "compassion," mudita,
which means "joy" — your
practice should be joyful, otherwise it’s not true practice; and finally,
upeksha, equanimity — upeksha means "no discrimination." You love
because the other person needs you, not because he is your countryman or he
belongs to the same religion you do. No discrimination at all, that is true
love.
One day, after
finishing his rains retreat, the venerable Shariputra wanted to go north to
visit another community that he had to care for. After he was gone, another
monk went to the Buddha and complained about Shariputra: "My Lord,
Shariputra is unbearable. He is too arrogant. I hate him. You trust him, you
love him so much. But he is not worth your love and your trust. He plays too
important a role in the Sangha. He teaches so many young monks and he has so
much influence in the Sangha and that is not good for you, Lord, and not for
him either. You know, my Lord, this morning when he was going out with his bowl
I asked him, ‘Shariputra, where are you going?’ He didn’t say anything. He did
not even answer me. And with his left hand he pushed me and I fell to the
ground, and he did not apologize, he just went out."
You know, Shariputra
was the object of a lot of jealousy. Because he was so important a teacher, he
was loved and appreciated by the Buddha. Shariputra is there, today, object of
jealousy, object of anger, of hatred. I guess in his daily life Shariputra
received a lot of things like that but fortunately he practices. The Buddha
said, "When did Shariputra leave?" Ananda said, "Just this
morning, my Lord. A few hours ago." "Could anyone go after him and
ask him to come back, we would like to see him?" Then a novice was sent by
Ananda to go after Shariputra and to invite him back.
That afternoon
Shariputra was back again at the Jeta monastery and the Buddha asked Ananda to
convene a meeting of the Sangha. You can see Ananda holding a bunch of keys and
going to each door and knocking, "Brothers, brother, come to tonight,
there will be an important meeting." Then when everyone was there, the
Buddha opened his mouth and spoke: "Bhikshu Shariputra, a brother of yours
said this morning that when you were leaving the gate of the monastery he asked
you where you were going, but you didn’t care to answer him and then you pushed
him, he fell to the floor, and you just continued your way without apologizing.
Is that true?"
This is the answer
offered by Shariputra. The answers of Shariputra have been recorded and became
a sutra, and the sutra we call The Lions Roar of Shariputra. I will read to you
a few lines. "Lord, you remember the lesson you gave fourteen years ago to
the young Bhikshu Rahula, he was only eighteen years old at the time. You
taught him to contemplate the nature of earth, water, fire, and air in order to
nourish and develop the four virtues of loving kindness, compassion, joy, and
equanimity. Although your teaching was directed at Rahula, I learned from it
also. I had made efforts to observe that teaching throughout the past fourteen
years, and I have often thanked you in my heart.
"Lord, I have
tried to practice to be more like earth. Earth is wide and open and has the
capacity to receive and transform. Whether people toss pure and fragrant
substances such as flowers, perfume, or fresh milk upon the earth, or toss
unclean and foul-smelling substances such as excrement, urine, blood, mucous,
and spit, on it, the earth receives it all equally with neither grasping nor
aversion. Lord, I have contemplated to make my mind and body more like the
earth. A monk who does not contemplate the body in the body, who is not mindful
of the actions of the body, such a monk could knock down a brother monk and
leave him without apologizing. Such is not my way.
"Lord, I have
practiced to be more like water. Whether someone pours fragrant substances or
defiled substances into water, the water receives them both without grasping or
aversion. Water is immense and flowing and has the capacity to transform and to
purify. Respected Buddha, I have contemplated to make my body and mind more
like water. A monk who does not contemplate the body in the body, who is not
mindful of the actions of the body, such a monk could knock down a brother monk
and leave him without apologizing. Such is not my way.
"Lord, I have
practiced to be more like fire. Fire burns all things, the beautiful as well as
the impure, without grasping or aversion. Fire has the ability to burn, purify,
and transform. My Lord, I have contemplated to make my body and mind more like
fire. A monk who does not practice mindfulness of the body in the body,
mindfulness of the actions of the body, such a monk could knock down a brother
monk and leave him without apologizing. I am not such a monk.
"Lord, I have
practiced to be more like air. The air carries all manner of smells, good and
bad, without grasping or aversion. Air has the capacity to transform, purify,
and release. Lord, I have contemplated to make my body and mind become more
like air. A monk who does not practice mindfulness of the body in the body, who
is not mindful of the actions of his body, such a monk could knock down a
brother monk and leave him without apologizing. Such is not my way.
"Lord, like a
small, Untouchable child, with tattered, torn cloth who clasps a bowl and begs
in the street for scraps of food, I practice to hold no false pride or
arrogance. I have tried to make my heart like the heart of an Untouchable
child’s heart. I have tried to practice humility, not daring to place myself
higher than others. My Lord, a monk who does not contemplate the body in the
body, who is not mindful of his actions and his speech, such a monk could knock
down a fellow monk and leave him without apologizing. I am not a monk like
that."
The venerable
Shariputra continued speaking like that, but his accuser could bear it no
longer. The other monk stood up and took away a piece of his sanghati robe to
show his shoulder and bowed to the Buddha and joined his palms and he
confessed, "Lord Buddha, I have violated the Precepts. I have born false
witness against Shariputra. I confess that I had jealousy, anger, hatred in me.
I confess my transgression before you and the entire community. I vow to
observe my Precepts better in the future." The Buddha said, "It’s
good that you have confessed your transgression before the community. We are
very glad you have done that." Then Shariputra rose also and he touched
the ground in front of the other monk. "I bear no hatred, no anger against
my brother and I ask him to forgive anything I may have done to upset him in
the past." And both of them practiced Beginning Anew in front of the
Buddha. The community saw that Shariputra did really practice in order for his
heart to expand like the earth, like the water, like the fire, like the air. No
matter what people told him, how mean it was, no matter how cruel were all the
things they did to him, he could accept all of that without rancor, without
suffering. That is the practice of true love in Buddhism.
True love consisting
of loving kindness — the desire to offer happiness; of compassion — the desire
to remove the pain from the other person; the desire to practice mudita — joy,
to bring joy to people around; and upeksha — the desire to accept everything,
not to discriminate. You love just because living beings need your love, not
because he is your brother or sister, he belongs to your family, or your nation
— no discrimination, that is upeksha.
[Bell]
If you still suffer,
if you still believe that you are the victim of injustice, if you still think
that they have wronged you, it means your heart is still not large enough, you
have not become quite like air, or earth, or fire, or water. You still want to
undo that injustice, to free yourself from injustice. You want the other person
to be punished so that you will feel better because you have been the victim of
terrible injustice. Injustice is the thing you see everywhere — a two year old
child struck with cancer, a baby just born is already crippled, a couple of
young people just married and have an accident that kills both. There are so
many things like that happening around you. And you look at the sky and you
say, "God is cruel. Where is justice? If God is love, if God is just, how
could God allow these things to happen?" After having looked for justice
from humankind, expecting the government, expecting the military, expecting the
fellow human beings to repair the injustice done to you, and you don’t succeed,
then you have to look at the sky and you cry out your injustice to God.
Lao Tzu, the author
of Tao Te Ching, said, "Sky and earth are inhuman, they treat living
beings like a straw dog." Straw dog — a dog made with straw, just a toy.
When you look closely at things, at people, at living beings, you see so much
suffering, you see so much injustice you cannot explain, and you blame sky and
earth, you blame God, you blame the Creator. You see that there are so many
people who are good-hearted and who continue to suffer so much and you ask why.
Yet you can see many people who are very wicked, very mean, very cruel, unjustly
enjoying very special treatment of society. And you revolt against this kind of
thing.
In the Buddhist
circle they used to explain this kind of injustice by the teaching of cause and
effect, in the context of "three times." "Three times"
means the past, present, and future. And they quoted this sentence: "If
you want to know what kind of goal you have pursued in the past life, just look
at yourself in the present life." If in the present life you suffer, it
means in the former life you have done a lot of wicked things, cruel things. So
if you suffer during this life, it’s because you were doing bad things in the
former life. Even if in this life you are trying to do good, you still have to
suffer because in a past life you have done bad things. If the other person is
doing cruel things but is still enjoying his situation, his special treatment,
it’s because in a former time in his past life he had done good things. That is
why he enjoys the fruit of his good karma right now. To know the quality of
your life in the future, you just look at the action you are doing in this
life. If you are doing good things and if you are not happy yet, be sure that you
will be happy in the future.
That is the way they
explain in the Buddhist circle, in order to appease a little bit your tendency
to revolt against injustice. Injustice, you can see it — a small nation
occupied by a big nation for one thousand years; a nation destroyed by another
nation with napalm, with defoliants. Millions of people die during a war. Think
of the former Yugoslavia — a thousand people liquidated in the name of ethnic
purification. The whole world community just stood by and allowed it to
continue and continue and continue and continue. You want to revolt. You feel
oppressed, you feel you have been the victim of injustice. You want to repair
that and you think of military means, political means, because you think that
only political means and military means can repair injustice. By trying to
repair the situation you may cause a lot of injustice at the same time. Giai
oan is a Vietnamese term, "to undo injustice." Giai means "to
untie." Injustice is like a rope binding you tightly and you suffer, and
you want to remove that rope, and you naturally think of military means, sheer
violence. You want political means to repair injustice. According to the
Buddhist practice, the only way to undo the injustice is to enlarge your heart.
Because only compassion, only loving kindness, only understanding, can answer
to ignorance, can answer violence, can answer injustice, can answer cruelty.
A child, a charming
little boy, catches a butterfly, and he takes the two wings of the butterfly by
four fingers and he just tears like that — and the butterfly dies. The little
boy laughs with joy. The little boy does not know that by doing that, he is
destroying life. One day I saw a little boy doing like that, I told him,
"My dear one, do you know that the butterfly has a sister, a mother?
Tonight if the butterfly does not fly home, his parents will be very upset, you
know that? Don’t you know that you are doing a very terrible thing to a
butterfly?" And the child understood. From that moment on, he no longer
caught butterflies. A few days later, when it was raining, he was collecting
snails on the path and putting them back in the bushes, being afraid that if we
step on the snails, the snails would not be able to go back to their fathers,
their mothers, in the evening. "Lord, forgive him for what he is doing,
because he does not know what he is doing." People are cruel, people are
doing incredible things to other people because they are just ignorant. They
don’t know that what they are doing makes themselves suffer, not only the
others suffer. They are acting in the name of the future, of happiness — happiness
of humankind, happiness of the nations.
You embrace an
ideology, a superb, superb ideology, and you want all your friends, all people
in your country to unite, to realize the golden world, the utopia, because you
are motivated by the desire to make this world beautiful, perfect, with
happiness for all people. You are ready to embrace that superb ideology for the
sake of your own nation, for the sake of the world community, and you believe
that this is the only way for humankind, because that ideology is the cream of
human intelligence. You do it out of goodwill. You kill, you exile, you lock
them into psychiatric hospitals, you liquidate them, you bury them
collectively, by hundreds of people, because of your love of humanity, because
of your aspiration for a better future for humanity. "Lord, forgive them,
because they don’t know what they are doing."
Only when you
practice understanding do compassion and loving kindness arise. Only when the
nectar of compassion is born in your heart do you begin to stop suffering.
There is no other way to undo injustice, except by the practice of deep looking
in order to forgive, in order to accept. If your heart is small, it means that
you have not practiced, you have not been able to see things. When you see that
he, she, the other person, because of ignorance, has done that to you and your
beloved one, you no longer blame.
[Bell]
Of course we have
suffered, all of us. Not only the Bosnians, but also the Serbs. Not only the
Palestinians, but also the Israelis. Both of us have suffered. But they
continue to bear hatred, anger toward each other. They think that the only way
to undo the injustice is to use political and military means, and they ask our
friends to come and help us with these means — political and military forces.
We don’t know that the way out is love, is compassion. Love and compassion, how
could they be possible if we don’t open our heart, if we don’t open our eyes in
order to see that just because we are ignorant we are making each other suffer?
Where is the world community? Are you there in order to help us to understand
each other? To help us produce the nectar of compassion in our heart? Or are
you there in order to support one side against the other and to egg us on to
continue the fighting? The interest is not the interest of one side, one
nation, one party. The interest is the interest of both, because we inter-are.
In Vietnam we say,
"The father eats a lot of salt and it is the son who has to drink a lot of
water." What the father does, the son has to bear. We have to inherit the
fruit of the actions of our fathers. Why? Is that injustice? Because we are
caught in the idea of self. My father did that, not me, why do I have to bear
the retribution? But in the light of non-self, you are your father, you are the
continuation of your father. If you are a young person and if you suffer, you
should learn that you suffer for the sake of your father, your ancestors, and
also your society. You have to learn in order to look, and when you say,
"I suffer," it’s okay: there should be someone who suffers for the
sake of his father, for his grandfather, his countrymen. "I suffer,
because I love. I suffer for all of them, because they did not know — that is
why they have produced a lot of suffering. Now I suffer in order to redeem that
kind of wrong doing." Suddenly you have enough courage in order to
continue and to forbear the difficulties. Suddenly your heart opens and
suffering is no longer unbearable for you because love is in you.
You know, what you do
can make your father or your mother suffer. What you do can make your
great-grandchild suffer in the future. That is why mindfulness helps us to stop
causing suffering to the people we love and to ourselves. A child who at two
years old gets a terrible sickness — who is responsible? You cannot say,
"Dear little child, you suffer like that because in your former life you
have done a terrible thing." You cannot say that. Who did the terrible
thing so that the child has to suffer today? All of us — that is non-self. We
belong to the same reality. There is a stream of life.
If you continue to
sit there and to blame and to hate your parents, that means you have not
practiced looking deeply. The better way is to sit down with your parents, to
reconsider the situation, to look deeply in order to see how the suffering has
come into being and how we can end thesamsara and the vicious circle of
suffering for our sake and for the sake of our children and grandchildren.
Understanding opens the door of the heart. Suddenly we are able to accept each other
because our heart has grown large thanks to the practice of looking deeply.
32 Transcending Injustice: The Tale of Quan Am Thi Kinh
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