Dear All,
Sadly, another day, another tragic war in the news, filled with reports of atrocities, the deaths of children, cruelty.
Such days will continue until human nature changes, such that human beings would no more harm other human beings and their children than they would harm their own children. This is not a matter of "who is right, who is wrong," but rather, all hate, all oppression, all callousness must be stopped on both sides, replaced by tolerance, caring and love.
The only way, I believe, is to increase human empathy toward others, even strangers, just as one would feel empathy for the pain of one's own mother or brother. The potential harm doer must truly feel, in his or her heart, the suffering he or she is about to inflict on another by gun or bomb. People must be left physically repulsed at the very thought of doing harm to others. Under such conditions, a war like this would be impossible, as would the hate or oppression of one people by another that is at the base of this conflict.
For 2500 years, Buddhism has proposed such a goal for humankind, a goal shared by pacifist voices of other religions and humanitarians of many philosophies. Sadly, all our prayers and preaching, reasoning and condemning have done little to truly change the animalistic, selfish, angry, violent human nature that is at the root of these evils. The means available centuries ago were simply insufficient for such a task on a wide scale (even if helping countless individuals one by one.) Now, ancient Buddhist Wisdom and Compassion is to be summoned through new means.
No longer empty words, no longer but a dream. This is the new path of Zen Buddhism and all Buddhism looking ahead, assuming that we truly wish to end the greed, anger, jealousy, resentments, selfishness and other divided thoughts in ignorance that are the poisoned root of all this.
For the first time, we can bring peace in this world, limit selfishness, increase charity and empathy, by changing human nature. New means are becoming available, whereby no more children need suffer and cry, like the children of Israel and Gaza tonight.
I will preach this message more and more in the coming days, months and years, because I believe it is the only answer to this violence, and to a score of other deadly problems which face humankind today. I have various proposals and notions to share, perhaps right and perhaps wrong, but worthy of discussion I feel. I believe that this is the new path for Buddhism's mission in rescue of the suffering sentient beings.
We must change our ways of working toward peace and love, because the key to unlock peace and love is to be found in changing the human heart and mind. This is in keeping with the Buddha's teachings of peace.
Gassho, Jundo
stlah
Sadly, another day, another tragic war in the news, filled with reports of atrocities, the deaths of children, cruelty.
Such days will continue until human nature changes, such that human beings would no more harm other human beings and their children than they would harm their own children. This is not a matter of "who is right, who is wrong," but rather, all hate, all oppression, all callousness must be stopped on both sides, replaced by tolerance, caring and love.
The only way, I believe, is to increase human empathy toward others, even strangers, just as one would feel empathy for the pain of one's own mother or brother. The potential harm doer must truly feel, in his or her heart, the suffering he or she is about to inflict on another by gun or bomb. People must be left physically repulsed at the very thought of doing harm to others. Under such conditions, a war like this would be impossible, as would the hate or oppression of one people by another that is at the base of this conflict.
For 2500 years, Buddhism has proposed such a goal for humankind, a goal shared by pacifist voices of other religions and humanitarians of many philosophies. Sadly, all our prayers and preaching, reasoning and condemning have done little to truly change the animalistic, selfish, angry, violent human nature that is at the root of these evils. The means available centuries ago were simply insufficient for such a task on a wide scale (even if helping countless individuals one by one.) Now, ancient Buddhist Wisdom and Compassion is to be summoned through new means.
No longer empty words, no longer but a dream. This is the new path of Zen Buddhism and all Buddhism looking ahead, assuming that we truly wish to end the greed, anger, jealousy, resentments, selfishness and other divided thoughts in ignorance that are the poisoned root of all this.
For the first time, we can bring peace in this world, limit selfishness, increase charity and empathy, by changing human nature. New means are becoming available, whereby no more children need suffer and cry, like the children of Israel and Gaza tonight.
I will preach this message more and more in the coming days, months and years, because I believe it is the only answer to this violence, and to a score of other deadly problems which face humankind today. I have various proposals and notions to share, perhaps right and perhaps wrong, but worthy of discussion I feel. I believe that this is the new path for Buddhism's mission in rescue of the suffering sentient beings.
We must change our ways of working toward peace and love, because the key to unlock peace and love is to be found in changing the human heart and mind. This is in keeping with the Buddha's teachings of peace.
Gassho, Jundo
stlah
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