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by Ken Jones
Acknowledgments ![[go to toc]](../../images/scrollup.gif)
I am grateful to Mr. Paul Ingram who, as the then editor, published
the original, very much abbreviated, version of this paper in the
Buddhist Society's journal "The Middle Way" (Vol. 54, No. 2
Summer 1979, 85-88). My thanks are also due to the Ven. Nyanaponika
Mahathera who encouraged me to develop my ideas further. For these,
however, I must accept sole responsibility.
Part One: The Fundamentals ![[go to toc]](../../images/scrollup.gif)
1.1 Buddhism and the new global society
It is the manifest suffering and folly in the world that invokes
humane and
compassionate social action in its many different forms.
For Buddhists this situation raises fundamental and controversial
questions. And here, also, Buddhism has implications of some
significance for Christians, humanists and other non-Buddhists.
By "social action" we mean the many different kinds of
action intended to benefit mankind. These range from simple individual
acts of charity, teaching and training, organized kinds of service,
"Right Livelihood" in and outside the helping professions,
and through various kinds of community development as well as to
political activity in working for a better society.
Buddhism is a pragmatic teaching which starts from certain
fundamental propositions about how we experience the world and how we
act in it. It teaches that it is possible to transcend this
sorrow-laden world of our experience and is concerned first and last
with ways of achieving that transcendence. What finally leads to such
transcendence is what we call Wisdom. The enormous literature of
Buddhism is not a literature of revelation and authority. Instead, it
uses ethics and meditation, philosophy and science, art and poetry to
point a Way to this Wisdom. Similarly, Buddhist writing on social
action, unlike secular writings, makes finite proposals which must
ultimately refer to this Wisdom, but which also are arguable in terms
of our common experience.
In the East, Buddhism developed different schools of
"traditions," serving the experiences of different cultures,
ranging from Sri Lanka through Tibet and Mongolia to Japan. Buddhism
may thus appear variously as sublime humanism, magical mysticism,
poetic paradox and much else. These modes of expression, however, all
converge upon the fundamental teaching, the "perennial
Buddhism." This pamphlet is based upon the latter, drawing upon
the different oriental traditions to present the teachings in an
attempt to relate them to our modern industrial society.
From the evidence of the Buddha's discourses, or suttas in the
Digha Nikaya, it is clear that early Buddhists were very much
concerned with the creation of social conditions favorable to the
individual cultivation of Buddhist values. An outstanding example of
this, in later times, is the remarkable "welfare state"
created by the Buddhist emperor, Asoka (B.C. 274-236). Walpola Rahula
stated the situation perhaps at its strongest when he wrote
that "Buddhism arose in India as a spiritual force against social
injustices, against degrading superstitious rites, ceremonies and
sacrifices; it denounced the tyranny of the caste system and advocated
the equality of all men; it emancipated woman and gave her complete
spiritual freedom." (Rahula, 1978). The Buddhist scriptures do
indicate the general direction of Buddhist social thinking, and to
that extent they are suggestive for our own times. Nevertheless
it would be pedantic, and in some cases absurd, to apply directly to
modern industrial society social prescriptions detailed to meet the
needs of social order which flourished twenty-three centuries ago. The
Buddhist householder of the Sigalovada Sutta 1
experienced a different way of life from that of a computer consultant
in Tokyo or an unemployed black youth in Liverpool. And the conditions
which might favor their cultivation of the Middle Way must be secured
by correspondingly different and more complex social, economic
and political strategies.
It is thus essential to attempt to distinguish between perennial
Buddhism on the one hand and, on the other, the specific social
prescriptions attributed to the historical Buddha which related the
basic, perennial teaching to the specific conditions of his day. We
believe that it is unscholarly to transfer the scriptural social
teaching uncritically and with careful qualification to modern
societies, or to proclaim that the Buddha was a democrat and an
internationalist. The modern terms "democracy" and
"internationalism" did not exist in the sense in which we
understand them in the emergent feudal society in which the Buddha
lived. Buddhism is ill-served in the long run by such special
pleading. On the other hand, it is arguable that there are democratic
and internationalist implications in the basic Buddhist
teachings.
In the past two hundred years society in the West has undergone a
more fundamental transformation than at any period since Neolithic
times, whether in terms of technology or the world of ideas. And now
in the East while this complex revolution is undercutting traditional
Buddhism, it is also stimulating oriental Buddhism; and in the West it
is creating problems and perceptions to which Buddhism seems
particularly relevant. Throughout its history Buddhism has been
successfully reinterpreted in accordance with different cultures,
whilst at the same time preserving its inner truths. Thus has Buddhism
spread and survived. The historic task of Buddhists in both East and
West in the twenty-first century is to interpret perennial Buddhism in
terms of the needs of industrial man and woman in the social
conditions of their time, and to demonstrate its acute and urgent
relevance to the ills of that society. To this great and difficult
enterprise Buddhists will bring their traditional boldness and
humility. For certainly this is no time for clinging to dogma and
defensiveness.
1.2 Social action and the problem of suffering
In modern Western society, humanistic social action, in its
bewildering variety of forms, is seen both as the characteristic way
of relieving suffering and enhancing human well-being and, at the same
time, as a noble ideal of service, of self-sacrifice, by humanists of
all faiths.
Buddhism, however, is a humanism in that it rejoices in the
possibility of a true freedom as something inherent in human nature.
For Buddhism, the ultimate freedom is to achieve full release from the
root causes of all suffering: greed, hatred and delusion, which
clearly are also the root causes of all social evils. Their grossest
forms are those which are harmful to others. To weaken, and finally
eliminate them in oneself, and, as far as possible, in society, is the
basis of Buddhist ethics. And here Buddhist social action has its
place.
The experience of suffering is the starting point of Buddhist
teaching and of any attempt to define a distinctively Buddhist
social action. However, misunderstanding can arise at the start,
because the Pali word dukkha, which is commonly translated
simply as "suffering," has a much wider and more subtle
meaning. There is, of course, much gross, objective suffering in the
world (dukkha-dukkha), and much of this arises from poverty,
war, oppression and other social conditions. We cling to our good
fortune and struggle at all costs to escape from our bad fortune.
This struggle may not be so desperate in certain countries which
enjoy a high material standard of living spread relatively evenly
throughout the population. Nevertheless, the material achievements of
such societies appear somehow to have been "bought" by
social conditions which breed a profound sense of insecurity and
anxiety, of restlessness and inner confusion, in contrast to the
relatively stable and ordered society in which the Buddha taught.
Lonely, alienated industrial man has unprecedented opportunities
for living life "in the context of equipment," as the
philosopher Martin Heidegger so aptly put it. He has a highly valued
freedom to make meaning of his life from a huge variety of more or
less readily available forms of consumption or achievement whether
career building, home making, shopping around for different world
ideologies (such as Buddhism), or dedicated social service. When
material acquisition palls, there is the collection of new experiences
and the clocking up of new achievements. Indeed, for many their
vibrating busyness becomes itself a more important self-confirmation
that the goals to which it is ostensibly directed. In developing
countries to live thus, "in the context of equipment," has
become the great goal for increasing numbers of people. They are
watched sadly by Westerners who have accumulated more experience of
the disillusion and frustration of perpetual non-arrival.
Thus, from the experience of social conditions there arises both
physical and psychological suffering. But more fundamental still is
that profound sense of unease, of anxiety or angst, which
arises from the very transience (anicca) of life (viparinama-dukkha).
This angst, however conscious of it we may or may not be, drives the
restless search to establish a meaningful self-identity in the face of
a disturbing awareness of our insubstantiality (anatta).
Ultimately, life is commonly a struggle to give meaning to life
and to death. This is so much the essence of the ordinary human
condition and we are so very much inside it, that for much of
the time we are scarcely aware of it. This existential
suffering is the distillation of all the various conditions to which
we have referred above it is the human condition itself.
Buddhism offers to the individual human being a religious practice,
a Way, leading to the transcendence of suffering. Buddhist social
action arises from this practice and contributes to it. From suffering
arises desire to end suffering. The secular humanistic activist sets
himself the endless task of satisfying that desire, and perhaps
hopes to end social suffering by constructing utopias. The Buddhist,
on the other hand, is concerned ultimately with the transformation
of desire. Hence he contemplates and experiences social action in a
fundamentally different way from the secular activist. This way will
not be readily comprehensible to the latter, and has helped give rise
to the erroneous belief that Buddhism is indifferent to human
suffering. One reason why the subject of this pamphlet is so important
to Buddhists is that they will have to start here if they are to begin
to communicate effectively with non-Buddhist social activists. We
should add, however, that although such communication may not be easy
on the intellectual plane, at the level of feelings shared in
compassionate social action experience together, there may be little
difficulty.
We have already suggested one source of the widespread belief that
Buddhism is fatalistic and is indifferent to humanistic social action.
This belief also appears to stem from a misunderstanding of the
Buddhist law of Karma. In fact, there is no justification for
interpreting the Buddhist conception of karma as implying quietism and
fatalism. The word karma (Pali: kamma) mean volitional action
in deeds, words and thoughts, which may be morally good or bad. To be
sure, our actions are conditioned (more or less so), but they
are not inescapably determined. Though human behavior and
thought are too often governed by deeply ingrained habits or powerful
impulses, still there is always the potentiality of freedom or, to
be more exact, of a relative freedom of choice. To widen the range of
that freedom is the primary task of Buddhist mind training and
meditation.
The charge of fatalism is sometimes supported by reference to the
alleged "social backwardness" of Asia. But this ignores the
fact that such backwardness existed also in the West until
comparatively recent times. Surely, this backwardness and the alleged
fatalistic acceptance of it stem from the specific social and
political conditions, which were too powerful for would-be reformers
to contend with. But apart from these historic facts, it must be
stressed here that the Buddha's message of compassion is certainly not
indifferent to human suffering in any form; nor do Buddhists think
that social misery cannot be remedied, at least partly. Though
Buddhist realism does not believe in the Golden Age of a perfect
society, nor in the permanence of social conditions, yet Buddhism
strongly believes that social imperfections can be reduced, by the
reduction of greed, hatred and ignorance, and by compassionate action
guided by wisdom.
From the many utterances of the Buddha, illustrative of our
remarks, two may be quoted here:
"He who has understanding and great wisdom does not think of
harming himself or another, nor of harming both alike. He rather
thinks of his own welfare, of that of others, of that of both, and
of the welfare of the whole world. In that way one shows
understanding and great wisdom."
Anguttara Nikaya (Gradual Sayings) Fours, No. 186
"By protecting oneself (e.g., morally), one protects others;
by protecting others, one protects oneself."
Samyutta Nikaya (Kindred Sayings), 47;
Satipatthana Samy., No. 19
In this section we have introduced the special and distinctive
quality of Buddhist social action. In the remainder of Part One we
shall explore this quality further, and show how it arises naturally
and logically from Buddhist teaching and practice.
1.3 The weight of social karma
Individual karmic behavior patterns are created by the struggles of
the individual human predicament. They condition the behavior of the
individual and, in traditional Buddhist teaching, the subsequent
rounds of birth and rebirth. We suggest, however, that this karmic
inheritance is also expressed as social karma. Specific
to time and place, different social cultures arise, whether of a
group, a community, a social class or a civilization. The young are
socialized to their inherited culture. Consciously and unconsciously
they assimilate the norms of the approved behavior what is good,
what is bad, and what is "the good life" for that culture.
The social karma the establishment of conditioned behavior
patterns of a particular culture is and is not the aggregate of
the karma of the individuals who comprise the culture. Individuals
share common institutions and belief systems, but these are the
results of many different wills, both in the past and the present,
rather than the consequence of any single individual action. It is,
however, individual karmic action that links the individual to these
institutions and belief systems. Each individual is a light-reflecting
jewel in Indra's net, at the points where time and space intersect.
Each reflects the light of all and all of each. This is the mysticism
of sociology or the sociology of mysticism!
Human societies, too, suffer the round of birth and rebirth, of
revolution and stability. Each age receives the collective karmic
inheritance of the last, is conditioned by it, and yet also struggles
to refashion it. And within each human society, institutions, social
classes, and subcultures, as well as individuals, all struggle to
establish their identity and perpetuate their existence.
Capitalist industrial society has created conditions of extreme
impermanence, and the struggle with a conflict-creating mood of
dissatisfaction and frustration. It would be difficult to imagine any
social order for which Buddhism is more relevant and needed. In these
conditions, egotistical enterprise, competitive conflict, and the
struggle for status become great social virtues, while, in fact, they
illustrate the import of the three root-causes of suffering greed,
hatred, and delusion.
"These cravings," argues David Brandon, "have become
cemented into all forms of social structures and institutions. People
who are relatively successful at accumulating goods and social
position wish to ensure that the remain successful... Both in intended
and unintended ways they erect barriers of education, finance and law
to protect their property and other interests... These structures and
their protective institutions continue to exacerbate and amplify the
basic human inequalities in housing, health care, education and
income. They reward and encourage greed, selfishness, and exploitation
rather than love, sharing and compassion. Certain people's life
styles, characterized by greed and overconsumption, become dependent
on the deprivation of the many. The oppressors and oppressed fall into
the same trap of continual craving" (Brandon, 1976, 10-11). It
should be added that communist revolution and invasion have created
conditions and social structures which no less, but differently,
discourage the spiritual search.
Thus we see that modern social organization may create conditions
of life which not only give rise to "objective,"
non-volitionally caused suffering, but also tend to give rise to
"subjective," volitionally caused karmic suffering, because
they are more likely to stimulate negative karmic action than
do other kinds of social organization. Thus, some of us are born into
social conditions which are more likely to lead us into following the
Buddhist way than others. An unskilled woman factory worker in a
provincial factory town is, for example, less likely to follow the
Path than a professional person living in the university quarter of
the capital city. A property speculator, wheeling and dealing his
samsaric livelihood anywhere is perhaps even less likely than
either of them to do so. However, all three may do so. Men and
women make their own history, but they make it under specific karmic
conditions, inherited from previous generations collectively,
as well as individually. The struggle is against nurture, as well as
nature, manifested in the one consciousness. "The present
generation are living in this world under great pressure, under a very
complicated system, amidst confusion. Everybody talks about peace,
justice, equality but in practice it is very difficult. This is not
because the individual person is bad but because the overall
environment, the pressures, the circumstances are so strong, so
influential" (Dalai Lama, 1976, p. 17).
In short, Buddhist social action is justified ultimately and above
all by the existence of social as well as individual karma.
Immediately it is simply concerned with relieving suffering;
ultimately, in creating social conditions which will favor the ending
of suffering through the individual achievement of transcendent
wisdom. But is it enough, to take a beautiful little watering can to a
flower dying in sandy, sterile soil? This will satisfy only the
waterer. But if we muster the necessary plows, wells, irrigation
systems and organized labor, what then will become of the spiritual
life amongst all this busyness and conflict? We must next consider
this fundamental question.
1.4 Is not a Buddhist's prime task to work on him- or herself?
Answer: YES and NO
Buddhism is essentially pragmatic. Buddhism is, in one sense,
something that one does. It is a guide to the transformation of
individual experience. In the traditional Buddhist teaching, the
individual sets out with a karmic inheritance of established
volitions, derived from his early life, from earlier lives and
certainly from his social environment, a part of his karmic
inheritance. Nevertheless, the starting point is the individual
experiencing of life, here and now.
Our train of argument began with the anxiety, the profound sense of
unease felt by the individual in his naked experience of life in the
world when not masked by busyness, objectives, diversions and other
confirmations and distractions. Buddhism teaches that all suffering,
whether it be anxiety, or more explicitly karmic,
brought-upon-ourselves-suffering, or "external" suffering,
accidental and inevitable through war, disease, old age and so on
arise ultimately from the deluded belief in a substantial and enduring
self. In that case, what need has the individual Buddhist for concern
for other individuals, let alone for social action since his prime
task is to work on himself in order to dissolve this delusion? Can he
only then help others?
The answer to these questions is both yes and no. This does not
mean half-way between yes and no. It means yes and no. It means that
the answer to these fundamental questions of Buddhist social action
cannot ultimately be logical or rational. For the Buddhist Middle Way
is not the middle between two extremes, but the Middle Way
which transcends the two extremes in a "higher"
unity.
Different traditions of Buddhism offer different paths of spiritual
practice. But all depend ultimately upon the individual becoming more
deeply aware of the nature of his experience of the world, and
especially of other people and hence of himself and of the nature of
the self. "To learn the way of the Buddha is to learn about
oneself. To learn about oneself is to forget oneself. To forget
oneself is to experience the world as pure object to let fall
one's own mind and body and the self-other mind and body" (Zen
Master Dogen: Shobogenzo). Meditation both reveals and
ultimately calms and clarifies the choppy seas and terrifying depths
of the underlying emotional life. All the great traditions of
spiritual practice, Buddhist and non-Buddhist emphasize the
importance of periods of withdrawal for meditation and reflection.
Their relative importance is not our present concern. However, in all
Buddhist traditions the training emphasizes a vigilant mindfulness of
mental feelings in the course of active daily life, as well as in
periods of withdrawal. It all advocates the parallel development of
habitual forms of ethical behavior (sila).
"We need not regard life as worth [either] boycotting or
indulging in. Life situations are the food of awareness and
mindfulness... We wear out the shoe of samsara by walking on it
through the practice of meditation" (Chogyam Trungpa, 1976, p.
50). The same message comes across forcefully in the Zen tradition:
"For penetrating to the depths of one's true nature... nothing
can surpass the practice of Zen in the midst of activity... The power
or wisdom obtained by practicing Zen in the world of action is like a
rose that rises from the fire. It can never be destroyed. The rose
that rises from the midst of flames becomes all the more beautiful and
fragrant the nearer the fire rages" (Zen Master Hakuin, 1971, p.
34).
It is open to us, if we wish, to extend our active daily life to
include various possible forms of social action. This offers a strong
immediate kind of experience to which we can give our awareness
practice. Less immediately, it serves to fertilize our meditation
"dung for the field of bodhi." Thirdly, it offers wider
opportunities for the cultivation of sila the habituation
to a selfless ethic.
The above remarks are about taking social action. They refer
to the potential benefits of social action for individual practice.
They are less "reasons" for social action than reasons why a
Buddhist should not desist from social action. The mainspring of
Buddhist social action lies elsewhere; it arises from the heart of a
ripening compassion, however flawed it still may be by ego needs. This
is giving social action, with which we shall be concerned in
the next section.
Social action as a training in self-awareness (and compassionate
awareness of others) may be a discipline more appropriate to some
individual temperaments, and, indeed, to some cultures and times, than
to others. We are not concerned with advocating it for all Buddhists,
but simply to suggesting its legitimacy for such as choose to follow
it. For Buddhism has always recognized the diversity of individual
temperaments and social cultures that exist, and has offered a
corresponding diversity of modes of practice.
1.5 Buddhist social action as heartfelt paradox
As we have noted, the significance of social action as mindfulness
training is, of course, incidental to that profound compassionate
impulse which more or less leads us to seek the relief of the
suffering of others. Our motives may be mixed, but to the extent that
they are truly selfless they do manifest our potential for Awakening
and our relatedness to all beings.
Through our practice, both in the world and in withdrawn
meditation, the delusion of a struggling self becomes more and more
transparent, and the conflicting opposites of good and bad, pain and
pleasure, wealth and poverty, oppression and freedom are seen and
understood in a Wisdom at once serene and vigilant. This Wisdom
partakes of the sensitivity of the heart as well as the clarity of
thought.
In this Wisdom, in the words of R.H. Blyth, things are beautiful
but not desirable; ugly but not repulsive; false but not
rejected. What is inevitable, like death, is accepted without rage;
what may not be, like war, is the subject of action skillful and the
more effective because, again, it is not powered and blinded by rage
and hate. We may recognize an oppressor and resolutely act to remove
the oppression, but we do not hate him. Absence of hatred, disgust,
intolerance or righteous indignation within us is itself a part of our
growth towards enlightenment (bodhi).
Such freedom from negative emotions should not be mistaken for
indifference, passivity, compromise, loving our enemy instead of
hating him, or any other of these relativities. This Wisdom transcends
the Relativities which toss us this way and that. Instead, there is an
awareness, alert and dispassionate, of an infinitely complex reality,
but always an awareness free of despair, of self-absorbing aggression,
or of blind dogma, an awareness free to act or not to act. Buddhists
have their preferences, and in the face of such social cataclysms as
genocide and nuclear war, they are strong preferences, but they are
not repelled into quietism by them. What has been said above has to be
cultivated to perfection by one following the Bodhisattva ideal. We
are inspired by it, but very few of us can claim to live it. Yet we
shall never attain the ideal by turning our backs upon the world and
denying the compassionate Buddha nature in us that reaches out to
suffering humanity, however stained by self love those feelings may
be. Only through slowly "Wearing out the shoe of samsara"
in whatever way is appropriate to us can we hope to achieve this
ideal, and not through some process of incubation.
This Great Wisdom (prajna) exposes the delusion, the folly,
sometimes heroic, sometimes base, of human struggle in the face of
many kinds of suffering. This sense of folly fuses with the sense of
shared humanity in the form of compassion (karuna). Compassion
is the everyday face of Wisdom.
In individual spiritual practice though, some will incline to a Way
of Compassion and others to a Way of Wisdom, but finally the two
faculties need to be balanced, each complementing and ripening the
other.
He who clings to the Void
And neglects Compassion
Does not reach the highest stage.
But he who practices only Compassion
Does not gain release from the toils of existence.
(Saraha, 1954)
To summarize: Buddhist or non-Buddhist, it is our common humanity,
our "Buddha nature," that moves us to compassion and to
action for the relief of suffering. These stirrings arise from our
underlying relatedness to all living things, from being brothers and
sisters one to another. Buddhist spiritual practice, whether at work
or in the meditation room, ripens alike the transcendental qualities
of Compassion and Wisdom.
Social action starkly confronts the actor with the sufferings of
others and also confronts him with his own strong feelings which
commonly arise from such experience, whether they be feelings of pity,
guilt, angry partisanship or whatever. Social action is thus a
powerful potential practice for the follower of the Way, a
"skillful means" particularly relevant to modern society.
Finally, it is only some kind of social action that can be
an effective and relevant response to the weight of social
karma which oppresses humanity and which we all share.
Part Two: The Action ![[go to toc]](../../images/scrollup.gif)
2.1 Giving and helping
All social action is an act of giving (dana), but there is a
direct act which we call charitable action, whether it be the UNESCO
Relief Banker's Order or out all night with the destitutes' soup
kitchen. Is there anything about Buddhism that should make it less
concerned actively to maintain the caring society than is Christianity
or humanism? "Whoever nurses the sick serves me," said the
Buddha. In our more complex society does this not include the active
advancement and defense of the principles of a national health
service?
The old phrase "as cold as charity" recalls numerous
possibilities for self-deception in giving to others and in helping
them. Here is opportunity to give out goodness in tangible form, both
in our own eyes and those of the world. It may also be a temptation to
impose our own ideas and standards from a position of patronage. David
Brandon, who has written so well on the art of helping, reminds us
that "respect is seeing the Buddha nature in the other person. It
means perceiving the superficiality of positions of moral authority.
The other person is as good as you. However untidy, unhygienic, poor,
illiterate and bloody-minded he may seem, he is worthy of your
respect. He also has autonomy and purpose. He is another form of
nature" (Brandon, 1976, p. 59).
There are many different ways in which individual Buddhists and
their organizations can give help and relieve suffering. However,
"charity begins at home." If a Buddhist group or society
fails to provide human warmth and active caring for all of its members
in their occasional difficulties and troubles though always with
sensitivity and scrupulous respect for privacy where then is its
Buddhism? Where is the Sangha?
In our modern industrial society there has been on the one hand a
decline in personal and voluntary community care for those in need
and, on the other, too little active concern for the quality and
quantity of institutional care financed from the public purse that has
to some extent taken its place. One facet of this which may be of
particular significance for Buddhists, is a failure to recognize
adequately and provide for the needs of the dying. In recent years
there has been a growing awareness of this problem in North America
and Europe, and a small number of hospices have been established by
Christian and other groups for terminally ill people. However, only a
start has been made with the problem. The first Buddhist hospice in
the West has yet to be opened. And, less ambitiously, the support of
regular visitors could help many lonely people to die with a greater
sense of dignity and independence in our general hospitals.
2.2 Teaching
Teaching is, of course, also a form of giving and helping. Indeed,
one of the two prime offenses in the Mahayana code of discipline is
that of withholding the wealth of the Dharma from others. Moreover,
teaching the Dharma is one of the most valuable sources of learning
open to a Buddhist.
Here we are concerned primarily with the teaching of the Dharma to
newcomers in Buddhism, and with the general publicizing of Buddhism
among non-Buddhists.
Buddhism is by its very nature lacking in the aggressive
evangelizing spirit of Christianity or Islam. It is a pragmatic system
of sustained and systematic self-help practice, in which the teacher
can do no more than point the way and, together with fellow Buddhists,
provide support, warmth and encouragement in a long and lonely
endeavor. There is here no tradition of instant conversion and
forceful revelation for the enlightenment experience, however sudden,
depends upon a usually lengthy period of careful cultivation.
Moreover, there is a tolerant tradition of respect for the beliefs and
spiritual autonomy of non-Buddhists.
Nevertheless, a virtue may be cultivated to a fault. Do we not need
to find a middle way between proselytizing zeal and aloof
indifference? Does not the world cry out for a Noble Truth that
"leads to the cessation of suffering"? The task of teaching
the Dharma also gives individual Buddhists an incentive to clarify
their ideas in concise, explicit everyday terms. And it requires them
to respond positively to the varied responses which their teaching
will provoke in others.
It will be helpful to treat the problem on two overlapping levels,
and to distinguish between (a) publicizing the Dhamma, and (b)
introductory teaching for enquirers who interest has thus been
awakened.
At both the above levels activity is desirable both by a central
body of some kind and by local groups (in many countries there will
certainly be several "central bodies," representing
different traditions and tendencies). The central body can
cost-effectively produce for local use introductory texts and study
guides, speakers' notes, audiocassettes, slide presentations and
"study kits" combining all of these different types of
material. It has the resources to develop correspondence courses such
as those run by the Buddhist Society in the United Kingdom which offer
a well-tried model. And it will perhaps have sufficient prestige to
negotiate time on the national radio and television network.
Particularly in Western countries there are strong arguments for
organizations representing the different Buddhist traditions and
tendencies to set up a representative Buddhist Information and Liaison
Service for propagating fundamental Buddhism and some first
introductions to the different traditions and organizations. It would
also provide a general information clearing house for all the groups
and organizations represented. It could be financed and controlled
through a representative national Buddhist council which, with growing
confidence between its members and between the different Buddhist
organizations which they represented, might in due course take on
additional functions. Certainly in the West there is the prospect of a
great many different Buddhist flowers blooming, whether oriental or
new strains developed in the local culture. This is to be welcomed,
but the kind of body we propose will become a necessity to avoid
confusion for the outsider and to work against any tendency to
sectarianism of a kind from which Buddhism has been relatively free.
Local groups will be able to draw upon the publicity and teaching
resources of national centers and adapt these to the needs of local
communities. Regular meetings of such groups may amount to no more
than half a dozen people meeting in a private house. Sensitively
handled it would be difficult to imagine a better way of introducing a
newcomer to the Dharma. Such meetings are worthy of wide local
publicity. A really strong local base exists where there is a resident
Buddhist community of some kind, with premises convenient for meetings
and several highly committed workers. Unfortunately, such communities
will, understandably, represent a particular Buddhist tradition or
tendency, and this exclusiveness may be less helpful to the newcomer
than a local group in which he or she may have the opportunity to
become acquainted with the different Buddhist traditions represented
in the membership and in the program of activity.
In many countries the schools provide brief introductions to the
world's great religions. Many teachers do not feel sufficiently
knowledgeable about introducing Buddhism to their pupils and may be
unaware of suitable materials even where these do exist. There may be
opportunities here for local groups, and certainly the Information
Service suggested above would have work to do here.
Finally, the method of introductory teaching employed in some
Buddhist centers leaves much to be desired both on educational grounds
and as Buddhist teaching. The Buddha always adapted his teaching to
the particular circumstances of the individual learner; he sometimes
opened with a question about the enquirer's occupation in life, and
built his teaching upon the answer to this and similar questions. True
learning and teaching has as its starting point a problem or
experience posed by the learner, even if this be no more than a
certain ill-defined curiosity. It is there that teacher and learner
must begin. The teacher starts with the learner's thoughts and
feelings and helps him or her to develop understanding and awareness.
This is, of course, more difficult than a standard lecture which
begins and ends with the teacher's thoughts and feelings, and which
may in more sense than one leave little space for the learner. It will
exclude the teacher from any learning.
It follows that unless the teacher is truly inspiring, the
"Dharma talk" is best used selectively: to introduce and
stimulate discussion or to summarize and consolidate what has been
learned. Dharma teachers must master the arts of conducting open
discussion groups, in which learners can gain much from one another
and can work through an emotional learning situation beyond the
acquisition of facts about Buddhism. Discussion groups have become an
important feature of many lay Buddhist and social action organizations
in different parts of the world. They are the heart, for example, of
the Japanese mass organization Rissho Kosei Kai, which explores
problems of work, the family and social and economic problems.
2.3 Political action: the conversion of energy
Political power may manifest and sustain social and economic
structures which breed both material deprivation and spiritual
degradation for millions of men and women. In many parts of the world
it oppresses a wide range of social groupings national and racial
minorities, women, the poor, homosexuals, liberal dissidents, and
religious groups. Ultimately, political power finds its most terrible
expression in war, which reaches now to the possibility of global
annihilation.
For both the oppressors and the oppressed, whether in social strife
or embattled nations, karmic delusion is deepened. Each group or
nation emphasizes its differences, distinguishing them from its
opponents; each projects its own short-comings upon them, makes them
the repository of all evil, and rallies round its own vivid illusions
and blood-warming hates. Collective hating, whether it be the raised
fist, or prejudice concealed in a quiet community, is a heady liquor.
Allied with an ideology, hate in any form will not depart tomorrow or
next year. Crowned with delusive idealism, it is an awesome and
murderous folly. And even when victory is achieved, the victors are
still more deeply poisoned by the hate that carried them to victory.
Both the revolution and the counter-revolution consume their own
children. Buddhism's "Three Fires" of delusion (moha),
hatred and ill-will (dosa), and greed and grasping, (lobha),
surely burn nowhere more fiercely.
Contrariwise, political power may be used to fashion and sustain a
society whose citizens are free to live in dignity and harmony and
mutual respect, free of the degradation of poverty and war. In such a
society of good heart all men and women find encouragement and
support in making, if they will, the best use of their human condition
in the practice of wisdom and compassion. This is the land of good
karma not the end of human suffering, but the beginning of the
end, the bodhisattva-land, the social embodiment of sila.
This is not to be confused with the belief common among the
socially and politically oppressed that if power could be seized
(commonly by an elite claiming to represent them), then personal,
individual, "ideological" change will inevitably follow.
This absolutely deterministic view of conditioning (which Marx called
"vulgar Marxism"), is as one-sided as the idea of a society
of "individuals" each struggling with only his own personal
karma in a private bubble hermetically sealed off from history and
from other people.
Political action thus involves the Buddhist ideal of approaching
each situation without prejudice but with deserved circumspection in
questions of power and conflict, social oppression and social justice.
These social and political conflicts are the great public samsaric
driving energies of our life to which an individual responds with both
aggression and self-repression. The Buddha Dharma offers the
possibility of transmuting the energies of the individual into Wisdom
and Compassion. At the very least, in faith and with good heart, a
start can be made.
Buddhists are thus concerned with political action, first, in the
direct relief of non-volitionally caused suffering now and in the
future, and, secondly, with the creation of social karmic conditions
favorable to the following of the Way that leads to the cessation also
of volitionally-caused suffering, the creation of a society of a kind
which tends to the ripening of wisdom and compassion rather than the
withering of them. In the third place, political action, turbulent and
ambiguous, is perhaps the most potent of the "action
meditations."
It is perhaps because of this potency that some Buddhist
organizations ban political discussion of any kind, even at a
scholarly level, and especially any discussion of social action. There
are circumstances in which this may be a sound policy. Some
organizations and some individuals may not wish to handle such an
emotionally powerful experience which may prove to be divisive and
stir up bad feeling which cannot be worked upon in any positive way.
This division would particularly tend to apply to "party
politics." On the other hand, such a discussion may give an
incomparable opportunity to work through conflict to a shared wisdom.
Different circumstances suggest different "skillful means,"
but a dogmatic policy of total exclusion is likely to be ultimately
unhelpful.
In this connection it is worth noting that any kind of social
activity which leads to the exercise of power or conflict may stir up
"the fires" in the same way as overtly political activity.
Conflict within a Buddhist organization is cut from the same cloth as
conflict in a political assembly and may be just as heady, but the
Buddhist context could make such an activity a much more difficult and
delusive meditation subject. The danger of dishonest collusion may be
greater than that of honest collusion (to borrow one of the Ven.
Sangharakshita's aphorisms). The dogmatism and vehemence with which
some Buddhists denounce and proscribe all political involvement is the
same sad attitude as the dogmatism and vehemence of the politicians
which they so rightly denounce.
To be lost in revolution or reform or conservatism is to be lost in
samsara and the realm of the angry warrior, deluded by his
power and his self-righteousness. To turn one's back upon all this is
to be lost in an equally false idea of nirvana the realm of
the gods no less deluded by spiritual power and righteousness,
"You do not truly speak of fire if your mouth does not get
burnt."
Effective social action on any but the smallest scale will soon
involve the Buddhist in situations of power and conflict, of
"political" power. It may be the power of office in a
Buddhist organization. It may be the unsought for leadership of an
action group protesting against the closing of an old people's day
care center. It may be the organizing of a fund-raising movement to
build a Buddhist hospice for care of the dying. It may be membership
of a local government council with substantial welfare funds. It may
be joining an illegal dissident group. In all these cases the Buddhist
takes the tiger his own tiger by the tail. Some of the above
tigers are bigger than others, but all are just as fierce. Hence a
Buddhist must be mindful of the strong animal smell of political power
and be able to contain and convert the valuable energy which power
calls up. A sharp cutting edge is given into his hands. Its use we
must explore in the sections which follow.
2.4 Buddhist political theory and policy
Buddhism and politics meet at two levels theory and practice.
Buddhism has no explicit body of social and political theory
comparable to its psychology or metaphysics. Nevertheless, a Buddhist
political theory can be deduced primarily from basic Buddhism, from
Dharma. Secondly, it can be deduced from the general orientation of
scriptures which refer explicitly to a bygone time. We have already
argued, however, that this can be done only in a limited and qualified
way.
Whatever form it may take, Buddhist political theory like other
Buddhist "theory" is just another theory. As it stands in
print, it stands in the world of the conditioned; it is of samsara.
It is its potential, its spiritual implications, which make it
different from "secular" theory. When skillfully practiced,
it becomes a spiritual practice. As always, Buddhist
"theory" is like a label on a bottle describing the contents
which sometimes is mistaken for the contents by zealous label-readers.
In that way we can end up with a lot of politics and very little
Buddhism.
This is not to decry the value of a Buddhist social and political
theory only its misuse. We have only begun to apply Buddhism as a
catalyst to the general body of Western social science and most of the
work so far has been in psychology. Such work in allied fields could
be extremely helpful to Buddhists and non-Buddhists alike.
The writings of some Buddhists from Sri Lanka, Burma and elsewhere
offer interesting examples of attempts to relate Buddhism to
nationalism and Marxism (not to be confused with communism). Earlier
in the century Anagarika Dharmapala stressed the social teaching of
the Buddha and its value in liberating people from materialistic
preoccupations. U Nu, the eminent Burmese Buddhist statesman, argued
that socialism follows naturally from the ethical and social teachings
of the Buddha, and another Burmese leader, U Ba Swe, held that Marxism
is relative truth, Buddhism absolute truth. This theme has been
explored more recently in Trevor Ling's book "Buddha, Marx and
God," (2nd ed., Macmillan, London 1979) and Michal Edwarde's
"In the Blowing out of a Flame" (Allen & Unwin 1976).
Both are stimulating and controversial books. E.F. Schumacher's
celebrated book "Small is Beautiful" (Blond & Briggs,
London 1973) has introduced what he terms "Buddhist
economics" and its urgent relevance to the modern world to many
thousand of non-Buddhists. Of this we shall say more in a later
section on the Buddhist "good society."
Buddhist social and political theory and policy can only be
mentioned in passing in this pamphlet, although we have earlier
introduced the idea of "social karma" as of central
importance. We are, instead, concerned here with problems and
questions arising in the practice of social and political work by
Buddhists and the nature of that work.
2.5 Conflict and partisanship
The Buddhist faced with political thought, let alone political
action, is straightaway plunged in the turbulent stream of conflict
and partisanship and right and wrong.
Let the reader, perhaps prompted by the morning newspaper, select
and hold in his mind some particular controversial public issue or
public figure. Now, how does your Buddhism feel, please? (No,
not what does your Buddhism think!) How does it feel when,
again, some deeply held conviction is roughly handled at a Buddhist
meeting or in a Buddhist journal? "The tears and anguish that
follow arguments and quarrels," said the Buddha, "the
arrogance and pride and the grudges and insults that go with them are
all the result of one thing. They come from having preferences, from
holding things precious and dear. Insults are born out of arguments
and grudges are inseparable with quarrels." (Kalahavivada-sutta,
trans. H. Saddhatissa, 1978, para. 2) Similarly, in the words of one
of the Zen patriarchs: "The conflict between longing and loathing
is the mind's worse disease" (Seng Ts'an, 1954).
In all our relationships as Buddhists we seek to cultivate a spirit
of openness, cooperation, goodwill and equality. Nonetheless, we may
not agree with another's opinions, and, in the final analysis, this
divergence could have to do even with matters of life and death. But
hopefully we shall be mindful and honest about how we think and, with
what we feel, and how our opponent thinks and feels. In such
controversies, are we each to confirm our own ego? Or each to benefit
from the other in the search for wise judgment? Moreover, in the words
of the Dalai Lama, "when a person criticizes you and exposes your
faults, only then are you able to discover your faults and make
amends. So your enemy is your greatest friend because he is the person
who gives you the test you need for your inner strength, your
tolerance, your respect for others... Instead of feeling angry with or
hatred towards such a person, one should respect him and be grateful
to him" (Dalai Lama, 1976, p. 9). We are one with our adversary
in our common humanity; we are two in our divisive conflict. We should
be deluded if we were to deny either if we were to rush either to
compromise or to uncompromising struggle. Our conflict and our
humanity may be confirmed or denied at any point along that line of
possibilities which links the extremes, but ultimately it will be
resolved in some other, less explicit sense. Sangharakshita expresses
this paradox in his observation that "it is not enough to
sympathize with something to such an extent that one agrees with it.
If necessary, one must sympathize to such an extent that one
disagrees" (Sangharakshita, 1979, p. 60).
Zen Master Dogen advised that "when you say something to
someone he may not accept it, but do not try to make him understand it
rationally. Don't argue with him; just listen to his objections, until
he himself finds something wrong with them." Certainly we shall
need much time and space for such wisdom and compassion as may inform
us in such situations. If we do fight, may our wisdom and compassion
honor both our adversary and ourselves, whether in compromise, victory
or defeat.
And so,
"On how to sing
The frog school and the skylark school
Are arguing."
(Shiki, 1958, p. 169)
2.6 Ambiguity, complexity, uncertainty
Our "Small Mind" clings to delusions of security and
permanence. It finds
neither of these in the world where, on the
contrary, it experiences a sense of ambiguity, complexity and
uncertainty which it finds intolerable, and which make it very angry
when it is obliged to confront them. Small Mind prefers to see social,
economic and political phenomena in terms of black and white, or
"Left and Right." It likes to take sides, and it clings to
social dogmas both sophisticated and simple. ("The rich/poor are
always selfish/idle.")
To the extent that we have achieved "Big Mind" we
perceive with equanimity what Small Mind recoils from as intolerable.
We are freer to see the world as it is in all the many colors
of the rainbow, each merging imperceptibly into the next. In place of
clinging to a few black, white and gray compartments, scrutiny is
freed, encouraged by the Buddha's discriminating and differentiating
attitude. (Vibhajjavada; see Wheel: No. 238/240, Anguttara Anthology,
Part II, pp. 59 ff.)
We shall not be surprised then that the personal map which guides
the Wise through social and political realities may turn out to be
disturbingly unconventional. Their reluctance readily to "take
sides" arises not from quietism or an attachment to a compromise
or a belief in the "unreality" of conflict, as is variously
the case with those guided by mere rules. On the contrary, they may
not even sit quietly, throwing soothing generalizations into the ring,
as is expected of the religious. This seemingly uncomfortable,
seemingly marginal stance simply reflects a reality which is
experienced with equanimity.
However, it does not require much equanimity to discover the deeper
truths which underlie many current conventional truths. Conventional
politics, for example, run from "left," to
"right," from radicals through liberals and conservatives to
fascists. Some radicals are, for example, as dogmatic and
authoritarian in practice as fascists, and to their ultimate detriment
they hate no less mightily. And, again, some conservatives are equally
dogmatic because of an awareness of the subtle, organic nature of
society and hence the danger of attempts at "instant"
restructuring.
Similarly an ideology such as Marxism may be highly complex but has
been conveniently oversimplified even by quite well educated
partisans, both those "for" and those "against"
the theory. The present Dalai Lama is one of those who have attempted
to disentangle "an authentic Marxism" which he believes is
not without relevance to the problems of a feudal theocracy of the
kind that existed in Tibet, from "the sort one sees in countless
countries claiming to be Marxist," but which are "mixing up
Marxism and their national political interests and also their thirst
for world hegemony" (Dalai Lama, 1979).
The Wise person sees clearly because he does not obscure his own
light; he does not cast the shadow of himself over the situation.
However, even an honest perception of complexity commonly paralyzes
action with, "Yes, that's all very well, but...," "On
the other hand it is also true that... ." Contemplative wisdom is
a precious thing, but true Wisdom reveals itself in positive action
or "in-action." Though a person may, through Clear
Comprehension of Purpose (satthaka-sampajanna), keep loyal to
the social ideal, his Clear Comprehension of (presently absent)
Suitability may counsel in-action, or just "waiting."
In a social action situation the complexity and ambiguity to which
we refer is strongly felt as ethical quandary, uncertainty as to what
might be the best course of action. Even in small organizations all
power is potentially corrupting; the power wielded is soon lost in a
thicket of relative ethics, of means and ends confused, of greater and
lesser evils, of long term and short term goals. This is not a
"game." It is the terrible reality of power, wealth and
suffering in the world, and the confusing of good and delusion. It
cannot be escaped; it can only be suffered through. We cannot refuse
life's most difficult problems because we have not yet attained to
Wisdom. We simply have to do our mindful and vigilant best, without
guilt or blame. That is all we have to do.
2.7 Violence and non-violence
The First Precept of Buddhism is to abstain from taking life. But
it must be made clear that the Buddhist "Precepts" are not
commandments; they are "good resolutions," sincere
aspirations voluntarily undertaken. They are signposts. They suggest
to us how the truly Wise behave, beyond any sense of self and other.
Evil springs from delusion about our true nature as human beings,
and it takes the characteristic forms of hatred, aggression and
driving acquisitiveness. These behaviors feed upon themselves and
become strongly rooted, not only in individuals but in whole cultures.
Total war is no more than their most spectacular and bloody
expression. In Buddhism the cultivation of sila (habitual
morality) by attempting to follow the Precepts is an aspiration toward
breaking this karmic cycle. It is a first step towards dissolving the
egocentricity of headstrong willfulness, and cultivating heartfelt
awareness of others. The Precepts invite us to loosen the grip,
unclench the fist, and to aspire to open-handedness and
open-heartedness. Whether, and to what extent, he keeps the Precepts
is the responsibility of each individual. But he needs to be fully
aware of what he is doing.
The karmic force of violent behavior will be affected by the
circumstances in which it occurs. For example, a "diminished
responsibility" may be argued in the case of conscripts forced to
kill by an aggressive government. And there is surely a difference
between wars of conquest and wars of defense. Ven. Walpola Rahula
described a war of national independence in Sri Lanka in the 2nd
century BC conducted under the slogan "Not for kingdom but for
Buddhism," and concludes that "to fight against a foreign
invader for national independence became an established Buddhist
tradition, since freedom was essential to the spiritual as well as the
material progress of the community" (Rahula, 1978, p. 117). We
may deplore the historic destruction of the great Indian Buddhist
heritage in the middle-ages, undefended against the Mongol and Muslim
invaders. It is important to note, however, that "according to
Buddhism there is nothing that can be called a 'just war' which is
only a false term coined and put into circulation to justify and
excuse hatred, cruelty, violence and massacre" (Rahula, 1967,
84).
It is an unfortunate fact, well documented by eminent scholars such
as Edward Conze and Trevor Ling, that not only have avowedly Buddhist
rulers undertaken violence and killing, but also monks of all
traditions in Buddhism. Nonetheless, Buddhism has no history of
specifically religious wars, that is, wars fought to impose
Buddhism upon reluctant believers.
Violence and killing are deeply corrupting in their effect upon all
involved, and Buddhists will therefore try to avoid direct involvement
in violent action or in earning their living in a way that, directly
or indirectly, does violence. The Buddha specifically mentioned the
trade in arms, in living beings and flesh.
The problem is whether, in today's "global village" we
are not all in some degree responsible for war and violence to the
extent that we refrain from any effort to diminish them. Can we
refrain from killing a garden slug and yet refrain, for fear of
"political involvement," from raising a voice against the
nuclear arms race or the systematic torture of prisoners of conscience
in many parts of the world?
These are questions which are disturbing to some of those Buddhists
who have a sensitive social and moral conscience. This is
understandable. Yet, a well-informed Buddhist must not forget that
moral responsibility, or karmic guilt, originate from a volitional and
voluntary act affirming the harmful character of the act. If
that affirmation is absent, neither the responsibility for the act,
not karmic guilt, rest with those who, through some form of pressure,
participate in it. A slight guilt, however, might be involved if such
participants yield too easily even to moderate pressure or do not make
use of "escape routes" existing in these situations. But
failure to protest publicly against injustice or wrong-doings does not
necessarily constitute a participation in evil. Voices of protest
should be raised when there is a chance that they are heard. But
"voices in the wilderness" are futile, and silence, instead,
is the better choice. It is futile, indeed, if a few well-meaning
heads try to run against walls of rock stone that may yield only to
bulldozers. It is a sad fact that there are untold millions of our
fellow-humans who do affirm violence and use it for a great variety of
reasons (though not "reasonable reasons"!). They are
unlikely to be moved by our protests or preachings, being entirely
obsessed by divers fanaticisms or power urges. This has to be accepted
as an aspect of existential suffering. Yet there are still today some
opportunities and nations where a Buddhist can and should work for the
cause of peace and reducing violence in human life. No efforts should
be spared to convince people that violence does not solve problems or
conflicts.
The great evil of violence is its separation unto death of us and
them, of "my" righteousness and "your" evil. If
you counter violence with violence you will deepen that separation
through thoughts of bitterness and revenge. The Dhammapada says:
"Never by hatred is hatred appeased, but it is appeased by
kindness. This is an eternal truth" (I, 5) Buddhist non-violent
social action (avihimsa, ahimsa) seeks to communicate, persuade
and startle by moral example. "One should conquer anger through
kindness, wickedness through goodness, selfishness through charity,
and falsehood through truthfulness" (Dhammapada, XVII, 3).
The Buddha intervened personally on the field of battle, as in the
dispute between the Sakyas and Koliyas over the waters of the Rohini.
Since that time, history has provided us with a host of examples of
religiously inspired non-violent social action, skillfully adapted to
particular situations. These are worthy of deep contemplation.
Well known is Mahatma Gandhi's non-violent struggle against
religious intolerance and British rule in India, and also the Rev.
Martin Luther King's black people's civil rights movement in the
United States. A familiar situation for many people today is the mass
demonstration against authority, which may be conducted either
peacefully or violently. As Robert Aitken Roshi has observed,
"the point of disagreement, even the most fundamental
disagreement, is still more superficial than the place of our common
life." He recalls the case of a friend who organized an
anti-nuclear demonstration at a naval base passing through a small
town in which virtually every household had at least one person who
gained his livelihood by working at the base. Consequently, when the
friend visited every single house before the demonstration he hardly
expected to win the people over to his cause. But he did convince them
that he was a human being who was willing to listen to them and who
had faith in them as human beings. "We finally had our
demonstration, with four thousand people walking through this tiny
community, nobody resisted us, nobody threw rocks. They just stood and
watched" (The Ten Directions, Los Angeles Zen Center, 1
(3) September 1980, p. 6).
And yet again, situations may arise in which folly is mutually
conditioned, but where we must in some sense take sides in
establishing the ultimate responsibility. If we do not speak out then,
we bow only to the conditioned and accept the endlessness of suffering
and the perpetuation of evil karma. The following lines were written a
few days after Archbishop Oscar Romero, of the Central American
republic of El Salvador, had been shot dead on the steps of his
chapel. Romero had roundly condemned the armed leftist rebel factions
for their daily killings and extortions. However, he also pointed out
that these were the reactions of the common people being used as
"a production force under the management of a privileged
society... The gap between poverty and wealth is the main cause of our
trouble... And sometimes it goes further: It is the hatred in the
heart of the worker for his employer... If I did not denounce the
killings and the way the army removes people and ransacks peasants'
homes I should be acquiescing in the violence" (Observer
newspaper (London), March 30, 1980).
Finally there is the type of situation in which the truly massive
folly of the conflict and of the contrasting evils may leave nothing
to work with and there is space left only for personal sacrifice to
bear witness to that folly. Such was the choice of the Buddhist monks
who burnt themselves to death in the Vietnam war surely one of the
most savage and despairing conflicts of modern times, in which a
heroic group of Buddhists had for some time struggled in vain to
establish an alternative "third force."
2.8 The good society
The social order to which Buddhist social action is ultimately
directed must be one that minimizes non-volitionally caused suffering,
whether in mind or body, and which also offers encouraging conditions
for its citizens to see more clearly into their true nature and
overcome their karmic inheritance. The Buddhist way is, with its
compassion, its equanimity, its tolerance, its concern for
self-reliance and individual responsibility, the most promising of all
the models for the New Society which are an on offer.
What is needed are political and economic relations and a
technology which will:
(a) Help people to overcome ego-centeredness, through
co-operation with others, in place of either subordination and
exploitation or the consequent sense of "righteous" struggle
against all things.
(b) Offer to each a freedom which is conditional only upon
the freedom and dignity of others, so that individuals may develop a
self-reliant responsibility rather than being the conditioned animals
of institutions and ideologies. (See "Buddhism and
Democracy," Bodhi Leaves No. B. 17)
The emphasis should be on the undogmatic acceptance of a diversity
of tolerably compatible material and mental "ways," whether
of individuals or of whole communities. There are no short cuts to
utopia, whether by "social engineering" or theocracy. The
good society towards which we should aim should simply provide a
means, an environment, in which different "ways,"
appropriate to different kinds of people, may be cultivated in mutual
tolerance and understanding. A prescriptive commonwealth of saints is
totally alien to Buddhism.
(c) The good society will concern itself primarily with the
material and social conditions for personal growth, and only
secondarily and dependently with material production. It is noteworthy
that the 14th Dalai Lama, on his visit to the West in 1973, saw
"nothing wrong with material progress provided man takes
precedence over progress. In fact it has been my firm belief that in
order to solve human problems in all their dimensions we must be able
to combine and harmonize external material progress with inner mental
development." The Dalai Lama contrasted the "many problems
like poverty and disease, lack of education" in the East with the
West, in which "the living standard is remarkably high, which is
very important, very good." Yet he notes that despite these
achievements there is "mental unrest," pollution,
overcrowding, and other problems. "Our very life itself is a
paradox, contradictory in many senses; whenever you have too much of
one thing you have problems created by that. You always have extremes
and therefore it is important to try and find the middle way, to
balance the two" (Dalai Lama, 1976, pp. 10, 14, 29).
(d) E.F. Schumacher has concisely expressed the essence of
Buddhist economics as follows:
"While the materialist is mainly interested in goods, the
Buddhist is mainly interested in liberation. But Buddhism is 'The
Middle Way' and therefore in no way antagonistic to physical
well-being... The keynote of Buddhist economics is simplicity and
non-violence. From an economist's point of view, the marvel of the
Buddhist way of life is the utter rationality of its pattern
amazingly small means leading to extraordinarily satisfying
results" (Schumacher, 1973, p. 52).
Schumacher then outlines a "Buddhist economics" in which
production would be based on a middle range technology yielding on the
one hand an adequate range of material goods (and no more), and on the
other a harmony with the natural environment and its resources. (See
also Dr. Padmasiri de Silva's pamphlet The Search for a Buddhist
Economics, in the series, Bodhi Leaves, No. B. 69)
The above principles suggest some kind of diverse and politically
decentralized society, with co-operative management and ownership of
productive wealth. It would be conceived on a human scale, whether in
terms of size and complexity of organization or of environmental
planning, and would use modern technology selectively rather than
being used by it in the service of selfish interests. In Schumacher's
words, "It is a question of finding the right path of
development, the Middle Way, between materialist heedlessness and
traditionalist immobility, in short, of finding 'Right
Livelihood.'"
Clearly, all the above must ultimately be conceived on a world
scale. "Today we have become so interdependent and so closely
connected with each other that without a sense of universal
responsibility, irrespective of different ideologies and faiths, our
very existence or survival would be difficult" (Dalai Lama, 1976,
pp. 5, 28). This statement underlines the importance of Buddhist
internationalism and of social policy and social action conceived on a
world scale.
The above is not offered as some kind of blueprint for utopia.
Progress would be as conflict-ridden as the spiritual path of the
ordinary Buddhist and the world may never get there anyway.
However, Buddhism is a very practical and pragmatic kind of idealism,
and there is, as always, really no alternative but to try.
2.9 Organizing social action
A systematic review of the different kinds of Buddhist organization
for social action which have appeared in different parts of the world
is beyond the scope of this pamphlet. Some considerable research would
be required, and the results would merit at least a separate pamphlet.
Later we shall introduce three contrasting movements which are in
some sense or others examples of Buddhist social action. Each is
related more or less strongly to the particular social culture in
which it originated, and all should therefore be studied as
illustrative examples-in-context and not necessarily as export models
for other countries. They are, however, very suggestive, and two of
the three have spread beyond their country of origin.
2.9a Maintaining balance
Social action needs to be organized and practiced in such a way as
to build upon its potential for spiritual practice and to guard
against its seductions. Collective labor with fellow-Buddhists raises
creative energy, encourages positive attitudes and engenders a strong
spirit of fellowship. The conflicts, disagreements, obstacles, and
discouragements which will certainly be met along the way offer rich
meditation experiences and opportunity for personal growth, so long as
scrupulous mindfulness is sustained.
The meditator will learn as much about himself in a contentious
meeting as he will in the meditation hall. Both kinds of experience
are needed, and they complement one another. Social action is a great
ripener of compassion (for self as well as for others), out of the
bitterness of the experiences which it commonly offers. Yet, like
nothing else, it can stir up the partisan emotions and powerfully
exult the opinionated ego. The busy, patronizing evangelist not only
gives an undercover boost to his own ego; he also steals another
person's responsibility for himself. However, these dangers are,
comparatively speaking, gross and tangible when set against the no
less ego-enhancing seduction of Other-Worldliness and dharma-ridden
pietism. Such "spiritual materialism," as Chogyam Trungpa
calls it, has long been recognized as the ultimate and most elusive
kind of self-deception which threatens the follower of the spiritual
path.
The seduction lies in being carried away by our good works, in
becoming subtly attached to the new goals and enterprises we have set
ourselves, so that no space is left in our busily structured hours in
which some saving strength of the spirit can abide. Here is
opportunity to learn how to dance with time "the river in
which we go fishing," as Thoreau called it, instead of neatly
packaging away our lives in it, or letting it dictate us. And in
committee lies the opportunity of slowly turning the hot, lusty
partisanship of self-opinionated confirmation into the kind of space
and dialogue in which we can communicate, and can even learn to love
our most implacable opponents.
It is therefore important that both the individual and the group
set aside regular periods for meditation, with periods of retreat at
longer intervals. It is important also that experience and the feel of
the social action project should as far as possible be shared openly
within the Buddhist group.
In our view, the first social action of the isolated Buddhist is
not to withhold the Dharma from the community in which he or she
lives. However modest one's own understanding of the Dharma, there is
always some first step that can be taken and something to be learned
from taking that step. Even two or three can be a greater light to one
another, and many forms of help are often available from outside such
as working together through a correspondence course, for example, or
listening to borrowed audiocassettes.
For the reasons given earlier it is important that social action
projects should, where possible, be undertaken by a Buddhist group
rather than each individual "doing his own thing." And since
the Buddhist group will, in most Western countries, be small and
isolated, it is important that the work be undertaken in co-operation
with like-minded non-Buddhists. This will both use energies to better
effect since social action can be very time- and energy-consuming, and
create an even better learning situation for all involved. Forms of
social action which are high on explicit giving of service and low on
conflict and power situations will obviously be easier to handle and
to "give" oneself to, though still difficult in other
respects. For example, organizing and participating in a rota of
visits to lonely, long-stay hospital patients would contrast, in this
respect, with involvement in any kind of local community development
project.
2.9b Spiritual centers: example and outreach
In this section we are concerned with the significance of Buddhist
residential communities both as manifestations and examples of the
"good society" and as centers of social outreach (mainly,
though not solely, in the form of teaching the Dharma). We may
distinguish four possible kinds of activity here.
In the first place, any healthy spiritual community does, by
its very existence, offer to the world a living example not only of
the Good Life but also of the Good Society. Certain spiritual values
are made manifest in its organization and practice in a way not
possible in print or in talk. On the other hand, the purely
contemplative and highly exclusive community can do this only in some
limited, special and arguable sense.
In the second place, where the members of such a community
undertake work as a community economically ("Right
Livelihood"), then to that extent the community becomes a more
realistic microcosm of what has to be done in the wider world and a
more realistic model and example of how it might best be done.
Thirdly, such communities are commonly teaching and training
communities. This may be so in formal terms, in that they offer
classes and short courses and also longer periods of training in
residence, in which the trainees become veritable community members.
And it may be true in terms of the "openness" of the
community to outsiders who wish for the present to open up their
communication with the community through some participation in work,
ritual, teaching, meditation.
Fourthly, the community might involve itself in various
kinds of outside community service, development or action beyond that
of teaching, and beyond the necessarily commercial services which may
sustain the community's "Right Livelihood." Examples might
be running a hospice for the terminally ill, providing an information
and advice center on a wide range of personal and social problems for
the people of the local community, and assisting and maybe leading
in various aspects of a socially deprived local community. The
spiritual community thus becomes more strongly a community within a
community. In this kind of situation would the spiritual community
draw strength from its service to the social, the "lay"
community, creating an upward spiral of energy? Or would the whole
scheme founder through the progressive impoverishment and corruption
of the spiritual community in a vicious downward spiral?
In the Eastern Buddhist monastic tradition the first and third
aspects (above) are present. In contrast to Christian monasticism,
monks are not necessarily expected to be monks for life, and the
monasteries may have an important function as seminaries and as long
and short stay teaching and training centers. On the other hand,
economically such communities are commonly strongly sustained by what
is predominantly Buddhist society. In the West there are now similar
communities in all the main Buddhist traditions. Although these are to
some extent sustained also by lay Buddhist contributions, their income
from training and teaching fees may be important. And whether it is or
not, it is clear that their actual and potential training and teaching
role is likely to be very important in non-Buddhist societies in which
there is a growing interest in Buddhism. A good example is the
Manjusri Institute in the United Kingdom, which is now seeking
official recognition for the qualifications which it awards, and which
could eventually become as much part of the national education system
as, say, a Christian theological college. Such an integration of
Buddhist activity into the pattern of national life in the West is, of
course, most welcome, and opens up many new opportunities for making
the Dharma more widely understood.
The above developments may be compared with the communities which
form the basis of the Friends of the Western Buddhist Order (FWBO). In
these, our second aspect (above), that of Right Livelihood, is found,
in addition to the first and third.
The FWBO was founded in 1967 in the United Kingdom by the Ven. Maha
Sthavira Sangharakshita, a Londoner who spent twenty years in India as
a Buddhist monk and returned with the conviction that the perennial
Buddhism always expresses itself anew in each new age and culture. The
FWBO is concerned with building what it calls the "New
Society" in the minds and practice of its members. Opening the
FWBO's London Buddhist Center, Ven. Sangharakshita was reported as
saying that the New Society was a spiritual community composed of
individuals who are "truly human beings: self-aware, emotionally
positive people whose energies flow freely and spontaneously, who
accept responsibility for their own growth and development, in
particular by providing three things: firstly, a residential spiritual
community; secondly, a co-operative Right Livelihood situation; and
thirdly a public center, offering classes, especially in
meditation" (Marichi, 1979).
The FWBO does in fact follow a traditional Mahayana spiritual
practice, but within this framework it does have, as the quotation
above suggests, a strong Western flavor. This owes much to the eleven
co-operatives by which many of the eighteen autonomous urban
communities support themselves. These businesses are run by teams of
community members as a means of personal and group development. They
include a printing press, graphic design business, photographic and
film studio, metalwork forge, and shops and cafes.
Membership of the communities (which are usually single sex),
varies between four and thirty people, and often the community members
pool their earnings in a "common purse." The FWBO comprises
Order members, Mitras (who have made some initial commitment) and
Friends (supporters in regular contact). Each community is autonomous
and has its own distinctive character. Attached to communities are
seven Centers, through which the public are offered talks, courses and
instruction in meditation. Regular meetings of Chairmen of Centers and
other senior Order members, supported by three central secretariats,
are planned for the future, but it is not intended to abridge the
autonomy of the constituent communities, each of which is a separately
registered legal body.
The FWBO is growing very rapidly, not only in the United Kingdom
but also overseas, with branches in Finland, the Netherlands, New
Zealand, Australia, the USA, and, interestingly, in India, where a
sustained effort is being made to establish centers.
2.9c Community services and development
We refer in this section to the fourth aspect distinguished early
in the previous section 2.9b, namely, various possible kinds of
service and support which may be given by organized Buddhists to the
local community in which they live. The FWBO does not undertake this
kind of activity (see previous section for examples), and in fact
there do not appear to be any major examples of it in the West.
Arguably if this kind of work is undertaken at all, it might more
likely be initiated by a non-residential "lay" Buddhist
group, whose members as householders and local workers may have strong
roots in their town or neighborhood. As an example of what can be
achieved by a relatively small group of this kind, we quote the
following (from The Middle Way, 54 (3) Autumn 1979, p. 193):
"The Harlow Buddhist Society have recently opened Dana
House, a practical attempt to become involved with the ordinary
people of the town and their problems. The new center... has four
regular groups using it. The first is an after-care service for
those who have been mentally or emotionally ill. The center is there
for those in need of friendship and understanding. The second group
is a psychotherapy one, for those with more evident emotional
problems. It is run by an experienced group leader and a
psychologist who can be consulted privately. The third group is a
beginners' meditation class based on the concept of 'Right
Understanding.' The fourth group is the Buddhist group, which is not
attached to any particular school of Buddhism.
"Peter Donahoe writes: 'We have endeavored to provide a
center which can function in relation to a whole range of different
needs, a place of charity and compassion, where all are welcomed
regardless of race, color, sex or creed, welcomed to come to terms
with their suffering in a way which is relative to each
individual.'"
However, on the whole, it is only in the East, in societies in
which Buddhist culture is predominant or important, that there are
sufficiently committed Buddhists to play a part in extensive community
service and development projects. For example, in Japan there are
several such movements and we shall refer in the next section to one
example Soka Gakkai, a movement which also plays a number of other
roles. We must first, however, turn our attention to a pre-eminent
example of a Buddhist-inspired movement for community development, the
Sarvodaya Shramadana Movement of Sri Lanka.
"Sarvodaya" means "awakening of all" and "Shramadana"
means "sharing of labor," making a gift of time, thought and
energy. This well describes what is basically a village self-help
movement, inspired by Buddhist principles and founded in 1958 as part
of a general national awakening. It is now by far the largest
non-governmental, voluntary organization in Sri Lanka.
The Movement learned in its earlier days how very important
non-economic factors are in community development, and its projects
combine spiritual-cultural with socioeconomic development. "One
important element that cannot be improved upon in Buddhist villages in
particular is the unique place of the temple and the Buddhist monk,
the one as the meeting place, the other as the chief exponent of this
entire process." (All quotations are from the pamphlet Ethos
and Work Plan, published by the Movement.) Founded on traditional
culture, Sarvodaya Shramadana is ultimately "a nonviolent
revolutionary movement for changing man and society." At the same
time it aims to retain the best in the traditional social and cultural
fabric of the community.
Village development projects are undertaken on the initiative of
the villagers themselves. To begin with the community is made aware of
the historic causes that led to the impoverishment and disintegration
of the community and of its cultural and traditional values. Economic
regeneration is only possible if there is a restoration of social
values within the village. It is emphasized that the community itself
must take the initiative in removing obstacles to development and in
learning the new skills needed to carry through a change of program.
The volunteers brought in to help serve only as a catalyst. Action is
focused initially on Shramadana Camps in which villagers and outside
volunteers work together upon some community project such as a road or
irrigation channel. The experience of such Camps helps to develop a
sense of community. Local leaders, working through village groups of
farmers, of youth, of mothers and others, emerge to take increasing
responsibility for a more or less comprehensive development program.
This may include pre-school care for the under-fives, informal
education for adults, health care programs, and community kitchens,
with co-operation with State agencies as appropriate. By 1980,
Sarvodaya was reaching 3,500 villages and was running 1,185
pre-schools.
Essential to these community development programs in Sarvodaya
Shramadana's system of Development Education programs, operating
through six Institutes and through the Gramodaya centers each of which
co-ordinates development work in some twenty to thirty villages. The
movement also provides training in self-employment for the youth who
compose the largest sector of the unemployed. Although the main thrust
of activity has been in rural areas, the Movement is also interested
in urban community development where conditions are favorable and
there is local interest.
The main material support for the movement comes from the villagers
themselves, although financial and material assistance has also been
received from overseas.
It is argued that the basic principles of Sarvodaya Shramadana can
be adapted to developed as well as developing countries, and Sarvodaya
groups are already active in West Germany, the Netherlands, Japan and
Thailand. "The rich countries also have to helped to change their
purely materialistic outlook and strike a balance, with spiritual
values added to the materialistic values of their own communities so
that together all can build a new One World social order."
2.9d Political action and mass movements
Although there may be exceptional circumstances in certain
countries, as a general rule there are strong arguments against
Buddhist groups explicitly aligning themselves with any political
party. It is not just that to do so would be irrelevantly divisive. As
we have noted in section 2.6 (above), there are deeper, underlying
social and political realities which cross-cut the conventional
political spectrum of left, right and center.
Nevertheless, Buddhism, like other great religious systems,
inevitably has political implications. To some extent these seem to be
relatively clear, and in other senses they are arguable and
controversial. Religion has its own contribution to make to politics
and, ultimately, it is the only contribution to politics that really
matters. It has failed both politically and as religion it falls
either into the extreme of being debased by politics or of rejecting
any kind of political involvement as a kind of fearful taboo. The fear
of creating dissension among fellow Buddhists is understandable, but
if Buddhists cannot handle conflict in a positive and creative way,
then who can?
On closer examination we shall find that it is not
"politics" that requires our vigilance so much as the
problems of power and conflict inherent in politics. Indeed, a better
use of the term "political" would be to describe any kind of
power and conflict situation. In this sense a Buddhist organization
may be more intensely and unhappily "political" in managing
its spiritual and practical affairs than if and when its members are
discussing such an "outside" matter as conventional
politics. Indeed, any such discussion of social and political
questions may be banned by a Buddhist society which may be in fact
intensely political in terms of underlying power and conflict with
which its members have not really come to terms. All kinds of
organizations have problems of power and conflict and derive their
positive dynamism from the good management of these, but the dangers
of self-delusion seem to be greater in religious bodies.
When we meet Buddhists and get to know them, we find that even when
they do not express explicit opinions on political and social matters,
it is clear from other things they say that some are inclined to a
conservative "establishment" stance, some are of a radical
inclination, and others more dissident still. Since the diversities of
THIS and THAT exist everywhere else in the conditioned world, even
Buddhists cannot pretend to exclude themselves from such disturbing
distinctions. This is not really in question. What is in question is
their ability to handle their differences openly and with
Buddhist maturity. And, as we have tried to show earlier, this
maturity implies a progressive diminution of emotional attachment to
views of THIS and THAT, so that we no longer need either in order to
sustain our identity in the world and have in some sense transcended
our clinging by a higher understanding. We still carry THIS or THAT,
but lightly and transparently and manageably without ego-weight.
If we did not still carry them, how could we feel the Compassion for samsara,
for ourselves as well as others?
Alan Watts wrote a suitably controversial little pamphlet on this
subject, entitled Beat Zen, Square Zen and Zen (City Lights
Books, San Francisco, 1959). The following passage may be found
helpful to our present discussion; what the author has to say about
Zen is surely no less applicable to Buddhism as a whole. Watts argues
that the Westerner who wishes to understand Zen deeply "must
understand his own culture so thoroughly that he is no longer swayed
by its premises unconsciously. He must really have come to terms with
the Lord God Jehovah and with his Hebrew-Christian conscience so he
can take it or leave it without fear or rebellion. He must be free of
the itch to justify himself. Lacking this, his Zen will be either
'beat' or 'square,' either a revolt from the culture and social order
or a new form of stuffiness and respectability. For Zen is above all
the liberation of the mind from conventional thought and this is
something utterly different from rebellion against convention, on the
one hand, or adapting foreign conventions, on the other."
In the West, individual Buddhists have been particularly attracted
to pacifist, disarmament, and environmentalist movements and parties.
These movements have profound concerns, which, arguably, undercut the
expediencies of conventional party politics. On the other hand, are
they not made the more attractive by a certain political innocence, as
yet uncorrupted and unblessed by the realities of power? And do they
not also underestimate the karma of power and property?
However, in Western and other non-Buddhist countries Buddhist
political action of any kind is little more than speculative.
Buddhists are few in number, and their energies are necessarily fully
occupied with learning and teaching. Teaching is the major form of
social action and we have already discussed certain social action
implications of the spiritual community. Social action at most verges
upon certain possible kinds of service to the wider community or even
participation in community development. We have already suggested the
merit of such enterprises. But as to politics, using the word
conventionally, in the West and at the present time, that can be no
more than a matter for discussion in Buddhist groups. As
always, individual Buddhists and perhaps informal groups will decide
for themselves about political action or inaction.
However, in countries where there are strong Buddhist movements,
well rooted in society, some kind of political stance and action seems
unavoidable and, indeed, logical and natural, though conventional
party political alignments may generally be avoided.
For example, Sarvodaya Shramadana's success at the higher levels of
village self-development depends on "the extent that unj |