No time in history of our nation has furnished with our
popular interest in politics than today. Nevertheless, it reminds me of
excellent writings of Winston Churchill, who characterized the descent of his
British during the time of Adolf Hitler’s ascension, as “fecklessness and
fatuity” of both his government and opposition. When our national leader, Aung
San, met with the elder British Cabinet members in his negotiation for our
independence, he was awed at how limited his and his young compatriot Burmese
politicians’ scope of vision, political and moral knowledge was compared with
the broad experience of these senior and wise people of England. Unbelievably,
as the smart prime minister who survived his British from the disaster of the
Second World War confessed, the whole British cabinet and parliament had been
lacking of intellectuals, fathomed with sentiments, and flinched with
platitudes mostly busy for enchanting the popular opinion during that fatal
period of world history. As in a famous Confucian sad warning to our
irreparably proud human beings, “people think they are smart and wise. When
they really get into a trap, nobody knows how to get out of it”.
Great Britain, full of her greatest
vigor in leading her Scottish enlightenment into modern democratic history, had
been crowned with her another name United Kingdom as early as the 9th
century. Just sixty five years ago, we Burmese first came to know the concept
of “union” when the British asked Aung San “what do you mean by that you want
the independence of ‘Burma’? “. Perhaps, this Great War had coached
reprehensible lessons to those leading British (so-called) intellectual
liberals in real understanding of how they were too inapt at digesting abstract
ideas to be understood themselves. To our people of neonatal democracy which
scarcely has passed its physiologic jaundice state, when we think we master all
those abstract ideas of “nation, race, unity and rationality “to ultimate truth
and will like to bring all the real best things on earth to our imagined
utopia, we must learn from the eternal acknowledgement these old men Confucius
and Churchill that the smartest of all don’t know about these words much. In
fact, there is only one problem badly in need to be solved by we Burmans, that
is we think to believe we know too much of the Truth (with Big T). Democracy is a lot more sexy and
promiscuous than authoritarianism. To be straight to the point, the risk of fatal
HIV infection for these dancing peacocks with our exposed butts is far greater.
To me, we don’t have any important
particular national character to be retained but we have to eliminate our
specifically pathetic national characters which are badly in need for not to be
repeated any more. As John Stuart Mill confessed in his erudite On Liberty, I have no new discovery for
my dear fellows and I will repeat the same message what all ancient sages have
discovered again and again, “ human knowledge is so limited that we must always
convince first we are so poor in our sentiments and knowledge“. Not so many of
our Buddhist monks get to know into what Buddha wanted to say by Dukkha
(suffering) is. We suffer from our restless seek for sentiments. We are ALWAYS
unsatisfactory and apprehensive in fixing to gain some “better” sense. There is
no rational being in Siddhartha Gautama’s eyes, only the futurists and slaves of their passion. There is no sane person free
from his sentiments as this great sage admonished. If we really like to take
initiative in solving our prevailing problems in this Buddhist country today,
it is nothing less than first convincing our arrogant minds on repeatedly
reminding how limited is our knowledge and how careless are our sentiments as
Buddha warned us.
I saw from these sentiments the big
shadow of social Darwinism and Nazism is now wrapping up Burma. Unless some
moral force can intervene, the fate of the nation will be in jeopardy than any can
be imagined. If we come to understand that all those problems of Germany in the
last century that raised Hitler’s Chancellorship and why Nazism had triumphed in
Germany to endanger all humanity, it was not because Hitler was mad and Nazis
were inborn sociopathic but simply because they did not aware that they were
being mad. Nazis and Hitler were just normal people as the majority of Burmese
civilians are today. Many were educated, intellectuals and nationalistic
politicians who were enthusiastic to save their nation that on their
presumption was being robbed by foreign migrants. We have the similar
foundation of Nazism here since moral relativism, which is the psychological
Darwinian root to justify Nazism, is already a chronic pestilence in our nation. The difference is that Germans’ moral
relativism in the past was human normal physiological response to economic
trauma and humiliation from defeat of war but ours is rooted on a false religious
perception which gives rise to our falsely justified cultural world view aggravated by chronically sick economic
conditions, and aided by our lack of real moral
education.
Let us be clearly speaking: in this
human world, there is no moral education that gives liberty so that somebody
can think it apart from one’s humaneness.
If you ever think nation, people, race, unity, spirit, courage, persistence, rationality
and prophylaxis of terrorism, and such endless etc. are the foundations of
moral education, the Burmese Hitler in near future can plug all kinds of his
arbitrary wishes in these illusive variables. Some the brilliant of our unborn
shaggy children will blame us how their ancestors were such unwise salvages to
leave them in brutalized society. To treat human being is to stand up yourself
to treat as a fellow human being, not to imagine enthroning yourself as the Buddha
or nation. There is no nation that precedes human existence. There is no single
national law that can rule above the Universal Laws of Humanity.
We can consider why we should not
prevent ourselves at least for self-defense against the growing power of those
invading people. I can understand being
angry with who have done wrong with some of your compatriots and maybe these
contentious strangers trying to walk in your life to crush your whole race and
your noble religion, but what is about the sense of being against a man just simply because of his birth? Could you
be able to decide before which womb you are to be conceived? Which DNA
molecules should be assembled in your genome to determine yourself to be born
as a Burmese or to be born in the dust and worms of Maungtaw as an unhealthy starving Rohingya
child to a deprived Rohingya family? Both Northern and Southern Abidharma
Buddhist theories of death and transmigration warn us that no sentient being is
free from this unthinkable random nature of reincarnation. John Rawls, who was greatly
influenced by Immanuel Kant, who in turn had unbelievably similar affinity for
his moral theories to Buddhism, developed his greatly influential “Theory of
Justice” based on this concept of random reincarnation of human beings. When
people in original position gather for determining what rules were to be
predefined for living up together a society, nobody knows what will happen to
him and his fellows in numerous random
futures. Therefore, every rational human being in the original
position has to promise each other when somebody comes to be in the
underprivileged position, the ones who obtained the advantageous position must
not ignore them and will voluntarily
offer help to them. This theory called the
veil of ignorance greatly influential on modern liberalism and
international order lucidly re-speaks what Buddha had simply acknowledged to the young man Suba as Karma in
ancient time. The central thesis of both the Buddhist Cannon and Rawls’ theory is
nobody knows he will be (unavoidably) disadvantageous (Dukkha) at some time in
countlessly numerous random incidences. If you sometimes think we are such incomparably
valuable polite and rational Buddhists in this life, keep in mind that for your
one noble Buddhist life, you have not less than a million helpless
disadvantageous lives in your infinite series of suffering and coming million lives to be suffered in
misery.
Let us be humble. As described by
Buddha, our incurious minds of Burmese are like a cattle watcher who just knows
counting the cows in the herd and who never progresses to become the owners of the
herd. As clearly observed in Rawls’ theory, the great cattle owners who get
insight into Dharma have been in many parts of the world and Dharma has been
all together in the West remarkably since the British enlightenment even though
people who developed Dharma in the West don’t think themselves as Buddhists
(knowers). Either to Buddha or Socrates, a knower is the one who knows he
doesn’t know anything except that he does doesn’t
know. Socrates' words to Athenians for his final departure and the great Buddha's Lotus Sutra revealed this unbelievably identical message to humanity.While Socrates admired knowledge and virtue, Buddha was more cautious and even looking anti-meritocratic. In Dharmapada, Buddha described about lusty monks compared to the
potentially enlightened fools in this way:
A
fool who knows himself that he is ignorant gradually learns to improve to be
clever. On contrary, the monk desires “let both laymen and monks think that it
was done by me. In every work, great and small, let them follow me" — such
is the ambition of the foolish monk ; thus his desire and pride increase.
An earlier research work, that was
even done before Ne Win subjugated Burmese society into military dictatorship, reported
a very interesting point.
“Even though democracy is astonishingly flourishing
here, this society will find it very
difficult to have improvement in modern sciences. The problem of these Buddhist
people is to identify themselves with the end. They think everything has been
set up for them and think themselves they were with the ultimate supreme end
(Loka Nibban)”
One of my friends, who has been greatly
beneficial to me in my further improvement in Buddhist knowledge, was an
admirer of Great Nagajuna, prestigious as the Second Buddha in Northern
Buddhist history. In his profound love for this great sage, he introduced to us
what seemed to be the most mind-boggling among all Buddhist teachings by saying
“ Samsara and Nirvana are the same. Samsara is nirvana, and Nirvana is Samsara”.
I urged him to stop with a clear reason in my mind that such message if
understood wrongly would drill our society into anarchy since even before
hearing such message, our people have already identified themselves with the end. As I came to
learn from Dr David Loy, one of the leading Western Buddhist scholars, I
realized what actually Nagajuna wanted to say was “ Nirvana and samsara are not
different” meaning it all depends on your serene or hellish mind. Nirvana and
samsara are not the real different places
as intended by the ‘same’ message. Instead, they are the same illusive mind as
intended by the ‘ not different’ message.
I appreciate somebody is motivated
to protect Buddhism and want it be sustainable in history. But let me ask you
which Buddhism are you willing to protect ? Is Buddhism the Shwedagon pagoda?
Is Buddhism the Buddhist fine arts? Is Buddhism, the Rakhine people or modern
Burma or Mr President, U Thein Sein, who apparently wears to be a Burmese
Buddhist ? Where is Buddhism apart from your mind (there is nothing in reality
except for your consciousness to think there Buddhism is)? Is there any
Buddhist Dharma that justifies you should be angry to others and compassionate
to some? Can there any Buddhist Dharma be existent when you are despising Muslims
to death and compassionate to Buddhists as the most spiritually advantageous in the world? If you
really want to protect Buddhism, there is but one and unbelievably simple way to
do it. DON’T treat others in the way as
you DON’T want to be treated. This is the central theme of Buddhist Law of
Karma that every candidate who wants to be a Buddhist must first believe in.
This particular and the most important theme of Buddhism contrasts Gods’
religions which ascertains to annul one’s responsible behaviors in their
collective great end. If somebody understands the responsibility of his moral
conduct in inexistent terms of nation, people or Buddhism, what leads him would
be not different from the despotic king of Great Britain, who identified himself as the Divine Representative, that Scottish enlightenment
of liberals overthrew to found modern America.
The most influential liberal
theorists of modern age , Karl Popper and Frederick Hayek, developed their
understanding of liberalism from their deeply conscientious knowledge that they really
didn’t understand anything. If some of our Burmese fellows think their rational
minds will lead Burmese democracy to overcome all sorts of miseries in this
nation and its people, let me remind us the classical description of Hayek, “ the limited authoritarian government is far better than an unlimited democratic
government”. Popper’s denial of nationalism looks more straightforward, “nationalist feelings infiltrate liberal strongholds and
sabotage liberalism. Also, and more importantly, being psychological, feelings
are irrelevant unless group-cohesion is achieved through psychology alone. This
idea of tribalism is a dangerous myth”.
If somebody comes to believe that nationalism can be a special case for Burmese
to be compatible with liberalism, it is the same irrational belief to think you
can have your best lunch and dinner with a dagger put ready to cut over your throat.
Nationalism is the manifest of fear from human group ego, and is built upon greed for a particular group’s
interest. Liberalism based on the rule
of Law is strictly egalitarian to be impartial and to be impassioned. Let us clarify: there is no space for the role of nationalism in an open society.
There will be no open society without the inalienable
full respect for egalitarianism.
We should ask that when people of
different merits and different tastes can never be equal, how can such
egalitarianism be practiced? In fact, the question itself has the answer: egalitarianism
is not the aim, it is a way of practice. That practice is not to treat any other as you don’t want to be
treated. The egalitarian society is a free society not because people enjoy the
equal merit but because people receive equal treatment that is not to be coerced by any special group or the
majority. Let us keep in mind that the democratic enlightenment of the West has
arisen from the need of every human to enjoy the freedom from the abuse of the arbitrary power of an authoritarian
government. That arbitrary power is not to be replaced with the arbitrary world
view of the majority or the tempest of nationalism or Buddhist Nazism of the
popular government.
There is no sub-human and no
useless in liberal democratic society. It is no surprise that thinking of
leading liberal theoreticians, Popper and Hayek have such close affinity with the
simple ancient Buddhist metaphysics, which is completely different from Fascist
interpretations of prevailing modern Burmese Buddhism, which are in part shaped
by bad illusions dominated by the rise of Germany’s Nazism during the Second
World War. There are important points we need to be aware that. Even though only
few modern Burmese know how Germans’ Nazism
and Japanese Fascism had been threatening the whole world, their emormous influence has
been extant in the consciousness of our people throughout these ages even
though we are completely unaware of it. As I have described earlier about Burmese
communists in one of my Why your country
has two names, “even the most ardent Burmese communists don’t know for what
purpose they are fighting in this egalitarian society ”, this ignorant Burmese history
of sentiments has repeated again to our fellow people who appear that they
really don’t know for what purpose they are fighting. If you like to think you are
fighting for history, let us understand first that history you are fighting for
is merely a low burglar history of
power struggles. History, as known to us, is for recording accolades of most brutal
minds of the triumphed, not for recording the fine arts, the suffering of the
underprivileged, the miseries of people, and best moral intelligence of the modest,
or perhaps most forgiving losers.
So before any of our fellows appears
to claim that they have rational sentiments in fighting for history, please ask yourself for what kind of history you will be fighting for. Let us keep in
mind repetitively that in fact there is only one single purpose for democratic
enlightenment of modern societies: that is to let people able to overthrow any becoming tyrannical government by
people’s power without bloodshed. That reserved purpose of people’s power is not for legitimizing a habit of discriminating
against one’s own fellow human beings from his or her unleashed Darwinian
instincts. Here I will regress a little as I think such relatively unknown knowledge can
be useful. Those great psychological theories of the Darwinian instinct, the
lust for power or sadomasochism as pointed out by Sigmund Freud are just
rediscoveries of our ancient Buddhist
metaphysics by humble and great Western minds, especially described in Abidharmakosa,
surprisingly a historical Theravada doctrine learned by Northern Buddhist scholars. Not
only this wonderful doctrine described about human fundamental lust for sex and
power as consistent with modern leading psychological theories, it dived into
even unimaginable quantum principles and a very clear description of Zeno’s
paradox which ever has led mathematical history to modern calculus. No matter how deep
are the abstracts of such comprehensive metaphysical doctrine, all it conveys in brief
is the same message all churches of Buddhism alert us , “all conditioned processes
are illusions and dreams”.
If some of our fellows think, these
abstracts are to be useful only for the metaphysical dimension and not
applicable to complex political affairs, let me inform them that modern
political sciences highlight to propose the progress of a nation depends on how
the public administrators of the nation are well-understanding the abstract areas
and synthesize them to the best of moral knowledge applicable to the people of
their nation. If we carefully examine how can someone be eligible to be
entitled as a competent public officer to manage those endlessly complex public affairs, the
first essential character is humaneness and the second essential character is his
learning wisdom for infinite progress. That kind of unhindered wisdom enjoyed
by the humane public officer on his infinite scientific progress of political, social and moral
knowledge is inevitably
built upon an ancient Buddhist metaphysical concept called Reductio ad absurdum, that means
as much as you know, all that you know
are meaningless things. The first developer of Reductio ad absurdum is that great
monk Nagasena who debated with King Milanda of Parkinstan in 150 BCE
followed by a cozy explanation of Nagajuna, and comprehensive study of Candrakirti of the
Madhyamika Buddhism, which is the most influential Buddhist philosophical method on many contemporary
Western natural and social scientists. If we think our modernized
political assumptions (that you just developed yourself in a few seconds out of your passion) for reforming our nation are more fundamentally true and systematic
than those great human learning for thousands of years, we must first realize
that it is nothing other than arrogant illusion of such rational fools. The Great
Buddha, we want to protect in our haughty sentiments of rational nationalism,
would be smiling at us.
(to be cont.)