Thursday, September 3, 2009

Nothing in the universe to everything in the universe V


"Buddha was the perfect example for the path of action of Karma Yoga in Bhagavad Gita because he never expected a reward for his action"

- Swami Vivekananda


Some Western critics claimed that there had never been a soul of philosophy in our tyrannical and ancient Asia. As a matter of fact, Immanuel Kant deeply admired Confucius as Chinese Socrates. Asia in its superficial outlook is likely to be rendered as uncannily simple with religious fanatism. A closer examination of religions of Asia would reveal an utterly different reality from its fanatic profile. In fact, all those gospels of Asia, Confucianism, Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism, are loose philosophies. I hardly believed that these Asia guiding stars of ancient wisdom are able to be ever qualified for the Western Abrahamic standards of a religion that insists the end of humanity is inevitably decided by Salvation of the God.

By saying loose philosophies, what I intend to mean is the original nature of all these sorts of ancient wisdom of Asia is open-ended. Those old Asians, loose philosophers, all seemed to hate the blind ends of humanity. They all advocated that humanity has great hope and incredible chances if one comes to get a sense of his own duty to move forward. During our study in the medical school, a surgeon taught us in a way for easy remembrance on endemicity of appendicitis and its anatomical vulnerability to infection. She said what God didn't want is the immortality of human beings so he attached an undesirable, non-functional organ with a blind end to intestines in our body. This blind end, unnecessary and useless, called the appendix, when distended with indigestible food residues becomes inflamed and finally ruptured to release infected bacteria to cause the whole abdomen infection called peritonitis. Peritonitis will kill a person within hours. God seems to want small blind ends in us.What seems to me is a blind end might look small, but when it outbursts, it is irresverible and fatal to a man. How many outbreaks of conflicts, violences and wars have happened among our fellow human beings by our blind ends to gods likewise.God himself is the greatest blind end of humanity. For this purpose of God as our unavoidable ultimate end, faith seems to be the only resort for our sinful humans in God's religions.

Our old Asian men, Confucius, Mahavira, Buddha and brilliant masters of Upanishads didn't think in this way. They all had the same message to us no matter they rose up in different times or places and never had a chance to meet one another. The consistent message to humanity from those old hoary men of Asia wisdom was Satyagraha that means the spirit of truth. The old men demanded us the bondage to the spirit of truth as our own inevitable duty rather than blind faith in the God. All humans are equally awarded with this greatest human honor that is the sense of duty as our ongoing struggle in a truthful way for progress of humanity: searching yourself stressed in Hinduism, Jainism and Buddhism; serving the relevant others stressed in Confucianism.

Those hoary men didn't also ignore the fact that the search for truth is feasible and equally possible to us only when we are not hindered by oppressive disturbances arisen from our malicious brutal tendencies. Liberty and liberation, not only for me but also for you and all others as well: the old ancient wisdom set a standardized principle called Ahimsa, non-violence. That is what Western thinkers may not recognize as a practical reason, for it is very hard to be believed that violence can be overthrown by a strong will, non-violence of unwavering resistance. The West built up a system called democracy that can easily overthrow a government when a government becomes an evil and brutal. The West seemed to realize the weakness of the powerless, is full of suspicion on tendencies toward exploitation, oppression, and brutal salvages of the ruling class people, who are often called tyrants. Westerners, the young were serious about the propensity of the corruption of their rulers, and the incapability of the bottom to remedy it, whereas the old, the Easterners, spiritually wholesome, generous and selfless, men firm like mountains and their spirits streaming like flowing rivers, seemed never be suspicious about the capability of the strong will of an individual in wending his way for his own liberation progress.

It is a big regret that Buddhism, one of the most open philosophies of Asia ancient wisdom, has become a dogma in Burma and some other societies under the disguise of Theravadas that claims to hold the pure teachings of Buddha. Theravada Buddhism in Burma, most probably everywhere else in any Theravada society, is often exploited as a very effective tool to be used by the class of the dominant for justification of their rule over the oppressed. Dogmas are very important for hampering the progress of humanity as they block the curious and free minds of humans in all possible ways and let them rationalize their miserable livings.

Colley Cibber wrote a poem about a blind boy who had never seen light since his birth. The poet concluded his poem by the blind boy's final resort of living, which is the inner liberty of the boy: Thus while I sing, I am a king. At least, the blind boy has his human liberty to claim himself as a king in his imagination. Nonetheless, we need to notice that even though we could somewhat be pleased about the boy to enjoy himself as a king in his thought paradise, nothing in reality has yet changed, as he is still a very poor blind boy. A tyrant is happy to know if a blind boy thinks he is a king whenever he sings. For a tyrant, his main concern is not to let a blind boy to know the ways to become a real king. What a tyrant wants the people is to live like a frog who just knows his own small sky over his narrow well as the greatest kingdom, not to get this damned frog out of his platonic cave. The frog will know how big and how incomparable in size are the sky, once he can get out of his well. This is a good change for the frog. To the tyrant, it is so sour. The closer the frog to the knowledge of reality, the tyrant becomes weaker to vindicate the need of his existence to rule a frog or a blind boy. The case of tyranny of Burma has its main pillar, the information asymmetry of the dominant class against the ruled class. Of course, the rule of the game is only the informed will win.

For the contemporary Chinese authoritarian system, as the ruling communist party had already tried to shatter the traditional Confucian system in the past, their choice of popularizing a dogma is not an ethical system but developing nationalism by arousing hatred against Japanese. I am not sure whether this strategy might be successful or not. It could be very unlikely to retain the tyranny of China in this way. First, masses of Chinese are mainly economic men rather than to be patriotic. Second, the government itself is just authoritarian. Not at all, they are the totalitarian system like Burma or North Korea. Being just authoritarian, the Chinese government has opened up doors of their country; the young Chinese generations who have closer and intimate contacts with the liberty of Western democracy and who come to understand the importance of the rule of law, have many big odds to change their country as a more or less democratic system in the future.

Burmese are sub-Indian in their culture. Like their fellow Indians, they are friendly to everybody else. They love Japanese and think that the Japanese are a very polite race. They love English as English drove out the incompetent, unpopular last king of Burma and introduced Burmese with modern systems. U Thant wrote in View from the UN, perhaps, by seeing that his socialist country was being driven to a state of pariahs to desperation: the British should not have left us earlier. Even if England was our stepfather, he was responsible for leaving us without adequately providing enough help for a country poorly equipped with competent human resources and administrative systems. It will be quite meaningless of those smart tyrants to arouse hatred against Japanese and English in the minds of these happy and not serious Burmese people. The only hope for the military rulers is to do something with Thais. But it is still not adequate enough. How's about the Muslim population who are so powerless in this Buddhist country? Or Chinese and Indian migrants who are competing and winning lazy native Burmans in economy? Historian Thant Myint Oo said in his The River of Lost footsteps: Ne Win, the first modern military ruler of Burma in his younger days was defeated in his running business among the migrant Indians. His bitter towards Indians made him drive out Indians from Burma when he became the supreme ruler. Notwithstanding, there were two brutal killing events of Chinese in Chinese-Burmese conflicts during his reign. He himself was Chinese-blooded and Chinese seemed not to be his bitter enemies. Without the cooperation of the government, such native-migrant conflicts were unlikely to outburst into very dangerous situations. In one of my comments in one Burmese blog, I explained that even in 1988, the top outburst was intentionally created strategically by the military government. The military controlled all the tempos of mass movements and created the timings of rancor to their highly desired odds. Beautiful statistical regressions of political scientists significantly proved that. If we ever think that a tyrant may just know for his existence and nothing else, we undermined the real situation. Of course, a tyrant may know only for his existence or he is merely protecting his existence. But he has to be sophisticated enough, wicked enough, violent enough, and smart enough for sustaining his existence. Most of all, he is a tyrant. He has the wealth and power to do all kinds of wicked sophistication. He needs to be sophisticated utmost as he definitely knows that he is a tyrant hated by everybody. In Burmese's case, the tyrants are lucky. The luckiest blessing for those tyrants' longevity is the dogma of Burmese under the guise of Theravadism.

Since the military rulers of Pagan, Buddhism has been thoroughly used as the support for the legitimacy of the rulers. It has been consistently exploited as a propaganda machine of the ruling tyrants. As in other countries, migration of Buddhism into this land has integrated itself with our cultural system full of taboos. We need to acknowledge about the fact that our understanding of Buddha's teaching is more or less intermixed with many of our cultural concepts however much we claim to be pure Buddhism. We are more or less biased in our interpretation and understanding of Buddhism as happened in many societies influenced by Buddhism. This is not a problem. We can learn to improve ourselves for the real Buddhism knowledge, if we are aware of our falsifiability of our current understanding and knowledge. The problem is started when there is dogma and arrogance; that is exactly what the tyrant wants a blind boy to breed. This is the hermetic Burmese social system where dogmas can most enjoy, a great situation and safe haven for tyrants, completely imperturbable against their power. The problem also lies in the original philosophy of Theravadism that will not accept any criticism and discussions for improvement. In the beginning, the founders of theravadists might have had a very good heart for their respect to Buddha's original teaching, but this may not be what Buddha wants. As mentioned earlier, Buddhism is a loose and open-ended philosophy. Actually, theravadists have stubbornly undermined what Buddha had instructed them, "to plug out some regulations on monks when the circumstances in the future lead you monks to infeasible practices". The meaning of Theravadism itself is not following the instruction of Buddha's final word. Theravada means the teaching of the Elders. Accordingly, theravadists need to follow the instruction of the Elders. This is also a violation against Buddha's final instruction. The final instruction of Buddha has two sentences, perhaps the most flashily illuminated words to humanity: "The monastic institution should be led by Dharma as the Teacher instead of me, Buddha (as I will no longer persist). Be always mindful about doing the good things". It is clear to us that Buddha had rejected any personal authority over the guidance of his Buddhism peace corps. The leader is the moral force, Dharma, the love of truth, the sense of duty that is not to be negligent but to assert good things into action. Absolutely, this is Satyragraha, to be strong enough to bring out good things with non-violence for sake of truth. Certainly, not for the sake of elders or serving originality.

These are a few prominent biases in our knowledge in understanding of Burmese Buddhism. Theravadism is grateful enough to me personally for retaining those original instructions of Buddha that I cited in this article. In my reasoning and preference, those teachings seem to be very original, right and fair to humanity as it is supposed to come from a really enlightened sage. The criticism of mine on Theravadism happens not because their brilliant work in maintaining the integrity of Buddha's teaching is not correct, but because as they are rather not following the original instruction and teaching of Buddhism, or perhaps they just learn the teachings by heart and haven't analyzed the matter carefully. Theravadists have very brilliant and asserted work in love of Buddha and Buddhism. But love itself is the problem and love is also the cause of dogma as said by Buddha in the principle of dependent origination, attachment (love) becomes dogma (Upadana). Regrettably, as critical thinking is lacking in our air-tight system, there are very few chances for our Burmese to get on the way of real progress of true knowledge of the original Buddhism during these a thousand historical years. Dogmas that are sticky with egoistic identifications have the triumph over reason in this land. One of the singing slogans of the Burmese military is "Patriotic, Buddhist, nationalistic, Burmese soldier". I couldn't find out what is nobler of that killer by being entitled as a Buddhist or Burmese. A killer is a killer. If a killer is from Buddhism, Buddhism is a shame. If a killer is from Burmese, Burmese is a shame. If a drug that can reverse all cancer cells to normal cells is invented by a muhammadan, it is a great honor to Islam. The would-be-Buddha in one of his early fulfilling periods had already recognized such self-arrogant wrong thinking. He was an old instructor at that time and people admired him. He wanted to test whether the reason of people's admiration on him was because of respect to his highly-esteemed designation or admiration of his moral integrity. He visited one acquainted household. He was warmly greeted and it was a joy of the household members to receive this very highly-reputed, honorable guest. In his return, he got some food from the household without getting the consent. He repeated this action three days to verify whether his great designation will offset the unfair act of his. The first two days, the households tolerated, so self-control seems to be not as much important as a person's status. On the third day, the household members surrounded and beat him. The would-be-Buddha was a great researcher for evidence-based truth, even risking his life for the verification of an important concept of Dharma. It is important to be noticed that whenever we think and say the superiority of a Burmese Buddhist over a Muslim or an Indian or an African, we are ignoring this impressive research work of Buddha and his verified result. The information for truth is there, affirmed by Buddha. For its sake of the love for dogma of "Burmese Buddhists" make our Burmese neglect and forget those warnings of ancient wisdom in many ways. The dogma and arrogance is the way of the losers. Still, we are the losers under the military boots.

Of course, it is important to remind us that Buddha finds truth not for the exclusive sake of theravadists of Burma, but his purpose is to serve equal for all universal beings, at least for his relatives, at least who are Indians that Buddha had intended them to become completely equal.We are just a 50 million population. Other and also very few Theravada countries are also as small countries as we are. If we claim that understanding of real truth exists only in our Theravada, it directly means that Buddha has served the best for Theravadists only. Dismally, in this pattern of our selfish thinking, his enlightenment is not for the benefits of other non-Theravadists. Buddha is the first equalitarian ever known by human history as a really existent personality. It is completely illogical to believe that this great equalitarian sage had exclusively served us and hadn't bothered about other non-theravadists.

In terms of Buddhism and truth only in Theravada, the purpose of Buddha comes to be deemed just for founding monastic institutions in Burma, Cambodia, Laos,Thailand, Sri Lanka and Bhutan, a very tiny population among the human Ocean of India, China or America. It should not be so. He lived only for eighty years as there was no purpose for him to enforce the monastic orders or his teachings. His existential solution to humanity is Bhkati and Prajna, that are the key elements of self-realization and self-liberation, not from the salvation of any God. He was not the decisive authority for the Karma or transcendental knowledge of creatures. Dharma is the guiding force and teacher as he trusted and delegated.

"Come and see by yourself", that is an intrinsic Buddha's teaching. Buddha believed that self-determination and capacity-building approaches will work much better and sustainable than his universal charity. He no longer needed to preach as he had already shown the people the rightful way of living. Of course, Buddha has never founded Buddhism, as Buddhism is not a religion but just a way of rightful thinking and peaceful living.

Buddha once said to a renegade from a nihilist to Buddhism on his request of apostasy, "Please review carefully about your decision. You should not be in haste to do such kind of conversion". Buddha also set a provisional period of four months for this convert to observe and test the practices of Buddhism. Only from getting the renegade's affirmation after four months of serious observation and tests, Buddha admitted the nihilist into his sect of church. Another remarkable story was Buddha's generosity for the liberty of other religions. After his critical discussion with Buddha on the topic of what really matters, result or intention, the right hand person of Mahavira (Human god of Jainists), called Upali converted into an adherent Buddhist from a Jainist. Accordingly, he deprived naked Jainists of his charity. Buddha called him and urged him to continue donating the Jain monks, that he willingly followed. This was Buddha's equalitarian principle of non-discrimination toward any religious practitioner. These are two examples how Buddha tolerate and even help the liberty of different thoughts. One prominent saying from Buddha was "wisdom comes from ignorance". If wisdom is progressive in nature, we need to acknowledge that all wisdom kinds are steps of ignorance.

Jainists were one of the vigorous reformers of Hinduism and they attempted seriously to overthrow the animal sacrifices of Hindu ritualism at least five hundred years before Buddha had ever risen up. In their enlightenment, they saw amoeba in water, that they identified as microorganisms who were able to respond to touch (pseudopodia formation) and regarded them as living organisms and avoided water and rather die for thirst for their adherence to the principle of not killing any living being. Hindu devouts today saw both Mahavira and Buddha as human saints for reforming Hinduism, and there is no problem to follow their principles and pay homage to their temples. Hinduism itself is just a set of questions about existential life and the knowledge of truth. Everybody can come and try to understand these spiritual matters and share with others. Nobody is the ultimate authority of their countless number of Upanishads; for all are different approaches to understand the reality of God and either reformation or reminding old good ways are needed when people become extremely ignorant.and morally corrupted.

I want to present an important nuance in our confusion of language. I think this is a crucially important logic for tolerance of our narrow-minded Theravada society to universal religions and brilliant systems of human civilizations. If this logic can illuminate souls of Burma to self-criticism and further inquisitiveness we have one step closer to becoming an open society. One step closer to the open society means, one step closer to the higher odds of driving away the military dictatorship that exclusively has exploited those weaknesses of our system. In constructing this logical nuance, first I want to elaborate some fundamental happenings in the thinking and practice of our Theravadism.

The questionability of Burmese Theravadists , perhaps also Mahayanists in understanding truth is to identify truth with Buddha. More badly, it is to identify non-truths with non-Buddhists. In a nutshell, the presumption of a Buddhist is more likely that a Buddhist who is devoted to Buddha is able to find truth and a non-Buddhist who devotes wrongly to the wrong one (God) is able not. If we inspect this matter closer, as I have explained earlier in the previous episode, either Buddha or Krishna is only living in our fancied imagination and seems not that actually close to real Buddha or real Lord Krishna of actual living beings. Actually, as a fallible human person, out of fear and having a tendency to have refuge in someone, we are tended to create Buddha with supreme human qualities with our own understandings. So we should be suggested that at least we should be aware of a difference from the actual reality even if this devotion to Buddha will make us calm and peaceful. I am neither urging nor saying that such kind of practice of envisioning Buddha or Buddha's qualities should be abandoned. Of course, those practices will make us feel and receive some vigor and energy of Buddha and will probably contribute some progress in our spirituality if we can be humble enough at our current point. All I am urging here is to be aware of our incompleteness of understanding of Buddha, and not to identify our own Buddha with the supreme truth or superior truth.

Another problem is about understanding the truth. Truth means universality, generalizability and of course, accessibility, realizability by anybody. If some truth is not accessible by a human being, this is not truth because it is not equally fair to everybody. It is just a hyper-secret of a sect or merely a pariah. On the other hand, we also need to be convinced that there are many agreeable truths. Even though it may not be taken significantly, truth should be agreeable to someone else rather than keeping on our own and trying to legitimize by self-verification. I am not meaning here that some brilliant and wonderful insights by the first person's experiences should not be defined as truths. Nor I am advocating moral relativism that is a very dangerous concept to humanity in affirming that everybody's any action can be defined as right in their own way. In fact, one of the misinterpretations of Karma as good will is one of the most overwhelming factors in Buddhism. In practice, this authorization of good will over any action is misleading to moral relativism and legitimization of atrocious conducts of the rulers until nowadays of Burma.

Purifying Buddhism, serving for the greatest good for the greatest number of people, or fighting a fair war, all these different clichés are frequently used by the reigning military to pretend that they have a just cause together with the people. In reality, those military hypocrites are delivering illusions to the people. Before considering purification of Buddhism, we need to self-criticize whether we have already explored and known definitely of what is pure Buddhism. I believe nobody is able to claim this because if you know pure Buddhism, you are already pure like a Buddha so that you are already a Buddha.

The legitimacy of the greatest good for the greatest number of people is an endemic and chronic disease in our Burmese traditional thinking. This sort of utilitarian justice is giving rise to unfair instrumentalism of the groups over the individual. The individual is a means for a group to their end. With this motto, the Burmese government enforced medical graduates into life-long slavery of the public hospitals. For the whole benefit of the society, enslavement of a few people seems very fair to the military, so might be the public. However, the doctors, possibly the best brains in Burma, are becoming to be just used as the instruments for achieving the ends of the military and the public. We are not meaning that we don't want to serve the benefits of the public. However, the demand of our services is not from the needs of the peple but from the obscenity of the military rulers. In pyschological terms such obscenity of the military tryants is called I-it relationship. In any mutual relationship, nobody wants to be treated as it. This is one of the examples of immature tradition of Burmese society in its adherence to utilitarian justice . What Burmese are still not cautious about the danger of this tradition is that everybody can become just an it any time. In many circumstances, untouchable its are even not cared or to be used, and just needed to be thrown away. When Thailand police drove the Rohinga muslims into the sea like animals, there were very few Burmese who sympathized with them. Some Buddhist dogmatists said that those muslims should be treated in this way; for they are stupid, harmful, despicable and obstacles to the progress of Buddhism. They are willing the pure Buddhism without any disturbance from Muslims' nuisance. The Muslims want to degrade Buddhism and will degrade Buddhism. I would like to ask those people whether Buddha has ever told us that people from a different religion should be thrown away into the sea. Did Buddha ever say to us that the stupid people should be thrown away into the sea? Did Buddha ever say to us that people who can be an obstacle to Buddhism should be treated like animals? Burmese Buddhist fundamentalists have very strong tendency to treat any Muslim in I-it relationships. When the military deprive the muslims of any human dignity in North Western Burma, Burmans simply think that is right. For many dogmatic Buddhists, all muslims are useless its. What they don't notice for themselves is in facing utilitarian justice of the military is anybody can become its at one time as shown in the example of the most intellectual class of medical doctors. Every day, we can see that people have to march in the scorching sun to hail the slogans of the military. Even a cow may have a chance to graze under a shady tree of its choice. Even a cow may speak a language of his complaint. Those masses of the people, who couldn't choose to graze; instead they need to stand and breathe hard like a mad dog in the sun; they couldn't complaint like a cow, all they need to do or die is to grumble salvage animal words of the military: Crush those (Aung San Su Kyi's men) into complete destruction. I want my Burmese fellows to repetitively notice that in this society of brutal tyrants, everybody can be its at any time. The military already has blatantly claimed for his legitimacy of treating anybody as it in their constitution. In the military men's eyes, its or animals are not worthy of any liberty but they are just instruments of higher humans, Buddhist sakya patriotic fighers. Its and animals don't know the duty. So they are worthy to be treated as the instruments of the highly responsible men who know the duty. That is the main concept of the Constitution of those evils who are dancing with ghost shadows of moral relativism in their hell paradise. My request to the Burmese bottom is if we are real followers of Buddha, please bear in mind not to treat anybody in a way that we don't like to be treated.

Fighting a fair war is also an agreeable truth to Burmese since the struggles of independence. I want to request our fellows to think carefully about this. Is there a war existent in history that is regarded as by any means fair? The war means injustice. We may say a revolutionary war or crushing the bad. But intrinsically such war is just a revenge on injustice by infringing injustice ourselves. Our critical reasoning for humanity should guide us that no war is fair. The justification of an action by just pointing out the good will for a good cause is cheating, as the good will itself can't be good enough to be eligible. In no way, a good cause is entitled to overrule the arbitrary and atrocious methods. Justification of any action for a good cause is meaningless. If we want to eliminate HIV/AIDS from this world, just to kill everybody who is the HIV positive. Of course, we just need to kill 40 million population (2006 UNAIDS statistics, I don't know the current figure) , so that six billion people can enjoy an HIV free world. Can such kind of good cause justify this action? Those kinds of arbitrary violence thought by either dissidents or the military people are mostly based on moral relativism. Moral relativism that is tried to be justified by pointing out good will and good cause is very irrational and very dangerous to humanity.

It doesn't mean that good will not exists and good will can't legitimize a good action. The knack is to understand clearly what the characters of a good will are rather than implicating its usage in the justification of our moral relativists' acts, like saying "a fair war" that is a shameful lie in any instance. The circumstances might bind us to do the war inevitably but we can't claim that Burmese can do a fair war. This is a very sinful violation of truth.

A really good will is with a wise sense of renunciation, denying any sort of instrumentality in earning one's privilege, and steadfastly avoids any form of violence. If devotion to Buddha and Krishna is regarded as instrumental to one's liberation, this is bribery for a privilege. Absolutely, this is not fair, equal and universal. This is not truth and this is not Dharma because Dharma is supposed to be fair, equal and universal.

(To be continued.)

Further readings

Moving mountains by James Ure

Embracing imperfections by Tallis Grayson

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Nothing in the universe to everything in the universe IV



“What kinds of qualities of a good man will make him pass those endless whirls of the Ocean of Sansara (Cycle of rebirths)?”

Demon Arthavaka'


“Arthavaka, I may say Bhakti and Prajná. With these two main qualities accumulated, a good man will pass this endless Ocean of Sansara

Lord Buddha'


In Nothing in the universe to everything in the universe I, I started to argue that the enjoyment of Moksha, the final liberation was not the mutually exclusive right for Buddhists. Instead, liberation or enlightenment should be the universal right for a person of any religion or even for an atheist, who are wise and thoroughly industrious in exploring their true purpose of life.


Burmese, in fact, have been the virtual prisoners’ race for a thousand years since the military rulers of Pagan or even before. When every possible path of external liberty of Burmese are heavily blocked by typical barriers and oppressions of a totalitarian society ruled by military dictatorship, the only possible outlet of those down-trodden proletariats is finding the inner freedom of one’s self . The unequal are becoming completely equal in this inner liberty that they could search on their own. The external liberty is for the Western, American wealthy materialists who possess but are very ignorant; the internal liberty is for smart penniless Buddhists who don’t possess but are very wise. This is always a classical excuse of the well-learned devout Buddhists in our country. What these learned Buddhists don’t aware is that many educated Indian converts from Hinduism to Christianity also always make their classical excuse by saying: “Hindus are very selfish. They worship the gods only for themselves and their family. They practice meditation only for their liberation. Hindus have no sense that a person should think about the others, and all others should gather and help a person in trouble. This kind of unselfishness is only observed in Christianity; therefore Christianity is a morally sound religion”. Honestly speaking, I can’t find any armor to defend a similar critique for the current practice of Theravadism as an individual's self-liberation nowadays in Burma. Morally, we can have a thrilled sense that our practice of Burmese Buddhism is on a wrong track, and we are in serious need to find remedial measures for coming up as appreciable Buddhism. In his Wheel of Dharma, Buddha proclaimed that the rightful practice comes from rightful understanding. In this sense, I also need to say that we have many wrong understandings in our accepted ways of Buddhism.


In her reply to a journalist, Daw Aung San Su Kyi said a prominent legacy of Theravadism to Burmese is individualism, one of the most important mind-sets for the founding pillars of Western democracy. Nevertheless, we need to notice that individualism is very close to ego-centrism, and the imminent danger from individualism is it could easily be corrupted into moral relativism that has been the experience of many democracy nations including contemporary America. The misunderstanding of Bhakti, that is commonly known to Burmese Buddhists as Saddha, is one of the misguided forces toward the rise of such moral tyranny from our Burmese Buddhist community, for whom all other diverse religious concepts and practices across the globe are purgative, and only the Buddhists, especially, the privileged Burmese as last defenders of Buddha’s original doctrine with their affirmative Bhakti are graceful in doing their religious acts.


The failure of the progress of a person has started but he may not have noticed, when he thinks himself that his knowledge is supreme to anybody else. In Mahayana Buddhism, the end of humanity has already been decided by the supreme compassion and wisdom of Bodhisattvas, and in Theravada Buddhism, the end is already decided by an individual’s noble devotion toward pre-conceived, sure-to-gain wisdom. In this way, the weak minds of Buddhist nations are dismally deluded, thinking themselves that at least they are supreme to non-Buddhists or even arrogant towards fellow Buddhists who might not know the more supreme Dharma such as Abidharma; so even the fellow Buddhists are also very ignorant in view of the possessor of knowledge of supreme wisdom. Why they could be so sure to be rewarded enlightenment as a Buddha may enjoy, a critical western thinker may ask. They will say their Bhakati, that is devotion of belief in Dharma, the true way of enlightenment, is firmly persistent in their unblemished mind so that they are sure to achieve the ultimate illumination of Dharma. The critical thinker may still argue what happens when the saints of other religions are so pure in their minds for devotion to their other way of practice for enlightenment. The Burmese who regards himself as the only one who is able to know the ultimate truth as a Buddhist will argue, “They are in illusion. Their purity is not the real Bhakati. In fact, their other practice is the way of evils”. Burmese are one of the most frankly speaking races, commensurable with their frugal simplicity in knowledge. Therefore, a response from an arrogant Buddhist member of this tight-fist society to a critique or a proposal of alternate thinking is quite typical: “My knowledge is always right and all other else are wrong, and all other else are to be discarded as they are completely wrong and evils.”


In Burma, most often, the Buddhist scholars publish the writings that often rebuke Hinduism as a perfectly wrong religion. What they don’t notice is the fundamental meditation practices of Buddhism were inherited from Hinduism. If Hinduism is completely wrong in their ways of practice as most Burmese scholars are saying and most Burmese are thinking, then our Burmese Buddhism will be also an absolutely wrong religion. The practice of the idolatry worship of the Buddhas’, Arahats’ and heaven god’s statues is also the cultural transmission from Hindus’ rituals of India, and this fetish culture is quite meaningless and not relevant to the original philosophy of Buddhism. The Burmese script we are writing today was also adopted from Tamil people of Southern India. In a similar way, for a common Burman, the understanding of Bhakati as devotion to Buddha is similar to a typical Hindu devout, who devotes to Lord Krishna he adores in hope that his Karma of transmigration will progress from his love for this Lord of the universe. An irony is by adopting Bhakati, in other words Saddha for the liberation of one’s self from the attachment, the most common thing is that we are claiming to do whatever we like from the power of clarity awarded from bowing to supernatural gods, Buddha or our imagined Dharma. I may say that such clarity has never existed because as a practitioner, nobody knows who the Buddha is or who Lord Krishna is or what the supreme Dharma is. Only in our fancy of imagination, we ourselves create Lord Buddha and Lord Krishna. If Krishna and Buddha are the real gods of the universe, our creation is far apart from the real qualities of these Lords. Our knowledge is far away from understanding the ethical principles of our Lords. As a matter of fact, we are worshipping our imagination and never have the ability to worship the real Buddha or Lord Krishna, or the perfect Dharma.


We may still counter argue that even if these imagined Lords or their Dharma is not in perfect shapes as they are supposed to be, they could contribute some help in promotion of our spirituality. Even if this counter argument is right, the result is a liars’ paradox. I want to show a sentence of a liar such as “I know that I know nothing”. In this sentence you are saying in its beginning that you know something. If it is so, the predicate that follows “I know nothing” is becoming meaningless. At least you know that you know nothing. This is a similar happening in the current understanding of Bhakati as a liar’s paradox for the practitioner in search of Moksha that is liberation from attachment in both Hinduism and Buddhism. If the meaning of Moksha is liberation from attachment, and Bhakati (Saddha) is devotion to Lords and our presupposed illumination of Dharma, it is found out that we are mired in our own spider's web of attachment to devotion.It is evident that we never have attempted to cut this spider's string and we never have been directed to renunciation. In this logical presentation, if Buddha was right in saying that Moksha could be obtained by the quality of Bhakati, the meaning of Bhakati should not be devotion, however, it should be a very different one, or perhaps, our limited cognition has not caught up sufficiently with what is seemed to be actually meant by Buddha for "devotion".


(To be cont., How Mahatma Gandhi understood Bhakati completely different from the conventional acceptance of Hinduism)

N.B: His new understanding of Bhakati (Saddha) was the most powerful moral force to be adopted by Gandhi to rise as the spiritual leader of India. Hinduism was no longer confined to castes in his consistent understanding and has become a universal religion.




Sunday, May 31, 2009

Why Some animals are more equal than others? VI

In honor of Abraham Lincoln's bicentennial


(It will be very difficult at first to understand the contents of this story as this is an abridged material of the life-long learnings of the greatest philosophers on politics, science, morality and religion to be applied in understanding the rise of tyranny in Burma and many similar countries. I do not tend to hide the fact that this story is an intellectual and informative weapon for the effective blow against the Burmese regime who exclusively has exploited these similar tools of political and social sciences in controlling the totalitarian society of Burma. The current world has two classes, the informed and the not informed. The rule of the game is the informed can rule and always win.)


Bodhisattva Wu Kong was eagerly asserting his dogma of the way of Great Vehicle Buddhism as certainly right; at least it is much more right than the way of Small Vehicle Buddhism Sect. He argued that the small vehicle guys, Theravadists, are sluggish and egoistic, only working individually for their exclusive higher achievement of one’s selves in spirituality, and all other merits and virtues as well. This egoism of Small vehicle path ignores the altruism for everybody else. For that reason, the society that follows the small vehicle path has less family and community spirit, less harmony and less fraternity towards each other, tending to create chaos in their lives and anarchy as ultimatum in their society, that is partly the result of their original wrongful acceptance for “some animals are entitled to be more equal than others”; however, the truth is already paradoxically and concomitantly in their mind, there has been unconscious smothering dissent, with unexpressed complaint with ferment: ” why some animals are more equal than others?”. Totalitarianism or tyranny is able to enjoy the most in Theravadas’ society as this customary norm doesn’t find any culpability against the greater liberty of the stronger and the more arrogant, and their superfluous entitlement of the more equal has to be taken for granted, at least for the least equal ones, and the more equal have their exclusive divine rights for the foolproof benefits from their past-life good merits of divination.


When the lower classes of Theravadists, the peasants, the poor, the oppressed with no sufficient education, have a chance to uprise against aristocrats of tyranny, their original vehement was often erupted into anarchy; the proclivity of lower masses for complete destruction of all classes is revealed as the rebels’ ultimatum: this is because, their original principle for the entitlement of one’s own nirvana has irreparable weakness, not able to give a cardinal solution like Mahayanists, who are able to create a sound, satisfactory hope and harmony for all in their entrenched principle since the beginning, “all animals must be set to be equal; no one else is left behind. Some animals can be never, ever more equal than others”. The original principle of Mahayanism has its own significance in philanthropy, whereas theravadists don’t or never bother to take care of this. For Wu Kong, it is that pathetic, morally depraved, self-righteous and insane status of a worldly rejected sect of Buddhism.


Lincoln needed to speak, “Mr. Wu, for my personal preference, I would choose to be a small vehicle guy, how small he is for your Great Vehicle Buddhism Bodhisattvas”.


Wu Kong began to be irritated as Lincoln didn’t seem to follow his thinking.

“Are you mad, Abe? You were the greatest ever liberator in the human world. And you don’t want to be great again here in Heaven. You have reached the top of the morality in the human world. The perfect moral path of the greatest ever unselfish souls of Bodhisattvas is now welcoming you. Why are you willing to pick up a small trivial stone when you are able to pick a greater choice?”


“Pardon me, Mr Wu. The reason is I am forced to choose the individualism of this small Buddhist guy’s moral path as some sort of the minimal worst to humanity, perhaps, even if it may not be the best. Because there is menacing danger to humanity in choosing your greater path. I admire your great vehicle guy’s attitude of serving for all others. However, I don’t believe that all animals are able to be set to be equal. I also never have believed that all men are created equal.”


Wu Kong couldn’t tolerate more. He waved his hand. A very long iron rod automatically descended into his hand. He was snarling at Lincoln, pointing his iron rod at Abe’s hat, looking furiously at Lincoln with irate eyes as if he were going to crush the demons on his escort journey for his master, Hsuan-Tsang to Buddhas’ land.

“Liar, traitor, pervert!! You are heard to admire the revolutionary leader, George Washington as your idol, the founder of America democracy. You are the 16th president of United States to take the oath that you must with utmost your effort to protect your Constitution of Liberty, that claims its core ideology as All men are created free and equal, condemning the divine right of the King of England as absurd. We, Bodhisattvas’ world now realize that you are a feigned evil: without believing in the principle you defended, you were merely pretending to protect this principle. Hypocrite! Now the tale of your honesty is that of a chimera!” Wu Kong is angry speaking at Lincoln.


“I might be too honest to speak like this, Mr Wu. Perhaps, the statement of Thomas Jefferson, all men are created equal might be already wrong. However, it was to be written, not because Jefferson really believed in the same way he was writing. He was just trying to describe an ideal abstract that might be never impossible, or might never be an ever accessible metaphysical goal for us.” Lincoln started explaining the paradox of democracy.


“Why Jefferson needed to write this if this kind of an ideal goal is inaccessible and this is a message of unpractical unreality then?” Wu Kong asked Lincoln, still tense with trepidation from his anger.


“Let’s us inspect closely on this matter and strive to understand together, Mr Wu. Of course, it could not be denied that, human beings are, like other things in the world, in many respects, very unequal. Nor should we doubt that this inequality is of great importance, and even in may respects most desirable.”


Wu got attracted by those interesting words, relaxing his grip of the iron rod that intended to kill Lincoln, “ The inequality is said to be shameful and immoral.Why this inequality should be desirable?”


Lincoln smiled at Wu, perhaps one of the very rare smiles from him among those melancholies of his hard life and those immature struggles of America.

“This is the same answer for my choice to become a small Buddhist man rather than a big Buddhist man, Mr Wu. Please remember that I honestly described to you that there is menacing threat to humanity from your good will of serving the others to become equal. On the opposite side, this small vehicle attitude has, at least no harmful danger towards humanity, even if its ambition and results might not be sky-rocketing that much like the sharp minds of Great Vehicle Bodhisattvas. Perhaps, it even can be a small germination of individualism that is a favorable factor for the foundation of democracy.”


“Abe, as a life-long atheist, or perhaps for your very late concession to Christianity, you may be far left behind in the mental matters of the religion. Let's me tell you one thing I am proud of Abe. Buddhism has allowed our Bodhisattvas the supreme moral authority of this universe. We Bodhisattvas have already asserted this all-or-none laws of Karma, that is the decisive force of the destiny of creatures for the fate of living in their better or worse worlds. We say that Karma is just your will, not anything else. You might be mocking us that we are sky-rocketing in our will of this ambitiousness for all animals to become equal. I don’t understand what the fault of this will is. Why this sky-rocketing will is imminent danger to humanity? If Karma is just the will, and if this will is good, everything should be good. If this will is the best, everything should be the best. We have the greatest faith in setting all animals to become equal and perfectly rational as if we Bodhisattvas are. This faith will make us immortal, never tired, never out of energy for getting to our ultimate goal, the utopia of all inclusive Bodhisattvas in their ultimate evolutionary forms of all human beings. By that time, this heaven door of rationality is open to all of us, undeniably, that is our incomparable and collective happiness of all sentient beings. What’s wrong with this kind of path affirmatively supported by our greatest will and imperturbable courage?”, Wu Kong started his defense for the assertion that his Buddha kingdom’s dream for all can be really certain by this great(est) will, as he is affirmative in his Buddhist principle of “ the will, (intention, precisely motivation) is the Karma (creative force)”.


Abe sighed. His melancholy on the ignorance America was still not finished in Heaven. He looked languidly at this motivated monkey Bodhisattva who had this mountain-high ambition for the final salvation of all beings. He said these words gradually,

“The problem is, Mr Wu, irrationality. It is the problem of irrationality”.


(To be cont. how the road to serfdom of the mankind is arisen from the creed of the mind-set of Bodhisattvas)