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Dear Still Water Friends,
The tradition of engaged mindfulness practice teaches us that our
insights and our actions must go together. We are encouraged to
cultivate peace in our own hearts and to work with others to
nourish peace in the world. The twelfth mindfulness training of the
Order of Interbeing reads:
Aware that much suffering is
caused by war and conflict, I am determined to cultivate non-violence,
understanding and compassion in my daily life, to promote peace
education, mindful mediation and reconciliation, within families,
communities, nations and in the world. I am determined not to kill and
not to let others kill. I will diligently practice deep looking with my
Sangha to discover better ways to protect life and prevent war.
It has never been easy to cultivate peace in a time of war. By
its nature, war creates animosities and partisanship, not only between
the warring parties, but within each side, among those who differ in
their understandings and visions.
An important question we will consider this Thursday is: How can we
work for peace in a way that opens our hearts and opens the hearts of
those we wish to influence?
Joining us for this discussion will be three of the organizers of the
Buddhist Peace Delegation events planned for this weekend in
Washington:
- Maia Duerr, Executive Director of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship,
- Margaret Howe, Past Executive Director of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship, and
- Bhante Suhita Dharma, the Prison Program Coordinator for the Buddhist Peace Fellowship
You are invited to join with us.
An excerpt on peaceful protest by Thich Nhat Hanh is below.
Warm wishes,
Mitchell Ratner
Senior Teacher
By Thich Nhat Hanh from For a Future to Be Possible
When we protest against a war, for example, we may assume that we are a
peaceful person, a representative of peace, but this might not be true.
If we look deeply, we will observe that the roots of war are in the
unmindful ways we have been living. We have not sown enough seeds of
peace and understanding in ourselves and others, therefore we are
co-responsible: “Because I have been like this, they are like
that.” A more holistic approach is the way of
“interbeing”: “This is like this, because that is
like that.” This is the way of understanding and love. With this
insight, we can see clearly and help our government see clearly. Then
we can go to a demonstration and say, “This war is unjust,
destructive, and not worthy of our great nation.” This is far
more effective than angrily condemning others. Anger always accelerates
the damage.
All of us, even pacifists, have pain inside. We feel angry and
frustrated, and we need to find someone willing to listen to us who is
capable of understanding our suffering. In Buddhist iconography, there
is a bodhisattva named Avalokitesvara who has one thousand arms and one
thousand hands, and has an eye in the palm of each hand. One thousand
hands represent action, and the eye in each hand represents
understanding. When you understand a situation or a person, any action
you do will help and will not cause more suffering. When you have an
eye in your hand, you will know how to practice true nonviolence.
To practice nonviolence, first of all we have to practice it within
ourselves. In each of us, there is a certain amount of violence and a
certain amount of nonviolence. Depending on our state of being, our
response to things will be more or less nonviolent. Even if we take
pride in being vegetarian, for example, we have to acknowledge that the
water in which we boil our vegetables contains many tiny
microorganisms. We cannot be completely nonviolent, but by being
vegetarian, we are going in the direction of nonviolence. If we want to
head north, we can use the North Star to guide us, but it is impossible
to arrive at the North Star. Our effort is only to proceed in that
direction.
Anyone can practice some nonviolence, even army generals. They may, for
example, conduct their operations in ways that avoid killing innocent
people. To help soldiers move in the nonviolent direction, we have to
be in touch with them. If we divide reality into two camps -- the
violent and the nonviolent -- and stand in one camp while attacking the
other, the world will never have peace. We will always blame and
condemn those we feel are responsible for wars and social injustice,
without recognizing the degree of violence in ourselves. We must work
on ourselves and also work with those we condemn if we want to have a
real impact.
It never helps to draw a line and dismiss some people as enemies, even
those who act violently. We have to approach them with love in our
hearts and do our best to help them move in a direction of nonviolence.
If we work for peace out of anger, we will never succeed. Peace is not
an end. It can never come about through non-peaceful means.
Most important is to become nonviolence, so that when a situation
presents itself, we will not create more suffering. To practice
nonviolence, we need gentleness, loving kindness, compassion, joy, and
equanimity directed to our bodies, our feelings, and other people. With
mindfulness -- the practice of peace -- we can begin by working to
transform the wars in ourselves. There are techniques for doing this.
Conscious breathing is one. Every time we feel upset, we can stop what
we are doing, refrain from saying anything, and breathe in and out
several times, aware of each in-breath and each out-breath. If we are
still upset, we can go for walking meditation, mindful of each slow
step and each breath we take. By cultivating peace within, we bring
about peace in society. It depends on us. To practice peace in
ourselves is to minimize the numbers of wars between this and that
feeling, or this and that perception, and we can then have real peace
with others as well, including the members of our own family.