美国佛教 – American Buddhism

June 12, 2009

Obama Roshi Has Arrived – Place Hands in Gassho!

Filed under: American Buddhism — amerbud @ 6:37 pm
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Politics Daily

… Yet presidents — the good ones, at least — are supposed to be extraordinary. Even if they came from humble beginnings, the great presidents were great because they transcended the petty squabbles and backstabbing of the political process and managed to do tremendous things, with dignity.

But Obama’s actions and personality suggest he is something far more foreign to the common American than a Muslim or a Kenyan. He may actually be a Zen Master, operating on a level so far above regular people that we can only hope to gain a bit of enlightenment from his calm demeanor.

While most Americans have only learned from one master — the wise green monster muppet “Yoda” in the Star Wars saga — they may eventually learn mindfulness, conflict resolution and anger management from our own president of Zen.

But I want to see the author of this blog write “Thank You, Shifu!” Only then will I be convinced of his sincerity.

Namu Amida Butsu
Xing Ping

October 30, 2008

American Buddhists in the Presidential Race

Filed under: American Buddhism — amerbud @ 12:37 pm
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Beliefnet: Buddhists Get Engaged in Race for President

…Whatever your political beliefs, your active, informed citizenship is part of a wise household practice,” the Buddhist leaders said.

That could be a boon for Obama. Buddhists, who form about 1 percent of the U.S. population (roughly the same as Muslims) are among the country’s most liberal religious groups, according to a survey by the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. More than two-thirds said they are Democrats or lean Democratic.

The 500 members of “Buddhists for Obama” have raised more than $230,000, sponsored 1,700 events and made 26,000 calls for their candidate, according to Obama’s Web site. There’s no Buddhist group listed for Republican nominee Sen. John McCain; a request to his campaign for information went unanswered.

Several Buddhists said Obama’s message of unity accords with Dharma teachings on interconnectedness and the dangers of an us-versus-them dualism. Morever, they say, the Democrat’s background reflects the Buddha’s belief that all beings can become enlightened, regardless of race or class.

“I think his candidacy has brought to the forefront issues of multi-racial identity for U.S. citizens,” said Mushim Patricia Ikeda-Nash, a Buddhist teacher in Oakland, Calif.
That’s not to say that Buddhism is inherently liberal. A sizable minority of Buddhists — particularly Asian Americans — vote Republican, said Jeff Wilson, an assistant professor of religion at Renison College, University of Waterloo in Canada.

Venerable Vien Duc, abbot of the Auspicious Cloud Monastery in Haymarket, Va., said many of his fellow Vietnamese-Americans support the GOP because of its tough anti-communist stance during the Cold War.

“The typical Vietnamese, because they suffered with communism, don’t want anything associated with it,” he said of communism.

In Broomfield, Colo., Charles Martin, an American-Indian Buddhist Republican, said his support for McCain has everything to do with his religious practice.

“I think Buddhism is inherently rather libertarian,” said Martin.

“You examine things for yourself and finally save yourself. That leads me in general to not liking a lot of kinds of government intervention.”

Other Buddhists, however, are reluctant to translate the Dharma into a political philosophy.
“I have always found Buddhism to be a refuge from the political and social world,” said Charles Johnson, an award-winning novelist who practices Zen in Seattle.

The Rev. Danny Fisher, a Buddhist blogger from Greensboro, N.C., said his understanding of the Dharma “means doing all I can to benefit beings — hence my mindful involvement in progressive causes and social justice work. … But I recognize that other Buddhists may understand things differently.”

Robert Jones, whose recent book, “Progressive & Religious,” includes a chapter on American Buddhists, said “there’s a kind of humility built into Buddhism. They are really reticent to come out with guns blazing and proscriptions for what needs to happen.”…

In the past, Beliefnet has been a mixed blessing for American Buddhism. It invented the “racial devide” brouhaha almost single-handedly. But this article is rather balanced, I feel. Earlier in the article, which should be read in its entirety, it stated that the large majority of American Buddhists are converts in the mainstream, not immigrants. I believe that that is the first time that statement has appeared in the mainstream media.

Oh, and hey, “Engaged” is what Thic Nhat Han used to translate the same ideographic roots that Fo Guang Shan has, very ineptly, insisted on mistranslating as “humanistic.” It is time, it is high time, and it is past high time for Fo Guang Shan to get past this cultural and linguistic blind spot. The “H” word gets us into a direct ideological conflict with the Catholic Church, because of the Church’s ancient quarrel with the Humanist philosophy. “Engaged” has already taken root in the West and “Humanistic” never will. There are overwhelming reasons for this. Fo Guang Shan needs to stop trying to push the river about this.

Namu Amida Butsu
Xing Ping

July 30, 2008

Asia’s angry monk syndrome

Filed under: Asian Buddhism — amerbud @ 12:38 pm
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By Megawati Wijaya

Read the whole article.

SINGAPORE – From Sri Lanka to South Korea, from Tibet to Myanmar, Asia’s Buddhist clergy are in unprecedented numbers exerting their moral authority onto politics, abandoning their detachment from worldly events and giving rise to what at least one academic has referred to as a region-wide “angry monk syndrome”.

Agitated ascetics made global headlines last year during Myanmar’s “Saffron Revolution”, where in their thousands they took to the streets to protest against the military government’s policies and perceived mistreatment of clergy members. At the height of the unrest, monks dropped the symbolic gauntlet by overturning their alms bowls and refused to accept donations from government officials and their family members.

This year, over 300 Tibetan monks marched in protest in Lhasa in commemoration of the 49th anniversary of an uprising against Chinese rule and to air more modern complaints and grievances, including calls for the release of monks detained last year after the Dalai Lama was awarded a congressional medal of honor by the United States, for the withdrawal of all troops and security personnel from their monasteries and the re-instatement of monks expelled from monasteries for their failure of “patriotic education” exams that required them to denounce the Dalai Lama. ……

This will simply destroy what little may be left of Asian Buddhism. For the laity, practice comes first. But for monks, practice is the only justification for their existence.

MONKS AND POLITICS DO. NOT. MIX!

Namu Amida Butsu
Xing Ping

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