AGES OF VIOLENCE
Judging from the beneficial
influences of Buddhism and Taoism in Asia—where
it all began—those early days must have been peaceful and serene. Birds warbling
in the trees, milk and honey flowing, brotherly love and flower child harmony.
However,
no period or no place, then or now, is peaceful for very long. History is callous.
In contemporary times our own country
has been involved in numerous major conflicts: World War II, the Korean War, Viet Nam, Iraq, Afghanistan. Plus lethal brush fires in Cuba, Panama, Grenada, Africa,
and South America.
Quoting from the jacket flap of the
book Zen under the Gun, a translation
by J.C. Cleary, “Sometimes history is cruel. A civilization starts to fall
apart and a stable social order starts to unravel; upheaval and uncertainty
abound. . . . .
“This is what happened to the Chinese
world in the thirteenth century when the Mongol conquers mangled China and left the Chinese social order in
chaos.”
From the last generation of China’s Song dynasty, around 1279, to the first
generation of the Ming dynasty, around 1368 measures some 90 years.
That’s
almost a century that Asia was in constant turmoil. During that
period nomads from Mongolia overran the greater part of what we now
call China. The tribes were under the rule of a hothead
named Genghis Khan, his grandson Kublai Khan, and others.
Genghis Kahn was thought to have been
a Buddhist or else a shaman. Whatever else he was, he was a natural leader
whose aim was to unite the hundreds of clans in Northeast Asia under his rule. He hoped to accomplish this
not through diplomacy or through honeyed words but by pounding people into
submission.
During the Mongol conflict four Chan teachers
became known for what is known today as “engaged Buddhism.”
1. Hengchuan (1222-1259) was almost
sixty when the Mongols took power in southeast China.
2. Gulin (1262-1329, was his immediate
disciple.
3. Zhuxian (1292-1348) was a teacher
in China who spent the last twenty years of his
life lecturing in Japan. He was a student of Gulin.
4. Daian (1347-1403) grew up during
the Chinese uprising against the Mongols and lived to experience the New Ming
dynasty’s rule over the country.
An
aside: The term engaged Buddhism refers to Buddhists who strive to apply the
insights from their meditation practice to situations of social, political, and
economic suffering and injustice. It’s a term coined by the modern day
Vietnamese monk Thich Nhat Hanh.
Though
those early Chan masters lived in a period of constant war, they didn’t run
from the violence. They remained actively involved, and used Buddhist
principles to do what they could for people around them.
To backtrack, early in the Mongol
conquest, Chinese Zen was flourishing in terms of its social prestige. That is
to say, it was socially acceptable to be Zen. Temples were officially sanctioned by the
government and supported by private individuals. Many places boasted wealthy
patrons. It seemed a rosy time for Buddhist beliefs.
But, according to Thomas Cleary, Zen
as a vehicle for the teaching of enlightenment was hanging by a thread.
The old Confucian notions of
formalism, ritual, and routine were once again all the rage. And as in modern
times in the Western World, Zen was dipped into haphazardly with little thought
given to its insights.
In other words, Zen was trendy, hip.
And its hawkers were early snake oil salesmen.
According
to the record, Hengchuan, Gulin, Zhuxian, and Daian were not hucksters. They
were not selling, they were giving.
Awakened
teachers of Zen speak of a potential that is inherent in everyone for
recognizing their true being.
True
being: What one really is aside from the crap that society showers on one. True
being has also been called the Buddha-mind, the Tao, and other terms.
The
words may change, but one’s true being is constant. It needs only to be
recognized.
Most of us live in a phony world. It’s
a world of selfish desires that are brought on by the social mores and scatterbrained
notions that have been drilled into us from birth. Because we are also taught
that we cannot live up to such weird conventions by living a so-called normal
social life, we are discouraged.
Such
frustrations lead to desire, otherwise known as dukkha. Dukkha is the Sanskrit
word that translates as anxiety, stress, discontent, and that ageless Buddhist
term: suffering.
Unlike some philosophies or religious
convictions, Buddhism doesn’t advocate escape from life’s trials into some
higher realm. In Buddhism there is no pie in the sky. As John Cleary wrote,
“The Buddhist effort is to undo our false ideas, and thus liberate our true
selves.”
When we can do that, we are able to
truly experience life and to deal with life’s oddities, not by appealing to
some imaginary thing but through
recognition of our own true self.
When we see us as we are, we are ready
to become engaged Buddhists.
An apology. I have drifted into what
some religious schools would call a homily, a sermon. Overlook the oration.
I started this talk mentioning four
ancient Chinese Chan masters. I promise to get back to these guys in future
talks, so please bear with me.
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