Do We Need National Buddhist Traditions
Abstract:If we define the word “nation” we discover that there exist many concepts about it. But all these concepts about a group of people called “nation” are based on the limited experience and view of a certain place and time. In the same way as an individual identifies with a “self”, a nation identifies with its characteristics and typical features it proclaims. In the same way many Buddhists identify themselves with a certain national Buddhist tradition. But the Buddha didn’t give his teachings to a certain nation, but to everybody who asked for advice or a teaching.
Key words:Nation concept identification universal approach
I want to show that the concept of a nation is very similar to the concept of an individual self. But exactly these concepts limit every possible development, which will come to an end at the limitations we ourselves have erected by defining certain fixed and fixating characteristics either of a self or of a nation. At the very moment when we make up our minds that a person or a nation is like this or that there isn’t any possibility to transcend these limitations.
The Buddha taught that all these concepts are created due to certain views, but these views don’t see the whole. They are dependent on time and knowledge, on our senses, emotions, social background and education. They are impermanent and therefore a cause of suffering. A nation is - as all phenomena or “samskara - connected with suffering. The Buddha taught that the clinging to our self-defined ego-concept is the cause for suffering. In the same way the clinging to a national identity and the aversion against other nations cause suffering, too.
My experiences and my personal situation have influenced the following thoughts and ideas, therefore I ask for your kind patience to listen to these examples. I was born in
What is the definition of a nation? The word “nation” is derived from the Latin term “natio” meaning “birth, breed, stock, kind, species, race, tribe, origin, a people”. A nation is a collection of people sharing the same national identity, based on ethnic and cultural ties. The members of a nation define themselves as the descendants of the past inhabitants of a national homeland or as the descendants of past speakers of the national language, or past groups which shared the same culture. A nation is a form of self-defined cultural and social community. We often forget that the idea of being a nation only developed during the 18th and 19th century in
I am speaking as the representative of Buddhists in
Sometimes members of a "nation" share a common identity, language and culture although there doesn’t exist a common origin. This is the case with the Hungarian people who moved west from the Altai region in
We always think that a common language and culture keeps a nation together, but the example of
All these examples show that the phenomenon “nation“ has been constructed by a multitude of changing attributes which people have put onto this concept. “Nation” is a similar concept as the concept of an “I”. It is a sort of collective “I”, by which a group of people define certain common characteristics like a common language or dialect, a certain outlook or way of thinking, common habits, feasts, food, drinks etc. And as all phenomena and even more all concepts have arisen in interdependency from immeasurable quantities of conditions they are void of inherent existence.
If a “nation” is not more than a man-made definition, which often has been dependent upon the purpose behind, we should be very cautious if we create a dependency upon it. When the Aryan invaders entered the Indian continent they defined who was an Aryan: namely the victorious tribes. And centuries later when their number wasn’t enough to rule this country they invented a ritual that made somebody an Aryan who had been non-Aryan before. The unforgettable Jingis Khan united the Central Asian tribes and made everybody a Mongol who shared his vision of a Mongol empire and who supported him. Several times in the history of Buddhism the religion became a state forming power and was used to be an identification model which kept people together.
The 20th century was a time of severe national conflicts. During World War I and II millions of people have experienced extreme suffering caused by the inhuman ideology of superiority of certain races and nations. Our situation in the 21st century is a challenge for a global change: We are going to discover the rich heritage of different cultures on all the five continents, and especially we Westerners give up the idea to dominate other cultures, as we unfortunately did in the past, but begin to learn from them on different fields like medicine, arts, philosophy and religions.
These many models show that every definition is dependant from the intentions of those who define it. But all these definitions and characteristics can change in the course of time, because they are only valid on the relative level of reality. We are more and more aware of the global interconnectedness and responsibility. The younger generation is open for many different lifestyles and is not any more fixated to a single one. This is a chance and a danger at the same time.
Let us look at the dangers first. Buddhist traditions in
Every year the German Buddhist Union organizes a Buddhist congress and we invite the general public. If we look at the number of visitors, it is most evident that those topics are the most attractive which offer answers to the everyday problems of men and women: How can I overcome my anxieties with regard to illness, old age and death? How can I become less aggressive and more patient and compassionate? How can we create a peaceful future for the next generations? How can I master my distractedness? How can I live a life without stress at work and in the family? They never ask: How can I be a good German! Seemingly the questions of mankind are the same as at the time of the Buddha.
It was this universal approach towards the basic human problems - which are the same all over the world – which made the Buddha’s teachings blossom in every country, nation and society. The Dharma could develop strong roots everywhere because those who propagated it were able to understand that these very simple truths the Buddha taught are the essence. Not everybody immediately understood the depth of these teachings, because they are easily acceptable but hard to put into practice. When the Buddha was asked to speak about the essence of his dharma he said: “Doing the good, avoiding the bad, taming the mind.” Everybody was surprised because they all thought that it wasn’t a very special teaching and every child knows this truth. So the Buddha agreed and answered: “Yes, every child knows it, but I have seen few old aged people who act according to it.” This story teaches a very deep truth: We know a lot about the Dharma, but we don’t act according to our knowledge. At the time of the Buddha many disciples immediately acted according to their teacher’s advice and realized the state of arhat.
When he started to teach the Dharma he didn’t teach it to his own clan, but to those who asked him for advice, independent from their ethnic background, profession, caste or gender. He spoke to everybody who was in need of spiritual guidance. His message was a message for kings and beggars, Brahmins and untouchables, monks and householders, and it said that our human determination is to realize indestructible happiness. “Every being wants happiness, every being is afraid of suffering. Seeing the similarity to oneself, one should not use violence or have it used.“ (Dhammapada 10, 129)
At the time of the Buddha there were no nations, but kingdoms which were ruled by rajas and maharajas. The ideal of those times was the cakravartin or world ruler whose task was to bring peace and wealth to everybody in his empire as King Ashoka did a few centuries after the Buddha’s parinirvana. When Prince Siddhartha was born, a seer made the prediction that this child could make a career either as a cakravartin or as a fully enlightened Buddha. But the prince chose to leave his palace and his homeland. He gave up every relationship to his family, to his clan, and didn’t identify with his role as a Shakya prince or a member of the aristocratic kshatriya caste or
The imprints of early education in childhood create the habits of individuals in a certain country or nation or social class and often are causes for strong dependencies. We get used to a special food, the way of living, dressing, and later we cling to these habits and don’t want to change them anymore. Therefore the Buddha and Buddhist masters of all times recommended that a practitioner should leave his family and his homeland, otherwise the customs and habits as well as the obligations towards the family and the clan will disable him from finding true freedom. Many masters of the past acted according to this advice, they left India and went to Sri Lanka, Central Asia, China, Indonesia, Tibet, Japan and even to Western countries and dedicated their lives to the wide spread of the Dharma.
In every country they encountered a cultural heritage which they neither blamed, attacked nor destroyed, as Christian missionaries sometimes did, but they integrated the Buddha-Dharma into the vast stream of already existing spiritual traditions. A friend of mine used to say: The Dharma is like the
When a baby is born we can’t see its nationality, but only the human being with the need to be loved and to be cared for, to eat and drink, to sleep and cry. If I am asked for my nationality I prefer to answer: “I have a German passport.” I feel hungry or thirsty, happy or sad, healthy or ill, tired or awake, but I don’t feel “German”. And all these basic feelings are the same whether I am German or Chinese, Swiss or Japanese, Hungarian or Mongol. I can say that I love the German language, but why? Because it is my mother tongue and is so familiar to me that I can express everything very precisely: thoughts, emotions, arguments. I feel secure and it is this familiarity and security which I love. If we become familiar with other languages we discover their beauty and their special style of describing reality and expressing emotions.
As a Buddhist from my early childhood I always was very aware of the possibility of past lives in far away countries which I have never seen before in this lifetime. So I never came to the idea to identify myself with the country where I am living now. I think that the connections with any country or nation are transitory and just lasting for a few lifetimes.
Shakyamuni Buddha has had the vision of the universal law, but he only taught what was essential for his time and the people who listened to his teachings. In the same way all the enlightened masters taught according to the mental capacity of their disciples in accordance with their cultural background, so that they were able to understand the eternal questions of mankind like birth and death, gain and loss, suffering and happiness. These basic problems and questions are independent of any nationality, and are the same for all children, men and women worldwide. The three roots of evil: greed, hatred and ignorance are not limited to any continent, race, country or nation. As Buddhists, we know that not only every human, but even every sentient being is endowed with what we call the seed of Buddhahood within or tathagatagarbha.
If we are clinging to national Buddhist traditions and forget the essence of the Dharma, the teachings of the Buddha can’t spread worldwide and reach, in the East and in the West, the younger generation - a generation that is growing up in a multicultural society, but has the same vision of happiness as all the other generations before. The Buddha’s message opens the gate to the path towards universal peace and harmony between people and between nations.
Ven. Vajramàlà
President of the German Buddhist
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