Table of Contents
| Jinn Home Page
| Search
| Net-Links
Voices
| Heresies
| Vectors
| Pacific Pulse
| The Americas
| California
| Movements
| Civil Conflicts
| YO!

Buddhism Will Continue To Thrive Despite Taliban Toppling
By Andrew Lam
Date: 03-07-01
The outraged protests that greeted news that the Taliban
in Afghanistan were going to destroy two very large statues of the
Buddha. It is important, however, to recognize that buddhism and its
precepts are in no way endangered by this action. PNS editor Andrew Lam
is a short story writer and commentator for National Public Radio.
When I was 8 or 9, I had an experience that marked me for life.
I was playing tag with a few cousins and with one misstep I crashed
against a cabinet on which sat the family's Buddhist altar. The porcelain
Buddha fell from its pedestal to shatter into several pieces at my feet.
My mother, was both embarrassed and furious. "Look at the profanity you
committed," she yelled and I began to weep uncontrollably. But Great
Uncle, bless his great, compassionate heart, just laughed and patted my
head and said, "Oh, leave the boy alone. It's just a statue of Buddha. If
you know Buddha, everywhere you look, you'll find Buddha."
At that moment something flowered within me. I, like millions of others,
had prayed to Buddha as a god and asked him for protection and fortune.
Since that day, however, I became fascinated with Buddhism not as a
religion but as a direct human experience.
When I read that the Taliban leaders of Afganistan had destroyed quite a
few ancient Buddha statues there, I immediately thought of my great
uncle. The Talibans created an international uproar with their action but
most likely it would have amused him -- you can no more get rid of
Buddhism by destroying Buddha statues than force religious conversion
with guns.
In my lifetime, I have watched a few ideologies falter, an empire fall
apart, various regimes toppled, despots thrown out and borders
continually redrawn and redefined by unprecedented mass migration and
modern technologies, but I have yet to see the end of humanity's thirst
for spiritual meaning and inner peace.
In fact, it seems that the more upheavals and sufferings and great
changes people experience, the more they long for spiritual solace and
ways to cope with our misery and confusion.
Afganistan, like my homeland, Vietnam, had the misfortune of being the
battle ground over which the superpowers played out their brutal Cold War
games. The Taliban, it now seems, are the only group who could restore
order in that wretched, rock strewn, country of too many factions and too
little resources. To be fair, they received little foreign aid and far
less credit for their efforts to rein in chaos and lawlessness, since
theirs is an extreme version of Islam and they conflict with that of
western values.
This said, however, I fear the Taliban are misguided if they think that
by destroying thousand year old Buddhist relics they could somehow
enhance their grip on the country. While their zealousness is
understandable given the wretched horror the Afgahnis have experienced,
their intolerance of other forms of religions (their leaders had
reportedly slapped buddha statues in the museums in Kabul to show their
contempt) speak not of open-mindedness but insecurity and hatred.
Born in 6 century B.C.E, in what historians now call the first axial age
(between 800 to 200 BCE ), an age of luminaries such as Confucius and Lao
Tsu and Zoroaster and Socrates and Plato whose thoughts continue to
influence people, the Buddha was an aristocrat who left his home to "go
forth" in search of enlightenment.
The Buddha believed, "he had woken up to a truth that was inscribed in
the deepest structure of existence" as Karen Armstrong writes in her
recent "autobiography" of Buddha. He had become enlightened and
experienced "a profound inner transformation; he had won peace and
immunity in the midst of life's suffering."
To his followers he taught the Dharma -- the fundamental law of existence
-- and a series of practices based on compassion and meditation; a
lifetime in service to others as a way to defeat The Buddhists' greatest
enemy: egotism.
Alas, if egotism is a seeker's bane, fueling him with greed and lust and
anger, and deterring him from finding inner peace, nationalism is, in a
way, a country's collective egotism. Carried too far, and coupled with
religiosity, it often leads rigid fundamentalism and xenophobia.
We are entering now what many thinkers and philosophers call the second
axial age, an age of pluralism where the various spiritual traditions
co-exist. In the best scenario, they could come together to shape the
human condition and lead humanity to an age of open- mindedness.
Like it or not, in these global days, no single country can exist as a
separate entity, nor can its borders remain impervious to change. The
Silk Road along which Buddhism and other religious ideas traveled had
crossed into Afganistan and like it or not other ideas will cross it
again -- perhaps on an even more powerful route - the information highway.
In the true buddhist view, blasted stone images are mere bumps in a
temple. No doubt the Buddha himself would discourage statues made in his
own image; it's his experience and message of compassion that is
important.
If my great uncle were alive he, too, would say it's more important to
feed the poor, attend the sick, and provide spiritual guidance than to
pay attention to ancient, crumbling relics.
Buddhism has survived 2,600 years because it is based on a religious
program that provides solace and alleviate suffering available to all, in
fact, the whole of humanity. No doubt it will continue to be in high
demands as long as we live in a flawed world, and will last long after
cruel and unjust rulers disappear from the scene.

Pacific News Service,
660 Market Street, Room 210, San Francisco, CA 94104,
tel: (415) 438-4755.
Jinn Magazine: <http://www.pacificnews.org/jinn/>
Email:
<pacificnews@pacificnews.org>
Copyright © 1900 Pacific News Service. All Rights Reserved.
Please do not reprint our stories without our permission.
This article is available for reprint.
For rates and information, call (415) 438-4755 or e-mail
<pacificnews@pacificnews.org>
|