REFLECTING ON WAR AND PEACE: RESPONDING TO YOUR QUESTIONS

To answer your questions:

I remember and pray for the citizens of Ukraine and Russia, and for every neighboring country, and for those afflicted by the many other active wars and violent conflicts. I pray for every country inclined towards colonization, including our own, and for those we have harmed and continue to harm. I pray we all find the way to freedom from confusion.
 
I do this because in war, ordinary people with few agendas other than to have a simple and good life suffer and die needlessly. And their suffering does not end when the battles are over.  
 
War burdens everyone it touches—the so-called winners and the losers are stricken with poverty, sickness, and fear for generations. We collectively lose children and elders and the gifts of promising young people. The poorest often are robbed of the scant opportunity and progress they have struggled to create. Suffering seeps over the borders of warring countries and impacts us all. It makes us sick. No one thrives in war. No one. Not even those who profit from it: this is a sordid illusion.
 
A deeper cost of war is that cultivating the mind of violence always breeds more violence, more hatred. Hatred displaces many beautiful things, including treasure troves of cultural artifacts and traditions, and wholesome social fabric—hard won, precious, and fragile. Hatred displaces loving care for local land, water, and air, and it steals ease and joy—in some ways our most precious resource. A small war can destroy lifetimes of wise and loving effort. 
 
We who are momentarily at peace have to help others avoid war at all costs. What else is our power, money, and influence for? Let us cultivate the view that failing at this noble work is more important than succeeding at lesser things.
 
We should never think, “They are fighting over there.” There is no “over there.” There is no “they,” only “we.”
 
It will not work to struggle to create a life of individual safety and prosperity. This side of enlightenment, there is no possibility of life without suffering. Think about this: in order to say “the house on the right,” we need to have something on the left. In order to say “it’s dim,” something needs to be brighter. We must understand that as long as the minds of beings are confused, where there is even a moment of peace, there will also be some kind of battle. The awakening person must live with the full spectrum of what is, while removing the actions that disrupt what would otherwise be a naturally arising peace.  
 
As we learn to open to this wisdom, we must also cultivate a compassion which includes every single life, without a single exception. Our own safety is not enough. Our own wealth is not enough. Our own freedom is not enough. When we injure others, we are the first victim; when we help them, we are the first beneficiary of our deeds. 
 
How do we make such a shift towards equanimity? Is it even possible? It is our practice to find out. From a Buddhist view, to conquer self-cherishing—to move in the direction of wisdom and compassion—we must put the well-being of others first. Not just humans—but animals, and the spirits of places and things. This is a radical act of courage. Not everyone can do it, so if you can, please engage in this way.
 
War is a sign that we are far from that place. We have to find our way home, and the first step cannot be denial or rejection—those are also acts of violence. To start, we have to accept the truth of this exact moment and place, imperfections intact. Our suffering and mistakes have something to teach us. Then, wide awake, we progress. 

The first gesture is to make peace with our own minds, our own bodies, our own speech, and our own thinking. We must do the work. It is not someone else’s to do. Please remember: every single moment you are sowing the seeds of either war or peace with your body, speech, and mind. With a loving but watchful eye, look with mindfulness, and see, right here, right now—are you planting the seeds of war? If so, turn on a dime and begin to plant the seeds of peace. Do this over and over. Make it your life’s work. Make it today’s work, the work of this hour, and this breath.
 
The whole world depends on you. Children and old people and animals depend on you. Whole ecosystems depend on you. Work lovingly and without compromise. Give up the harmful habit of preferring one life over any other. Establish peace, over and over. Always and always, until not even the word for suffering is known.

But start right now. Make a simple gesture. And then another. And another. Begin at the level of thought. Do not let the perfection of a future-state be your horizon. Say something genuine. Share food. Carry the load of another. Learn something new today. Accumulate small action upon small action. 
 
I support your wholesome intention to live in peace. You are my inspiration and your love is my guiding light. 
 
Lama Lekshe

A new essay from Lama Yeshe [Chris rose]

When making a decision, how shall we decide? Lama Yeshe says what he’d do. Check it out in Buddhadharma: a practitioners’ quarterly magazine. Fine piece of writing!

One tidbit from Yeshe on using meditation as a tool for deciding: “Practice letting false binaries fall away. Good/bad, right/wrong, me/them dichotomies roil the mind, clouding its innate capacity to know. Releasing them encourages ease and lucidity.”

Aspiration Prayer Concerning Global Warming


By the Venerable Thrangu Rinpoche

May the blessings of the exalted sources of refuge,
The Buddha, his teachings and community: the Three Precious Jewels,
And the spiritual teacher, meditational deities and protectors
of the Buddhist teachings: the Three Roots,
Fully pacify the terrors of illness, famine and war,
Along with chaotic disturbances of the four elements—
The imminent and terrifying danger that the whole world will
become a great wasteland,
As temperature imbalance causes the solid glaciers of snow
mountain massifs to melt and contract,
Afflicting rivers and lakes, so that primeval forests and
beautiful trees near their deaths!
May the sublime endowments of good fortune and spiritual
and temporal well-being flourish,
And may all beings nurture one another lovingly and kindly,
So that their joy may fully blossom!
May all their aims be fulfilled, in accordance with the sacred teachings!

New free dharma e-books from an excellent source of practice materials

Save this link. This source is rich with books in English and several other languages that cannot be found in other places. Some of today’s best translators work on these projects. Have a look!

This update includes a book by Thrangu Rinpoche on aging and dharma practice. Karma Chagme’s Mountain Dharma series, Volume 4 is also available. His books are among my most cherished for advice about how to do retreat.

Gender in Himalayan Buddhism: Glacial Shifts in Attitudes and Institutions

We received this generous invitation on a vitally important topic, and wanted to share it.

Dear colleagues,

You are warmly invited to join us for the Inaugural UBC Himalaya Program Annual Lecture on March 7, 2022, 6:00 – 7:30 PM PST (online) with Ven. Prof. Karma Lekshe Tsomo about “Gender in Himalayan Buddhism: Glacial Shifts in Attitudes and Institutions.”

https://himalaya.arts.ubc.ca/events/event/gender-in-himalayan-buddhism-glacial-shifts-in-attitudes-and-institutions/
Please register here: https://bit.ly/32hp8wa

Abstract: The very mention of Himalayan Buddhism conjures visions of an exotic tradition. A gong reverberating amidst resonant baritone voices. A red-robed monk gliding serenely off into the sunset. Delightful young acolytes giggling and blowing bubbles. But where are the women and how long will it take for them to get in the picture?

Although there are many inspiring images of awakened women in Buddhist iconography, conditions on the ground are not always as enlightened. In the Himalayan region, almost all religious leaders are male and contradictions between the Buddha’s egalitarian teachings and the patriarchal structuring of Buddhist institutions are stark. In recent years, however, significant changes have been taking place for Buddhist women around the world. Major challenges still lie ahead but the shift in attitudes and opportunities for women in Himalayan Buddhist societies has been quite remarkable. What accounts for this shift? Awakening, the goal of the Buddhist path, is ultimately beyond gender. The challenge is to how to translate this noble ideal into practice, for the good of all.

About the speaker: Ven. Prof. Karma Lekshe Tsomo is a renowned specialist in Buddhist studies and a Professor at the University of San Diego. Her research interests include women in Buddhism, death and dying, Buddhist feminist ethics, Buddhism and bioethics, religion and politics, Buddhist social ethics, and Buddhist transnationalism. She integrates scholarship and social activism through the Sakyadhita International Association of Buddhist Women and Jamyang Foundation, an innovative education project for women in developing countries, with fifteen schools in the Indian Himalayas, Bangladesh, and Laos.

With best wishes, 
Dr. Dagmar Schwerk (she/her/hers)
Khyentse Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow in Tibetan Buddhist Studies
Department of Asian Studies | Himalaya Program
University of British Columbia | Vancouver Campus | Musqueam Traditional Territory

Prayer to avert nuclear war by chatral sangye dorje rinpoche

This prayer would be good to recite often during these times.
– Lekshe

Namo Guru Ratnatraya! 
To the Teacher and the Three Jewels, I bow. 

  True leader of the golden age – Crown of the Sakyas! 
  Second Buddha, Prince of Oddiyana, Lake-Born Vajra, 
  Bodhisattvas – eight closest spiritual heirs 
  High Nobles, Avilokiteshvara and Manjushri, 
  Vajrapani and the rest! 
  Twenty-one Taras, Host of Noble Elders, 
  Root and lineage lamas, deities, 
  Peaceful and wrathful gods! 
  Dakinis in your three homes! 
  (the earth, the heavens and the emanated worlds!) 
  You who through wisdom or karma have become Defenders of the Doctrine! 
  Guardians of the Directions! 
  Seventy-five Glorious Protectors! 
  You who are clairvoyant, powerful, magical and mighty! 
  Behold and ponder the beings of this age of turmoil! 

  We are beings born at the sorry end of time; 
  An ocean of ill-effects overflow from our universally bad actions. 
  The forces of light flicker, 
  The forces of darkness, a demon army, inflames great and powerful men. 
  And they rise in conflict, armed with nuclear weapons 
  That will disintegrate the earth. 
  The weapon of perverse and errant intentions 
  Has unleashed the hurricane. 
  Soon, in an instant, it will reduce the world 
  And all those in it to atoms of dust. 
  Through this ill-omened devils’ tool 
  It is easy to see, to hear and think about 
  Ignorant people, caught in a net of confusion and doubt, 
  Are obstinate and still refuse to understand. 
  It terrifies us just to hear about or to remember 
  This unprecedented thing. 

  The world is filled with uncertainty, 
  But there is no means of stopping it, nor place of hope, 
  Other than you, undeceiving Three Jewels and Three Roots, 
  (Buddhas, Teaching and Spiritual Community, Lama, Deity and 
  Dakini) 
  If we cry to you like children calling their mother and father, 
  If we implore you with this prayer, 
  Do not falter in your ancient vows! 
  Stretch out the lightning hand of compassion! 
  Protect and shelter us defenseless beings, and free us from fear! 
  When the mighty barbarians sit in council of war 
  – barbarians who rob the earth of pleasure and happiness 
  – barbarians who have wrong, rough, poisonous thoughts. 
  Bend their chiefs and lieutenants 
  To the side of peace and happiness! 
  Pacify on the spot, the armed struggle that blocks us! 
  Turn away and defeat the atomic weapons 
  Of the demons’ messengers, 
  And by that power, make long the life of the righteous, 
  And spread the theory and practice of the doctrine 
  To the four corners of this great world! 
  Eliminate root, branch and leaf – even the names 
  Of those dark forces, human and non-human, 
  Who hate others and the teaching! 
  Spread vast happiness and goodness 
  Over this fragile planet! 
  Elevate it truly with the four kinds of glory! 
  And as in the golden age, with all strife gone, 
  Let us be busy only with the dance of pleasure, the dance of joy! 
  We pray with pure thoughts- 
  By the compassion of that ocean the three supreme refuges 
  And the power of the Realm of Truth; 
  The complete sublime truth, 
  Achieve the goal of this, our prayer 
  Magically, just as we have hoped and dreamed! 

Translated from the Tibetan by Richard Kohn and Lama Tsedrup Tharchin 

More about Chatral Rinpoche

Thrangu Rinpoche’s guide to calm abiding meditation, in PDF format – free!

This concise instruction manual for the meditation we do in most public meditation sessions at Dekeling is offered freely by Rinpoche on his website. Of course, we are free to visit the site and offer something at any time. https://namobuddhapub.org/zc/Dharma-Books

Many of you have asked for explicit instructions and I have recommended Crystal Clear as my best recommendation. And we are working on creating some videos for you. But in the meantime, this short PDF booklet is an excellent option. `

Some things bear repeating

“Right now there are Tibetan Buddhist monks in a temple in the Himalayas endlessly reciting mantras for the cessation of your suffering and for the flourishing of your happiness. Someone you haven’t met yet is already dreaming of adoring you. Someone is writing a book that you will read in the next two years that will change how you look at life. Nuns in the Alps are in endless vigil, praying for the Holy Spirit to alight the hearts of all of God’s children. A farmer is looking at his organic crops and whispering, “nourish them”. Someone wants to kiss you, to hold you, to make tea for you. Someone is willing to lend you money, wants to know what your favorite food is, and treat you to a movie. Someone in your orbit has something immensely valuable to give you — for free. Something is being invented this year that will change how your generation lives, communicates, heals and passes on. The next great song is being rehearsed. Thousands of people are in yoga classes right now intentionally sending light out from their heart chakras and wrapping it around the earth. Millions of children are assuming that everything is amazing and will always be that way. Someone is in profound pain, and a few months from now, they’ll be thriving like never before. From where they are, they just can’t see it . Someone has recently cracked open their joyous, genuine nature because they did the hard work of hauling years of oppression off of their psyche — this luminous juju is floating in the ether, and is accessible to you. Someone just this second wished for world peace, in earnest. Someone is dedicating their days to protecting your civil liberties and clean drinking water. Someone is regaining their sanity. Someone is coming back from the dead. Someone is genuinely forgiving the seemingly unforgivable. Someone is curing the incurable. You. Me. Some. One. Now.”


   — Mary Standing Otter