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Statement from
the Buddhist Peace Fellowship
on the actions of September
11, 2001
Our hearts are broken open by last week's
terrible acts of violence in the United States. We offer our
deepest condolences to families and friends of the thousands
of innocent victims of the September 11 attacks. We can only
condemn such acts that defy any sense of the sacredness of
all human life. There is no justification for wanton killing.
In our grief, fiery images of destruction are etched upon
our minds. It seems to many of us that things will never be
quite the same in this country. But here in the U.S. and around
the world, things never really were as they seemed. The illusion
of peace and the comforts of privilege are like a thin curtain,
so easily torn. Now our leaders, elected or not, loudly beat
the drums of war. It scares us. Our hope at Buddhist Peace
Fellowship is that the leaders and people of our nation will
pause to look deeply and think clearly before they step in
time to this drumbeat.
In the tense moment between violent action
and violent reaction we invoke several simple teachings of
the Buddha. The first is that all beings are our family. Twenty-five
hundred years ago the Buddha said "Hatred is never appeased
by hatred in this world; by non-hatred alone is hatred appeased.
This is an Eternal Law." (The Dhammapada, Verse 5). This
same sentiment can be found in every great spiritual tradition.
In the middle of the twentieth century Gandhi put it even
more concisely, "An eye for eye only ends up making the
whole world blind." The most painful thing about this
teaching is that we need to hear it at all. If we are one
family—victims, perpetrators, innocent, guilty—then
each of us is potentially capable of terrible and noble action.
We must first taste our fear and anger, without rashly retaliating
and escalating the violence. This is very hard work and we
need each other's help. Then let us seek what is noble and
just in even the most damaged of us.
The second principle is that each effect
has its web of causes and conditions. This is the law of karma.
Nations deny causality by ascribing blame to others—terrorists,
rogue nations, and so on. Singling out an enemy, we short-circuit
the introspection necessary to see our own karmic responsibility
for the terrible acts that have befallen us. We risk recreating
ourselves as mirror images of those we think of as the enemy.
We are not justifying their horrific acts in any way. But
in the Middle East we have demonized peoples and an entire
faith for many generations. At the same time we have curried
favor with corrupt regimes so we might suck the oil we desperately
crave from their lands. In Israel and Palestine, the legacy
of colonialism and our national guilt for inaction against
the holocaust has till now only fed the flames of violence
between peoples. Until we own causes we bear responsibility
for, in this case in the Middle East, last week's violence
will make no more sense than an earthquake or cyclone, except
that in its human origin it turns us toward rage and revenge.
The Holy Teaching of Vimalakirti offers this
teaching about the lives of Bodhisattvas, enlightening beings.
In order to help the living beings,
They voluntarily descend into
The hells which are attached
To all the inconceivable buddha-fields.
We are now in hell, and it seems we must
go deeper. The events of September 11, their prelude and aftermath,
are a rare and terrible gift in our hands, a broken heart.
When our hearts are broken open we may find a moment of vital
opportunity. Only out of suffering comes understanding. Great
suffering can turn to great compassion and beneficial action.
We pray for the healing and turning of the perpetrators of
these crimes whose damaged hearts and clouded minds have created
vast suffering in the present and into the future. We count
on the wisdom, patience, and lovingkindness of the world's
leaders, that they may be just and exercise restraint and
care in all their actions.
From this day on, let us dedicate ourselves
to peacefulness and nonviolence so that the power of human
goodness will overcome the folly and delusion of violence.
How can we become a real friend to all the
world's people? Instead of brandishing and trading expensive
weapons, can we share our wealth to feed the hungry, house
the homeless, provide medicine for the sick, heal the wounds
of war and hatred? Can we stop our own theft of the world's
resources? Can we see that every human life is precious, and
end our political and economic manipulation of others? Such
bold steps, acts of wholesome letting go might at last bring
us real security and help us find our true family, all humankind.
Let us stop and breathe and step forward toward life in the
midst of unimagined grief.
—Alan Senauke
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