|

Cultivating Peace, Dismantling
War:
Inner and Outer Disarmament
by Rev. Hozan Alan Senauke,
Buddhist Peace Fellowship, February 2005
Seeds of peace abide within us. They must be carefully tended. This
is the Buddha's teaching, resonant with the wisdom of all the great
religions. As we begin the year 2005, Buddhist Peace Fellowship
is putting forth a theme for our work: "Cultivating Peace,
Dismantling War." We are asking our members, friends, and chaptersparticularly
those of you in the United Statesto reflect and act in accord
with this theme, to connect our dharma practice with the challenge
of peacemaking.
The machinery of war lies all around us. Six thousand nuclear warheads
rest in America's arsenal, enough weapons to destroy the world many
times over. More than $150 billion in arms trades over the last
ten years were brokered by the U.S., half of the world's weapon
sales. Millions of landmines lie just beneath the surface of roads,
tracks, and fields in Cambodia, Afghanistan, Iraq, Bosnia, and nearly
eighty other countries, while our government stockpiles more than
ten million mines and reserves the right to deploy them. Government
leaders congratulate themselves on a U.S. role as the great voice
for peace and democracy, but this is hardly the way others in the
world see us.
In the streets of America's cities, anything from "Saturday
night specials" to automatic weapons are cheaply obtained and
readily used. Urban police are locked into their own spiraling arms
race, with automatic weapons and tasers becoming weapons of choice
against the poor.
The language and images we encounter on television, in the movies,
and on the streets are increasingly violent, sexualized, and coarse.
When fundamentalists and evangelicals raise questions about "values,"
they have a valid point. We have become a self-centered nation without
any true moral authority
As engaged Buddhists in the United States, how do we respond to
an epidemic of violence that has deep roots in our own nation, our
lives, and our privilege? This is a question that is always before
us. BPF's theme "Cultivating Peace, Dismantling War" is
a way of talking about national, personal, and inner disarmament.
This word "disarmament" carries, for some people, uncomfortable
echoes of the Cold War and decades past. But with all kinds of nuclear
and conventional weapons more widely available and more deadly than
ever, disarmament is precisely what we need: disarmament in conflicts
between nations, and inner disarmament within ourselves, in our
families, workplaces, and communities. Thoroughgoing disarmament
is the way to dismantle war and cultivate peace.
His Holiness the Dalai Lama consistently teaches about "inner
disarmament." He explains that "Outer disarmament comes
from inner disarmament. The only true guarantee of peace lies within
ourselves
you try to reduce negative emotions such as hatred,
anger, jealousy, extremism, and greed, and promote compassion, human
affection, tolerance
"
Meditation practice is the essence of inner disarmament. In meditation
we become intimate with our disquiet or dukkha, our own potential
for violence. What the Buddha called dukkha is variously
translated as "suffering," "dissatisfaction,"
or "lack"the seemingly ceaseless flow of anxiety
and self-centered thoughts. As meditation deepens we physically
realize the interconnection of all beings, even those whose actions
we recoil from. They are essentially not different from ourselves.
We all share the same capacity for delusion and enlightenment. The
difference is a matter of choice based on compassionate understanding.
Buddhist wisdom explains that we ourselves provide a home and a
source for the violence around us. We live according to the laws
of karma or intentional action, which simply put means that
the choices we make about how to live create the sea of cause and
effect in which we swim.
But meditation is not enough. To cultivate peace we must move from
silence into action. Thich Nhat Hanh's expression of the First Precept
or Mindfulness Training points the way.
| "Aware of the suffering caused by the destruction of
life, I vow to cultivate compassion and learn ways to protect
lives of people, animals, plants, and minerals. I am determined
not to kill, not to let others kill, and not to condone any
killing in the world, in my thinking, and in my way of life." |
Inner Disarmament and Outer Disarmament are like vines twining
together, inseparable. "I am determined not to kill, not to
let others kill, and not to condone any killing in the world, in
my thinking, and in my way of life." If we really take this
sentiment to heart, there is pressing work to be done in the world.
- Stopping the war in Iraq, which is spiraling into ceaseless
destruction. Acting with all the nonviolent tools available to
us.
- Identifying, lobbying, and demonstrating against arms manufacturers
and traders.
- Building public awareness and support for U.S. participation
in the dismantling of all nuclear weapons, the end of nuclear
weapons research, and cooperation in all international treaties
that ban the sale of landmines and other so-called conventional
weapons.
- Training ourselves in nonviolence and peaceful methods of conflict
resolution and communication. This should be an integral aspect
of our practice and part of the school curriculum at all grade
levels.
- Teaching and manifesting religious tolerance and cultural awareness
in a world that is ever more diverse.
- Deepening our understanding of social, economic, and environmental
justice so that we are no longer blind to forces that lead us
in the United States to live at the expense of millions of other
people around the world, people who seek happiness just as we
do.
- Helping people take the time to quiet and settle themselves,
to slow down so that life can be savored rather than avoided.
This is a short and incomplete list of activities that can move
us in the way of "Cultivating Peace, Dismantling War."
We offer these suggestions to spur discussion within BPF chapters,
at Buddhist practice centers, and among friends. We welcome your
responses to these comments, and reports of your activities. We
see this new year's theme as one that will express itself with particularity
and focus, and as a garden in which each of us can flourish.
Hozan Alan Senauke is a Soto Zen priest and teacher in
the tradition of Shunryu Suzuki Roshi. He was ordained by Sojun
Mel Weitsman in 1989. Alan is presently serving as tanto or head
of practice at Berkeley Zen Center in California, where he lives
with his wife, Laurie, and their two children, Silvie and Alexander.
From early 1991 through the end of 2001, Alan was Executive Director
of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship. He is presently Senior Advisor
at BPF.
Buddhist Peace Fellowship
Bringing Together Buddhism and Progressive Social Change
www.bpf.org
|