MY OH MY MYANMAR
Last week I got an unexpected email from a Buddhist monk of Bhutanese family who is an important part of my Rinpoche's sangha in Nepal. This is what he said:
We just got phone call with our sister living in Yangon about a few hours ago.
We saw on BBC world, saying that 200 monks were arrested. The true picture is far worse!!!!!!!!!
For one instance, the monastery at an obscure neighborhood of Yangon, called Ngwe Kyar Yan (on Wei-za-yan-tar Road, Yangon) had been raided early this morning. A troop of lone-tein (riot police comprised of paid thugs) protected by the military trucks, raided the monastery with 200 studying monks. They systematically ordered all the monks to line up and banged and crushed each one's head against the brick wall of the monastery. One by one, the peaceful, non resisting monks, fell to the ground, screaming in pain. Then, they tore off the red robes and threw them all in the military trucks (like rice bags) and took the bodies away.
The head monk of the monastery, was tied up in the middle of the monastery, tortured , bludgeoned, and later died the same day, today. Tens of thousands of people gathered outside the monastery, warded off by troops with bayoneted rifles, unable to help their helpless monks being slaughtered inside the monastery. Their every try to forge ahead was met with the bayonets.
When all is done, only 10 out of 200 remained alive, hiding in the monastery. Blood stained everywhere on the walls and floors of the monastery.
Please tell your audience of the full extent of the fate of the monks please please !!!!!!!!!!!!
'Arrested' is not enough expression. They have been bludgeoned to death !!!!!!
Aye Aye
And now a friend from DC has phoned in can you believe it ecstasy to report His Holiness the Dalai Lama has been invited to speak from the Capitol steps on October 17. Emaho! as Tibetan texts exclaim when they want to say: wondrous news here!
How often does the lone lobbyist for humanity face the
Duh! though to figure why
His Holiness the Dalai Lama is of course a simple Buddhist monk; that's how he invariably describes himself. So it’s a feel good photo op for
Unfortunately, the Dalai Lama is also the living reminder of hundreds of thousands of Buddhist monks burned, bashed and banished in
Deliberately echoing FDR at our entry into WWII, George W. Bush forced marched
Oops, make that a triple, because diverting attention from the glaring inaction by pushing the revered Dalai Lama to the front is presenting the monk in red robes to the public as a red herring.
Who knows how His Holiness, survivor of genocidal massacre, will use the world’s one pure voice of good conscience on the Capitol lawn here at
The interdependence of everything could be his topic, for it is one His Holiness often teaches, patiently explaining the twelve-steps of samsara known as the nidanas, for which the science, math and logic translation probably is: if A therefore B, guaranteed. One thing, everything, arises in dependence on something that just happened. Nothing goes to waste. Every action generates reaction, no exceptions, binding us all into the tangled web Shakespeare pointed out we weave. The whole point of the Buddha’s originally spinning the wheel of Dharma was to alert us to the absolute impossibility of anyone escaping these clutches of inevitability or what we might call this cosmic spin job, this morphing I think of as the karmic boomerang: what goes round comes back at you.
The fuzzy interdependence of a butterfly flapping its wings in
For example, the Thai people who are as devoutly Buddhist as the Burmese next door are said to be scandalized as well as mortified by the wanton violence against silent saffron clad monks. They want it stopped. Yet their government cannot speak up and will not ride to any monastic’s rescue because the lights, computers, car fuel and cash flows that animate Thailand depend on the resources—natural gas, hydropower and oil-- purchased from Myanmar, from its monopolizing thugs. The calculation is: no risk to the government —to me here-- from a blackout of Burmese civilians and monks over there, but a huge risk of riot here from any blackout in
We can substitute the Chinese for the Thais in these same sentences. Actually, we can substitute America and change Burma to a dozen other dictatorships. The slash and earn policy has endless precedents, the latest being our four-year foray into
The
Despite its subsequent glamorization, the Revolution was a ploy to stop British infringement of
Because no government wants to fight the land that feeds it, Americans can be as scandalized and mortified as they want about the mad, merciless Burmese junta-- or calculatingly cynical Chinese commissars. But we have set the pace for greed. And as long as we want cheap energy, cheap food, cheap bling—setting an example to be emulated, the outrage is just going to be cheep cheep blowing in the wind. Hypocrisy has no legs to stand on.
So the real enemy of those Burmese monks is us. Our convenience now replicated by others has made them inconvenient. As long as our begging bowls remain turned up to take what corporations with loyalty to nothing but money are shoving down our throats, no government will to do anything to eradicate the hidden costs, will stet all those lives deleted everywhere in their profit margins.
The Dharma says to change the world just change your mind, the way you understand the world. If we were truly serious about stopping the tsunami of barbarity blotting out unarmed human beings with the same two eyes and ten fingers we have, we would struggle to black out our own craving for what belongs to somebody else, our urge to grab and avoid the honest price of our desires. In some contexts this is called rape. In any it violates the precious Ten Commandments.
The Dharma the Burmese monks are dying for advocates the extinction of that craving, that egotistic need to satisfy our self at any cost. So, while America parades His Holiness the Dalai Lama as a sideshow meant to momentarily take the brrr out of Burma, the heinous horror happening there will probably never be taken out of the news until we all become brave enough to turn our gimme bowls upside down to take all the my out of Myanmar.
~Sandy Garson
"Wordsmithing to attest how the Dharma saved me from myself!"
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