Conscientious
Compassion
Raymond Lam
August
20, 2015 tricycle
Bhikkhu Bodhi on climate change, social justice, and saving the
world
American scholar and Theravada monk
Venerable Bhikkhu Bodhi might not receive the same high-profile
press coverage as the Roman Catholic Church’s charismatic
standard-bearer Pope Francis, but it is becoming evident to
Buddhism watchers and commentators that his message is every bit as
bold, eloquent, and sophisticated. The recent focus on Bhikkhu
Bodhi and other courageous Buddhist leaders who are highlighting
imminent threats such as climate change and global hunger might
well be influenced by the popular resonance with the urgency with
which Pope Francis speaks about the issues. Whatever the reasons,
Bhikkhu Bodhi’s actions speak loudly for themselves. As the founder
and chair of the humanitarian organization Buddhist Global Relief
(BGR), his activist work centers specifically on the issues of
climate change (he is a spiritual ambassador for the interfaith
climate change movement Our Voices) and hunger relief.
“When we started BGR, we initially set our
mission to help those afflicted with poverty, disaster, and
societal neglect,” he says.
But after a short time we realized that
this was too vague and not practical. Even large, well-established
humanitarian organizations like CARE and Oxfam have more precisely
defined missions. As a tiny Buddhist organization, we could not
tackle the whole range of human challenges on this planet without
dissipating our energies.
I thus drew on my own experience in Sri
Lanka and India, where I knew many people were suffering from
malnutrition—though this problem is not as acute in Sri Lanka as it
is in other countries. I also had read about the extent of global
hunger, and it boggled my mind to realize that close to a billion
people were suffering from food insecurity and that some six
million a year died from hunger and hunger-related illnesses. I
learned that it would take only about $40 billion a year to
eliminate global hunger. Yet worldwide, governments pour perhaps a
few trillion dollars annually into military budgets, while millions
die of hunger. This struck me as a tragedy and pulled at my heart.
The Buddha, in the Dhammapada, had said: ‘There is no
illness like hunger,’ and he often stressed the merits of providing
food to the hungry. Thereby I saw a close fit between traditional
Buddhist values and a more precise mission for BGR.
Bhikkhu Bodhi’s visibility in American
public discourse over the past several years, especially as a
representative of a “minority” religion in the US, is already
impressive. In May this year, he was at George Washington
University and the White House to discuss Buddhist civic engagement
and the types of policies that Buddhists would like to see
implemented. From a long-term perspective, however, Bhikkhu Bodhi
doesn’t believe that the small number of Buddhists in the US as a
discrete movement can have a significant impact on civic
life.
We are just a few ripples on the surface of
the lake. Rather, in my view, our best prospects for
giving Buddhist values a role in public affairs would be to
join hands with other faith-based organizations that share these
values. Rooted in our respective faiths we can present a collective
front, advocating for greater social justice, ecological
responsibility, a more peaceful foreign policy, and an end to
racism and police violence against people of color.
“This is especially necessary in the US,”
he suggests, “since fundamentalist Christians have grabbed the
moral high ground, advocating an agenda that seems driven more by
bigotry and religious dogmatism than by true benevolence and care
for the less fortunate.”
Many Buddhist leaders as well as voices
from other faiths recognize that divided, the religions cannot form
a united front on mitigating and transforming many of the selfish
and destructive interests that are threatening to exhaust the
planet’s resources.
“The major threat that I see today lies in
the ascendency of a purely utilitarian worldview driven by a
ruthless economic system that rates everything in terms of its
monetary value and sees everything as nothing more than a source of
financial profit,” he warns, echoing many similarly dire warnings
from other religious public figures.
Under this mode of thinking, the
environment turns into a pool of “natural resources” to be
extracted and turned into profit-generating goods, and people are
exploited for their labor and then disposed of when they are no
longer of use.
To resist these trends, I believe, we as
Buddhists can be most effective by networking with others who
regard human dignity and the integrity of the natural world as more
precious than monetary wealth. By joining together, a collective
voice might emerge that could well set in motion the forces needed
to articulate and embody a new paradigm rooted in the intrinsic
dignity of the person and the interdependence of all life on Earth.
Such collaboration could serve to promote the alternative
values that offer sane alternatives to our free-market
imperatives of corporatism, exploitation, extraction, consumerism,
and toxic economic growth.
This will be no mean feat, and might be the
greatest moral challenge posed to Buddhism and humanity as a whole
in our time. To muster the energy to even begin building this
united interfaith front, Bhikkhu Bodhi believes that Buddhists in
the East and West alike need to nurture stronger humanitarian
concern in their hearts.
Western Buddhists—and I think this is
probably largely true among educated Buddhists in Asia—take to the
dharma primarily as a path of inward development that bids us look
away from the conditions of our societies. If this trend continues,
Buddhism will serve as a comfortable home for the intellectual and
cultural elite, but risks turning the quest for enlightenment into
a private journey that offers only a resigned quietism in the face
of the immense suffering which daily afflicts countless human
lives.
He believes there are two primary moral
principles involved in this effort. “One is love, which arises from
empathy, the ability to feel the happiness and suffering of others
as one’s own. When love is directed toward those afflicted with
suffering, it manifests as compassion, the sharing of their
suffering, coupled with a determination to remove their suffering,”
he says.
The other principle that goes along with
love is justice. Some of my Buddhist friends have objected to this,
saying that justice is a concept foreign to Buddhism. I don’t
agree. I think the word dhamma, in one of its many
nuances, can be understood to signify justice, as when the
“wheel-turning monarch” is described as
dhammiko dhammaraja,
which I would render “a righteous king of righteousness,” or “a
just king of justice.” In my understanding, justice arises when we
recognize that all people possess intrinsic value, that all are
endowed with inherent dignity, and therefore should be helped to
realize this dignity.
Bhikkhu Bodhi finally joins the two
concepts to form a distinct ethical ideal.
When compassion and justice are unified, we
arrive at what I call conscientious
compassion. This is compassion, not
merely as a beautiful inward feeling of empathy with those
suffering, but a compassion that gives birth to a fierce
determination to uplift others, to tackle the causes of their
suffering, and to establish the social, economic, and political
conditions that will enable everyone to flourish and live in
harmony.
He invokes the idea of dependent
origination to explain the need to see the interdependence between
states of mind (particularly those governed by greed and delusion)
and an economic system built on the premise of unlimited growth on
a finite planet. Bhikkhu Bodhi concludes that if humanity is to
avoid a horrific fate, a double transformation is necessary. First,
we must undergo an “inner conversion” away from the quest to
satisfy proliferating desires and the constant stimulation of greed
or craving. But change is also needed in our institutions and
social systems. Bhikkhu Bodhi suggests people turn away from an
economic order based on incessant production and consumption and
move toward a steady-state economy managed by people themselves for
the benefit of their communities, rather than by corporate
executives bent on market dominance and expanding
profits.
At its most radical level, the dharma
teaches that the highest happiness is to be realized through the
complete renunciation of craving. But few are capable of such a
degree of detachment. To make the message more palatable, we have
to stress such values as contentment, simplicity, the appreciation
of natural beauty, and fulfillment through meaningful
relationships, and the effort to control and master the
mind.