Aware of the suffering caused by exploitation, social injustice, stealing, and oppression, I am committed to practicing generosity in my thinking, speaking, and acting. I am determined not to steal and not to possess anything that should belong to others; and I will share my time, energy, and material resources with those who are in need. I will practice looking deeply to see that the happiness and suffering of others are not separate from my own happiness and suffering; that true happiness is not possible without understanding and compassion; and that running after wealth, fame, power and sensual pleasures can bring much suffering and despair. I am aware that happiness depends on my mental attitude and not on external conditions, and that I can live happily in the present moment simply by remembering that I already have more than enough conditions to be happy. I am committed to practicing Right Livelihood so that I can help reduce the suffering of living beings on Earth and reverse the process of global warming. Exploitation, social injustice, and stealing come in
many forms. Oppression is one form of stealing that
causes much suffering both here and in the Third
World. The moment we undertake to cultivate loving
kindness, loving kindness is born in us, and we
make every effort to stop exploitation, social
injustice, stealing, and oppression. In the First Precept, we found the word
"compassion." Here, we find the words "loving
kindness." Compassion and loving kindness are the
two aspects of love taught by the Buddha.
Compassion, karuna in Sanskrit and Pali, is the
intention and capacity to relieve the suffering of
another person or living being. Loving kindness,
maitri in Sanskrit, metta in Pali, is the intention and
capacity to bring joy and happiness to another
person or living being. It was predicted by
Shakyamuni Buddha that the next Buddha will bear
the name Maitreya, the Buddha of Love. "Aware of the suffering caused by exploitation, social
injustice, stealing, and oppression, I undertake to
cultivate loving kindness and learn ways to work for
the well-being of people, animals, plants and
minerals." Even with maitri as a source of energy in
ourselves, we still need to learn to look deeply in
order to find ways to express it. We do it as
individuals, and we learn ways to do it as a nation.
To promote the well-being of people, animals,
plants, and minerals, we have to come together as a
community and examine our situation, exercising our
intelligence and our ability to look deeply so that we
can discover appropriate ways to express our maitri
in the midst of real problems. Suppose you want to help those who are suffering
under a dictatorship. In the past you may have tried
sending in troops to overthrow their government, but
you have learned that when doing that, you cause
the deaths of many innocent people, and even then,
you might not overthrow the dictator. If you practice
looking more deeply, with loving kindness, to find a
better way to help these people without causing
suffering, you may realize that the best time to help
is before the country falls into the hands of a
dictator. If you offer the young people of that country
the opportunity to learn your democratic ways of
governing by giving them scholarships to come to
your country, that would be a good investment for
peace in the future. If you had done that thirty years
ago, the other country might be democratic now, and
you would not have to bomb them or send in troops
to "liberate" them. This is just one example of how
looking deeply and learning can help us find ways to
do things that are more in line with loving kindness.
If we wait until the situation gets bad, it may be too
late. If we practice the precepts together with
politicians, soldiers, businessmen, lawyers,
legislators, artists, writers, and teachers, we can find
the best ways to practice compassion, loving
kindness, and understanding. It requires time to practice generosity. We may want
to help those who are hungry, but we are caught in
the problems of our own daily lives. Sometimes, one
pill or a little rice could save the life of a child, but we
do not take the time to help, because we think we do
not have the time. In Ho Chi Minh City, for example,
there are street children who call themselves "the
dust of life." They are homeless, and they wander
the streets by day and sleep under trees at night.
They scavenge in garbage heaps to find things like
plastic bags they can sell for one or two cents per
pound. The nuns and monks in Ho Chi Minh City
have opened their temples to these children, and if
the children agree to stay four hours in the morning -
- learning to read and write and playing with the
monks and nuns -- they are offered a vegetarian
lunch. Then they can go to the Buddha hall for a
nap. (In Vietnam, we always take naps after lunch; it
is so hot. When the Americans came, they brought
their practice of working eight hours, from nine to
five. Many of us tried, but we could not do it. We
desperately need our naps after lunch.) Then at two o'clock, there is more teaching and
playing with the children, and the children who stay
for the afternoon receive dinner. The temple does
not have a place for them to sleep overnight. In our
community in France, we have been supporting
these nuns and monks. It costs only twenty cents for
a child to have both lunch and dinner, and it will
keep him from being out on the streets, where he
might steal cigarettes, smoke, use delinquent
language, and learn the worst behavior. By encouraging the children to go to the temple, we
help prevent them from becoming delinquent and
entering prison later on. It takes time to help these
children, not much money. There are so many
simple things like this we can do to help people, but
because we cannot free ourselves from our situation
and our lifestyle, we do nothing at all. We need to
come together as a community, and, looking deeply,
find ways to free ourselves so we can practice the
Second Precept. "I undertake to practice generosity by sharing my
time, energy, and material resources with those who
are in real need." This sentence is clear. The feeling
of generosity and the capacity for being generous
are not enough. We also need to express our
generosity. We may feel that we don't have the time
to make people happy - we say, "Time is money,"
but time is more than money. Life is for more than
using time to make money. Time is for being alive,
for sharing joy and happiness with others. The
wealthy are often the least able to make others
happy. Only those with time can do so. I know a man named Bac Sieu in Thua Thien
Province in Vietnam, who has been practicing
generosity for fifty years; he is a living bodhisattva.
With only a bicycle, he visits villages of thirteen
provinces, bringing something for this family and
something for that family. When I met him in 1965, I
was a little too proud of our School of Youth for
Social Service. We had begun to train three hundred
workers, including monks and nuns, to go out to
rural villages to help people rebuild homes and
modernize local economies, health-care systems,
and education. Eventually we had ten thousand
workers throughout the country. As I was telling Bac
Sieu about our projects, I was looking at his bicycle
and thinking that with a bicycle he could help only a
few people. But when the communists took over and
closed our School, Bac Sieu continued, because his
way of working was formless. Our orphanages,
dispensaries, schools, and resettlement centers
were all shut down or taken by the government.
Thousands of our workers had to stop their work and
hide. But Bac Sieu had nothing to take. He was a
truly a bodhisattva, working for the well-being of
others. I feel more humble now concerning the ways
of practicing generosity. The war created many thousands of orphans.
Instead of raising money to build orphanages, we
sought people in the West to sponsor a child. We
found families in the villages to each take care of
one orphan, then we sent $6 every month to that
family to feed the child and send him or her to
school. Whenever possible, we tried to place the
child in the family of an aunt, an uncle, or a
grandparent. With just $6, the child was fed and sent
to school, and the rest of the children in the family
were also helped. Children benefit from growing up
in a family. Being in an orphanage can be like being
in the army -- children do not grow up naturally. If we
look for and learn ways to practice generosity, we
will improve all the time. "I am determined not to steal and not to possess
anything that should belong to others. I will respect
the property of others, but I will prevent others from
profiting from human suffering or the suffering of
other species on Earth." When you practice one
precept deeply, you will discover that you are
practicing all five. The First Precept is about taking
life, which is a form of stealing -- stealing the most
precious thing someone has, his or her life. When
we meditate on the Second Precept, we see that
stealing, in the forms of exploitation, social injustice,
and oppression, are acts of killing -- killing slowly by
exploitation, by maintaining social injustice, and by
political and economic oppression. Therefore, the
Second Precept has much to do with the precept of
not killing. We see the "interbeing" nature of the first
two precepts. This is true of all Five Precepts. Some
people formally receive just one or two precepts. I
didn't mind, because if you practice one or two
precepts deeply, all Five Precepts will be observed. The Second Precept is not to steal. Instead of
stealing, exploiting, or oppressing, we practice
generosity. In Buddhism, we say there are three
kinds of gifts. The first is the gift of material
resources. The second is to help people rely on
themselves, to offer them the technology and knowhow
to stand on their own feet. Helping people with
the Dharma so they can transform their fear, anger,
and depression belongs to the second kind of gift.
The third is the gift of non-fear. We are afraid of
many things. We feel insecure, afraid of being alone,
afraid of sickness and dying. To help people not be
destroyed by their fears, we practice the third kind of
gift-giving. The Bodhisattva Avalokitesvara is someone who
practices this extremely well. In the Heart Sutra, he
teaches us the way to transform and transcend fear
and ride on the waves of birth and death, smiling. He
says that there is no production, no destruction, no
being, no nonbeing, no increasing, and no
decreasing. Hearing this helps us look deeply into
the nature of reality to see that birth and death,
being and nonbeing, coming and going, increasing
and decreasing are all just ideas that we ascribe to
reality, while reality transcends all concepts. When
we realize the interbeing nature of all things -- that
even birth and death are just concepts -- we
transcend fear. In 1991, I visited a friend in New York who was
dying, Alfred Hassler. We had worked together in
the peace movement for almost thirty years. Alfred looked as though he had been waiting for me to
come before dying, and he died only a few hours
after our visit. I went with my closest colleague,
Sister Chan Khong (True Emptiness). Alfred was not awake when we arrived. His daughter
Laura tried to wake him up, but she couldn't. So I
asked Sister Chan Khong to sing Alfred the Song of
No Coming and No Going: "These eyes are not me,
I am not caught by these eyes. This body is not me,
I am not caught by this body. I am life without
boundaries. I have never been born, I will never die."
The idea is taken from the Samyutta Nikaya. She
sang so beautifully, and I saw streams of tears
running down the faces of Alfred's wife and children.
They were tears of understanding, and they were
very healing. Suddenly, Alfred came back to himself. Sister Chan
Khong began to practice what she had learned from
studying the sutra The Teaching Given to the Sick.
She said, "Alfred, do you remember the times we
worked together?" She evoked many happy
memories we had shared together, and Alfred was
able to remember each of them. Although he was
obviously in pain, he smiled. This practice brought
results right away. When a person is suffering from
so much physical pain, we sometimes can alleviate
his suffering by watering the seeds of happiness that
are in him. A kind of balance is restored, and he will
feel less pain. All the while, I was practicing massage on his feet,
and I asked him whether he felt my hand on his
body. When you are dying, areas of your body
become numb, and you feel as if you have lost those
parts of your body. Doing massage in mindfulness,
gently, gives the dying person the feeling that he is
alive and being cared for. He knows that love is
there. Alfred nodded, and his eyes seemed to say,
"Yes, I feel your hands. I know my foot is there." Sister Chan Khong asked, "Do you know we learned
a lot from you when we lived and worked together?
The work you began, many of us are continuing to
do. Please don't worry about anything." She told him
many things like that, and he seemed to suffer less.
At one point, he opened his mouth and said,
"Wonderful, wonderful." Then, he sank back to
sleep. Before we left, we encouraged the family to continue
these practices. The next day I learned that Alfred
passed away just five hours after our visit. This was
a kind of gift that belongs to the third category. If you
can help people feel safe, less afraid of life, people,
and death, you are practicing the third kind of gift. During my meditation, I had a wonderful image -- the
shape of a wave, its beginning and its end. When
conditions are sufficient, we perceive the wave, and
when conditions are no longer sufficient, we do not
perceive the wave. Waves are only made of water.
We cannot label the wave as existing or nonexisting.
After what we call the death of the wave, nothing is
gone, nothing is lost. The wave has been absorbed
into other waves, and somehow, time will bring the
wave back again. There is no increasing,
decreasing, birth, or death. When we are dying, if we
think that everyone else is alive and we are the only
person dying, our feeling of loneliness may be
unbearable. But if we are able to visualize hundreds
of thousands of people dying with us, our dying may
become serene and even joyful. "I am dying in
community. Millions of living beings are also dying in
this very moment. I see myself together with millions
of other living beings; we die in the Sangha. At the
same time, millions of beings are coming to life. All
of us are doing this together. I have been born, I am
dying. We participate in the whole event as a
Sangha." That is what I saw in my meditation. In the
Heart Sutra, Avalokitesvara shares this kind of
insight and helps us transcend fear, sorrow, and
pain. The gift of non-fear brings about a
transformation in us. The Second Precept is a deep practice. We speak of
time, energy, and material resources, but time is not
only for energy and material resources. Time is for
being with others -- being with a dying person or with
someone who is suffering. Being really present for
even five minutes can be a very important gift. Time
is not just to make money. It is to produce the gift of
Dharma and the gift of non-fear. by Thich Nhat Hanh In his book entitled "For a Future to be Possible" |