Report
on the 6th Western Monastic Buddhist Conference
By:
Ven. Tenzin Kacho
Assisted by: Sister Jitindriya,
Rev. Kusala, Rev. Meido, Ajahn Pasanno,
Ven. Heng Sure and Ven. Karma Lekshe Tsomo
Reverend
Master Eko Little and the monks at Shasta Abbey hosted the 6th
conference of western Buddhist monastics for the third consecutive
time. It took place from Friday October 20 to Monday, October
23, 2000 in Mt. Shasta, California. This was the largest gathering
ever with greater diversity and there was representation from
the Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Thai, Tibetan and Vietnamese traditions.
There were four abbots among the twenty-six participants. Some
persons had been ordained well over two decades and the newest
monastic was ordained just months ago. The conference theme was
“The Four Messengers”; the sights Prince Siddhartha
saw when he explored the world outside the palace gates; revealing
the signs of aging, sickness, death and the spiritual seeker.
We used this as a presentation focus in our life as monastics.
Most
guests arrived at the Abbey on Friday evening to the welcome introduction
and opening by Rev. Master Eko, Abbot of Shasta Abbey (Japanese
Soto Zen tradition) and Ajahn Pasanno, co-Abbot of Abhayagiri
Monastery (Thai tradition). Everyone was invited to attend the
evening vespers service and meditation with the resident monastics.
And in the early mornings many attended the morning services and
meditation in the Meditation and Ceremony Halls. The services
at Shasta Abbey are sung in English, set to western Gregorian
chant melodic style by the late Reverend Master Jiyu-Kennett who
established Shasta Abbey in 1970. The services are uniquely beautiful
and many participants looked forward to returning to the Abbey
for these services.
Saturday
morning the first gathering was on the topic of “Aging”
and Rev. Daishin from Shasta Abbey (Japanese Soto Zen tradition)
presented his experiences of being in the monastery most of his
adult life. He spoke of growing up and aging in the monastery
as he has been ordained for twenty-six years. He started his talk
by relating a recent visit to the local bank where he noticed
that no one had gray hair. Was it that everyone was young or just
appearing young? In our American society we deny and defy old
age. We are a culture addicted to youthful appearance. Surgically
and cosmetically we try to sustain youth and push away the reality
of age in the hopes of remaining youthful. Living in a monastery,
we don’t have to be compelled to engage in our life and
aging in this way. He spoke of enjoying being older and of the
satisfaction of monastic life. Discussion focused on how the natural
process of aging is accepted and appreciated more as we deepen
our practice and study of the Dharma. Reflection and blessing
were held at the beginning and end of every session offered by
monastics from different traditions.
Ven.
Karma Lekshe Tsomo (Tibetan tradition), assistant professor of
Theology and Religious Studies at the University of San Diego,
spoke on the topic of “Sickness.” She related her
personal experiences with sickness while pursuing her Dharma studies
in India and other countries. Some years ago in India, while viewing
land sites for a nunnery, Ven. Lekshe was bitten by a poisonous
viper. She spoke graphically about her three-month hospital ordeal
in India and Mexico, and the difficulties that even seasoned practitioners
may experience when confronted by intense pain and the uncertainties
of serious illness. She described the traditional Tibetan explanation
of illness and its causes, and presented a variety of Buddhist
practices that can be helpful for transforming our attitudes toward
illness, coping with pain, and using the experience of illness
as an opportunity for practice.
On
Sunday morning two participants shared the topic of “Death.”
Rev. Kusala (Vietnamese Zen tradition) spoke on the recent passing
of his teacher, the late Ven. Dr. Havanpola Ratanasara, eminent
master and scholar from Sri Lanka. The late venerable monk had
founded the American Buddhist Congress, the Buddhist Sangha Council
of Southern California and numerous other organizations and schools
in the United States and Sri Lanka. He spoke of the incredible
teaching Dr. Ratanasara showed through his acceptance of approaching
death and in mindfully releasing his responsibilities, turning
away from this life and looking in direction of his rebirth. Rev.
Kusala said of Dr. Ratanasara, “He taught me the need to
turn away from everything in this lifetime as death approaches
and make ready for the next. ‘Don’t be attached,’
he would say; ‘It only leads to more suffering.’”
Rev. Kusala also addressed the theme of dealing with grief as
monastics.
I,
Tenzin Kacho (Tibetan tradition), spoke on a different aspect
of “Death” in the “Death of the Monastic.”
I prefaced my talk saying that the focus was on the difficulties
and concerns of the western monastics today and presented some
of the encounters and views of lay Buddhists and lay Dharma teachers
toward monastics. Some persons view monasticism as an austere
self-centered practice and monastics as escapists not able to
cope in society. Also mentioned were the comments of the head
of a national Buddhist organization (name was not mentioned) who
feels that there are only two jewels left in Buddhism anymore;
that the Sangha has degenerated in Asia and not accepted in the
West. Some persons comment that there is no need for a monastic
Sangha. I also noted that there were no monastic presenters at
the “3rd Annual Buddhism in America Conference” held
in October 2000 in Colorado.
These
views stimulated some fruitful discussion. In general, although
concerned, the participants were optimistic and that we need to
continue our efforts to study, practice and conduct ourselves
well. With time, as we foster Dharma friendships with lay people
and participate in Buddhist gatherings, the presence and value
of monastics will naturally come to be recognized in this country.
Excellent training and continued guidance is key before one takes
ordination and especially in the early years of one’s life
as a monastic.
Ven.
Heng Sure, Director of the Berkeley Buddhist Monastery, a branch
of the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas (Chinese Chan tradition) spoke
on the Samana, the spiritual seeker and started by having each
person share the signs or triggers that set each of us on to become
monastics. This gave people a chance to express themselves and
it was skillful for it allowed everyone an opportunity to speak.
He
then presented ways of according with the Dharma and of the signs
and form of the Samana. The evening before he had translated the
“Poem in Praise of the Sangha” by Qing Dynasty Emperor
Shunzhi (mid 17th century) and read it to us. He shared how the
internal signs of the Samana were the combination of blessings
and wisdom; that blessings without wisdom was like an elephant
with a necklace and wisdom without blessings was like an Arhat
(one who has attained liberation) with an empty bowl. Blessings
come from making others happy.
Monday
morning Sister Jitindriya from Abhayagiri Monastery (Thai tradition)
presented “the Spiritual Friend”. She began her talk
with the view that the Four Messengers can be seen as opportunities
for awakening; that we don’t usually see them that way,
but instead we see them as things to avoid. Because we don’t
see suffering (dukkha), as an opportunity to awaken, as a ‘sign’
pointing out the truth of the way things are, we continue to wander
aimlessly in samsara. Dukkha is a sign that can lead to liberation
if we don’t despair. She suggested that if the Buddha had
not awakened to dukkha in seeing the earlier signs, he might not
have ‘seen’ the Samana, the sign of the renunciate
would not have meant much to him.
She
quoted from many sources in the Pali Suttas.As worldly beings
we are intoxicated with youth, health, beauty and life, we don’t
see their impermanent and unstable nature. The monk Ratthapala
was asked, “Why have you gone forth when you have not suffered
the four kinds of loss?” that is, of health, youth, wealth,
and family. He replied in the manner of a teaching he had heard
from the Buddha: that life is unstable and there is no shelter
or protection in any world. Ananda, the Buddha’s attendant,
said that association with good friends (those who encourage and
help us on the Path) constituted half of the holy life, and the
Buddha commented that the whole of holy life is association with
good friends. Good friendship is the forerunner and necessitates
arising of the Noble Eight-Fold Path.
Every
session was purposely created with sufficient time for discussion
after the presentations to allow questions, concerns, and dialogue
in depth. It was encouraging to voice and listen to other’s
personal views. Most of us have very busy lives alone or in monasteries
and it is a true joy to spend some time in engaging conversations
and learning about other monastics’ lives. Our gathering
truly felt like a conference for and by monastics.
Often
topics of discussion at Buddhist gatherings focus more on particular
interests and concerns of layperson's and lay teachers; the purpose
of this conference is to meet and share monastic concerns and
to enjoy the company of others who have gone forth. This fundamentally
different orientation highlights the importance of holding monastic
conferences as much as possible at monasteries. The purity of
the Sangharama (monastery), this time the hospitality we enjoyed
at Shasta Abbey, lends a priceless support to our gathering.
The
participants expressed deep appreciation for the rewards of the
Sixth Monastic Conference. Our time together is brief, but precious,
as the program brings together studies, traditions, inspiration
and wisdom from America’s diverse Buddhist cultural traditions.
The very fact of our gathering with six monastic traditions testifies
to the gradual deepening of the Dharma roots in Western soil.
The historic significance of our gathering, the community we create,
and the merit and virtue generated when the Buddha’s Sangha
gathers in harmony is truly an occasion for rejoicing!
We
have set the dates for the 7th Western Monastic Conference for
October 19-22, 2001 with the theme tentatively set for “Monastic
Ordination and Training.”
We
encourage other western Buddhist monastics to join us next year
and thank the American Buddhist Congress for offering some financial
assistance for travel to this 6th conference.
Bhikshuni
Tenzin Kacho (e-mail) is a fourth-generation American of Japanese
ancestry. She was ordained by HH the Dalai Lama in 1985 and received
higher ordination in 1994 by Ven. Dr. Karuna Dharma and Ven. Dr.
Ratanasara. She held the post of Executive Secretary for the Buddhist
Sangha Council of Southern California and is currently resident
teacher at Thubten Shedrup Ling center, established by Ven. Geshe
Tsultim Gyeltsen, in Colorado Springs, Colorado. She is the lay
Buddhist chaplain at the US Air Force Academy (“lay chaplain”
as she is not an enlisted serviceperson in the military) and attends
Naropa University in Boulder, Colorado.