The Udamwara Lotus Flower:
Protecting the Life of Helpless Beings
Geshe Thubten Soepa |
|
| Geshe
Thubten Soepa was born in Zanskar, India in 1955.
At the age of fourteen he entered the monastery of Dromo
Geshe Rinpoche in Kalimpong. At the age of 19 he was
sent to Sera Jey monastery in South India. He took his
novice vows before the Serkong Tsenshap Rinpoche and
his full vows before Kyabje Ling Dorjechang, the 97th
head of the Geluk tradition (Tib: Ganden Tri Rinpoche).
He also received many teachings and initiations from
them, as well as from Ganden Zong Rinpoche.
After three years as resident teacher at Dzongkha Chode
monastery, Lama Zopa Rinpoche of the FPMT invited Geshe
Soepa to be the resident Geshe of Aryatara
Institut in Munich, Germany, where he has taught
for nine years.
Geshe Soepa composed the first of these two texts on
animal rights, The Udamwara Lotus Flower in
1995, and the second, Compassion is the Root of
the Teachings in 2005. They were published together
in a book in 2007 by Sera Jey Monastery in India. |
Protecting the Life of Helpless Beings
Statements from Sutra Relating to Eating Meat
Section One: Udamwara:
Statements from the Sutra
Section Two: Question
and Answer
Section Three: Compassion is the Root
of the Teachings
Namo Maha Karunikaya
I bow to Great Compassion, the seed, the refuge which eliminates
all suffering of the six kinds of beings and whence all happiness
and benefit springs. For those who take joy in the exercise
of compassion I shall express a few thoughts on eating meat.
Does eating meat go against the practice of compassion?
If one eats the meat of a creature that has died a natural
death—for health reasons and without any desire—this
is not a harmful action. On the other hand, if someone kills
living beings for the sake of money or purchases and eats
the meat out of a desire to indulge, this goes against the
practice of compassion. Both these actions are harmful.
In the Kalachakra tantra and its elaborate commentary it
says that if we consider the harmful actions committed by
the butcher and the meat eater, those committed by the meat
eater are worse. Some people hold that while the butcher acts
harmfully, the meat eater does not. However, in the Lankavatara
Sutra it says:
He who murders beings for money's sake and
he who buys their meat for money—both
have the genuine link between doer and deed.
If the buyer were without vice, then no merit would be accrued
by the sponsor of stupas, scriptures or holy images either,
as they are also produced by someone else.
A sponsor of stupas accumulates great merit, although he
does not actually build them with his own hands. Likewise,
a meat eater accumulates great negativity, although he does
not normally slaughter the animals he eats. In fact, there
are hardly any snuff sellers left in Europe, because hardly
anyone takes snuff these days. Similarly, there would be no
meat trade if there were no meat eaters.
With regard to Buddhist teachings, three principles are of
utmost importance: 1) exploring reasons and reaching valid
conclusions through correct logical analysis, 2) establishing
the true nature of reality, and 3) making sure not to go against
the practice of great compassion. These three principles are
the corner stones of Buddhist theory and practice.
Now, what are the characteristics of so-called great compassion?
It views its object—all the living beings of the six
types, humans, gods, demi-gods, animals, ghosts and hell beings—without
classifying them as friends, enemies or those to whom one
is indifferent. Its particularity consists in seeing how they
all suffer and wishing to eliminate this suffering or protect
them from it. This special attitude, the persistent urge to
eliminate suffering and protect others from it is called "great
compassion". The suffering to be eliminated is manifest
suffering, the suffering of change as well as the suffering
pervading all cyclic existence. Great compassion is what wishes
to protect beings from these three kinds of suffering. It
is very important to be clear about those three kinds of suffering.
Rather than repeating their names in a superficial manner,
we should try and come to a thorough understanding of what
they signify.
From the Buddhist point of view we ourselves desire happiness
and we do not want the least suffering. Incapable of patience
in the face of adversity like pain, we accept as fact that
others, whether human or animal are the same in that respect.
Our own sensations of happiness and suffering are what we
can understand directly. The happiness and suffering of other
humans and animals may be known from signs. For example when
other beings, humans or animals, undergo terrible suffering
they squeal with pain, tremble and moan. From signs like these
we can clearly know that they undergo unbearable suffering.
As Buddhists we say: “this is the reality of the situation.”
That is something we can know from an analysis based on signs.
For that reason we meditate on the fact that the wish for
happiness is the same in ourselves and others, whoever they
may be. We also need to recognize and meditate on the fact
that we ourselves and others, whoever they may be, are the
same in not wanting the least suffering. We must realize that
it is necessary and equally important to eliminate suffering,
regardless of whose it may be, our own or that of others.
This way of looking at things is fundamental for the development
of great compassion. It is the perspective of a truthful path,
an honest path. Nobody, be they gods or scholars or other
humans will be able to demonstrate that this perspective is
untrue or dishonest. It is necessary to develop great compassion
by training the mind in this perspective.
However, it is not enough simply to meditate on great compassion.
It is also necessary to put it into practice by actually applying
it. It is of utmost benefit to see, hear and consider how
cows, buffalos, goats, sheep, chicken, fish, yaks, horses
and other animals undergo unbearable suffering while being
slaughtered for human consumption and thereupon to avoid eating
slaughtered meat out of compassion. As compassion is actually
being applied, this application is of the greatest benefit
for the purification of negativities accumulated previously.
This can be understood from the story of Noble Asanga and
other reports.
Compassion may also be put into practice directly by purchasing
animals meant for slaughter and saving their lives. The effect
of this action will help extend one's own life span and increasingly
bring about happiness as well as purify negativities. It is
also taught that nursing the sick, giving medicine and the
like, too, are actions resulting in a long life span.
Beautiful animals such as parrots and other birds are not
killed but locked up in cages. You can observe that some will
kill themselves trying to get out of their prisons. Therefore
it is also an act of compassion to buy them and release them.
Such an action will result in the attainment of lasting freedom
and a happy life. Even as a human you thus accumulate the
karma for miraculous powers such as flying and so forth. There
are even reports of cases where miraculous powers were achieved
in this very life.
Incidentally, castrating horses, cattle, goats, sheep, dogs
or cats—cutting their male or female energy channels
is also clearly presented as a negative action in Buddhist
scriptures. If you save the animals out of compassion, the
effect of that wholesome action may ripen in this life. In
this regard the commentary on chapter four of the Treasury
of Knowledge relates the following story from a sutra
concerning a eunuch, the body guard of some King Kanika's
spouse. At the time it was customary to pay eunuchs a big
salary for guarding the queen while the king was away at war.
This eunuch had thus grown rich guarding the queen over many
years. At some point his eye-sight deteriorated, he turned
blind, could not guard the queen anymore and returned to his
native town, a rich man. One day, when out walking he heard
the loud lowing of a buffalo. "What are they doing to
the buffalo?" he asked. His assistant told him that they
were castrating it. The blind man felt such strong compassion
imagining how the buffalo was now to undergo the same suffering
he had undergone—for he obviously knew it from experience—that
he bought some 500 buffalos to save them from this misfortune.
This action undid his castration and also had the effect that
he could see again with both eyes as before. This story is
quoted in the commentary on the Treasury of Knowledge
to illustrate the accumulation of karma ripening in the same
life. The action described in it is also a way of applying
compassion.
To deprive beings of their male or female organs is a cruel
negative action. Its effect ripens in the form of healthy
energy channels, energies and body essences lacking in this
life or a future one. In one of the tantras, Buddha says:
As you yourself do not want to be harmed, likewise, others
do not want to suffer harm. Therefore, don't harm others.
All sentient beings cherish life more than anything. They
all consider their own limbs, vital organs, sense organs and,
last not least, sexual organs most important. I am well aware
of Western arguments to the effect that animal populations
need to be controlled, that there may be a shortage of food
or space and that, therefore, it may be necessary to castrate
animals. However, from a Buddhist point of view castrating
animals is not good at all. I think this position also makes
sense in the context of religions that hinge on a creator
god and condemn as sins acts going against His creation. After
all, the sexual organs would also be seen as God's creation
allowing His creatures to multiply. In the context of religions
teaching the law of karma castration is definitely not considered
good.
Some people think that attachment and desire may be eliminated
by removing the sexual organs. However, this is a misconception.
Attachment cannot be overcome by destroying the objects of
attachment or the organs associated with it. It takes practice
in wisdom and concentration rather than a surgical intervention
to overcome it. Attachment and desire, which are deluded states
of mind, need to be eliminated by wisdom and concentration.
Apart from that, in Buddhist monasticism it is a requirement
for obtaining monk's or nun's vows that one’s male or
female organs are healthy and intact. It is taught in the
Vinaya that otherwise the vows cannot be effective. For the
attainment of the concentration of calm abiding and special
insight it is also necessary that the organs, energies and
channels are fully functional. The reason for this is that
the achievement of stability and clarity of mind is intimately
linked with the energies, channels and (reproductive) organs.
In the two texts Treasury of Knowledge and Compendium
of Abhidharma it is set out that if someone has committed
extremely negative actions such as killing his own mother
and the like they will be unable to achieve meditative stability
until the karmic obscuration is purified and that no meditative
concentration arises in hermaphrodites and eunuchs due to
their unstable minds and dominant mental afflictions. It is
clear that healthy channels, energies and body essences are
all the more indispensable for attainment of the completion
stage in highest yoga tantra.
After the loss of one's male or female
organs it is impossible to overcome desirous attachment. In
Buddhist texts it is explained clearly that for giving up
desirous attachment it is necessary to develop the union of
wisdom and meditative concentration as an antidote. Does that
mean beings whose male or female organs have been removed,
eunuchs and hermaphrodites cannot apply the teachings? Nobody
should lose courage—there are lots of things one can
do, e.g. train in love and compassion, generosity, patience
and wisdom, observe the ten types of religious activity
as well as carrying out fasting meditations (nyung ne).
The question of whether or not those whose male or female
organs have been damaged can practice the completion stage
is hard to settle. The teachings say: "For a human being
to be definitely able to reach buddhahood within one life
through the application of the paths of highest yoga tantra,
he or she has to be endowed with the so-called six constituent
elements of a being born from a womb. These six elements comprise
the components of bone, marrow and reproductive substances
obtained from the father and flesh, skin and blood obtained
from the mother.
According to the presentation in the Treasury of Knowledge,
the human beings of the first eon who descended from some
kind of light gods, arose through supernatural birth like
gods and are referred to as children of Manusha—i.e.
the mind. Therefore they were not meat eaters by origin.
The texts explain how their behaviour degenerated gradually.
According to the scientific manner of explanation, humans
have evolved gradually from apes. I believe that those early
humans may not have been meat eaters. Anyway, there are many
accounts of the origin of humans, that of the Treasury,
that of scientists, that of Bön shamans etc.
However, what indications are there to suggest that it is
not the inborn nature of humans to eat meat? The human body
has neither teeth nor claws like lions or tigers. Just like
monkeys it can be sustained on a diet of fruit and grains,
which is well suited to its physical requirements. I think
this is easy to see, however, still we should examine it.
In Western countries there are hundreds
of thousands of people with a natural aversion to eating meat.
There are numerous advantages resulting from not eating meat:
it is beneficial for one's health and prevents negative actions.
From the Buddhist point of view, however, the wholesome effect
is stronger if eating meat is abandoned with the motivation
that compassion for the painful experiences of the slaughtered
animals has arisen.
In India there are millions of vegetarians such as Mahatma
Gandhi and meals without meat may be found everywhere—in
thousands of vegetarian restaurants. This is one of the best
signs for the fact that the Dharma exists in India. All these
vegetarian restaurants are run by Hindus, Jains and Sikhs.
All the Tibetan restaurants serve meat. All the Tibetans say:
we are Buddhists. These restaurants with their meat cuisine
go against the Buddhist teachings. They disregard the teachings
on the link between actions and their effects and are in stark
opposition to taking refuge,
compassion, equanimity, and non-violence, the Mahayana and
Hinayana sutras as well as the four classes of tantra. Apparently,
some of those restaurants are run by monasteries. They do
damage to the Buddhist teachings.
Obviously, this is not nice to look at and undermines the
devotion others have to Buddhism. In fact one may well ask
why such restaurants serving meat exist in monasteries. Their
existence is being justified by saying that it generates a
lot of money. "This so-called money sucks the blood from
our bodies", said Mahatma Gandhi. To be bitten by money
is worse than to be bitten by a snake, he goes on to say in
his advice. This statement is certainly especially meaningful.
To be sure your own life becomes a money making machine, if
you are overcome by the disease of discontentment with regard
to money. It is as though you had sold your human life for
money. Examine that for yourself!
In the English language it is called "money". In
Tibetan one word used is gyu nor—an ambiguous
word, gyu meaning "cause" and nor
signifying "wealth" but also "error".
So you could also understand it in terms of causing rebirth
in lower realms—those of hungry ghosts, animals and
hell beings—rather than becoming a cause for higher
existences such as birth in the human or divine realms and
therefore it could be considered an "erroneous cause".
If the love of money is too strong, a country will be lost,
cultural and religious values deteriorate and individual human
values and abilities degenerate. For instance when the Chinese
communists first came to Tibet they distributed a lot of money
among Tibetans and those Tibetans with a predilection for
money sang songs with lyrics like: "Chinese communists
are like benevolent parents, they cause a rain of coins to
fall". The Tibetans were cheated at the time, in any
case they ended up losing their country to the Chinese and
wholesome values, the precious Buddhist religion and culture
deteriorated—an experience that Tibetans of future generations
will not forget.
If the desire for money is excessive, disadvantages will
ensue. Even today a lot of people do not finish their education
but rather chase after money. For the sake of earning money
some do not even care whether they act harmfully. As a means
to an end meals with the meat of countless chicken, cattle
and sheep are sold every day in restaurants. When the people
responsible for this die, in particular, they will have caused
themselves serious problems: Someone with lots of money will
be attached to it even on the threshold of death and die in
a corresponding state of mind.
Nowadays most people consider money to be the source of
happiness and well-being. That is a misconception. One's well-being,
a pleasant physique, a long life, health and a happy mind
are the results of wholesome actions born from compassion
and the desire to help in former lives. There is evidently
no guarantee for people with lots of money to be happier.
If we go on analyzing we can see that people with a lot of
money often suffer all the more and that the situation in
rich countries is often more difficult.
As regards the root of happiness and well-being it is therefore
taught in the sutras that the various types of wholesome actions
as causes give rise to the various types of happiness as effects.
For example the act of saving animals meant for slaughter
out of a compassionate motivation is a cause for living a
long life, nursing the sick and giving them medicine for having
a healthy body and mind, the development of patience for having
a pleasant physique and being well liked by everyone, trying
to save humans and animals from imprisonment for always enjoying
freedom, giving up castrating animals for not being born as
a hermaphrodite or becoming a eunuch, and compassion along
with wholesome actions the root of happiness and well-being
in general. The root of suffering is harmful action. In highest
yoga tantra it is set out that the most harmful thing is to
give up compassion for all beings.
From the Buddhist perspective India is a blessed country
where many buddhas, bodhisattvas and arhats have wandered
and which the Buddha himself prophesied to be an important
place where the Buddha Maitreya and some thousand other future
buddhas as well as many bodhisattvas and arhats would wander.
Unfortunately, in some old religious rites it is still customary
to make blood sacrifices on special Indian and Nepalese holidays.
That goes against the practice of compassion and non-violence.
Those offering ceremonies do more harm than good. Great gods
such as Shiva, Vishnu, Brahma and Sarasvati—by virtue
of being gods—do not accept blood sacrifices. Gods are
not beings feeding on impure substances like meat and blood,
but rather care for utmost purity. Foreigners also find these
blood sacrifices repulsive and Buddhists do not take pleasure
in them at all.
Sakya Pandita gives an account of the earlier Hindu sage
Eta who rejected blood sacrifices. There are also stories
about the Buddhist siddha Birvapa visiting many temples were
these customs were practiced and putting and end to them.
He did this by manifesting signs of his attainments and encouraging
the devotees to sacrifice so-called white offerings.
The Dalai Lama put an end to meat offerings in 1973 on the
occasion of the Kalachakra initiation in Bodhgaya telling
his disciples from the Himalayas: "From now on abandon
the custom of making red offerings. If the spirits accustomed
to it cause you trouble tell them: the Dalai Lama has told
us to stop it and if you want to cause problems because of
this you should turn to the Dalai Lama."
The great texts of the Buddhist tenet systems explain that
in the Hindu system, Buddha Shakyamuni is revered as the ninth
emanation of Vishnu. It is taught quite clearly that the development
and attainment of calm abiding, special insight, the four
levels of worldly meditative stabilization and the worldly
concentrations of form and formless realms are practices shared
by Hindus, Jains and Buddhists.
Specifically, Buddhist practices are associated with the
four noble truths, the two truths, renunciation, great compassion,
the attitude of conventional and ultimate bodhicitta and the
practice of the ten perfections. The attainment of the five
paths and the ten levels as well as the ability to achieve
arhatship and buddhahood are their special effects. All of
this is made clear in the great Buddhist texts.
The eight great powers common to Hindu and Buddhist tantra
such as the ability to fly, to move about at supernatural
speed, to cause a rain of grain to fall, to be able to tell
the future through prophecies, to display various miraculous
powers and similar abilities are taught as worldly attainments.
Special attainments in Buddhism concern healing, extending
life spans up to a thousand years, increasing wisdom and purifying
negativities and many other achievements brought about by
the power of mantra recitation combined with Buddhist deity
yoga—kriya, charya and yoga tantra—as well as
the attainment of buddhahood in the same body within a single
lifetime through developing the generation and completion
stages of highest yoga tantra.
The root of all those methods is great
compassion. All wholesome actions performed with the motivation
of compassion can ripen as wholesome effects. If the motivation
of compassion is lacking, even the highest practices will
come under the influence of selfishness and thus their wholesome
effect cannot ripen. The spiritual master Padmasambhava said:
With kleshas
exhausted - no reason for Dharma practice.
Without compassion the root of Dharma rots.
Consider samsara's sufferings again and again!
Lord and subjects, do not postpone the Dharma!
The protector Nagarjuna taught:
The fact that nothing is ever born—
if it is deeply known by the mind,
compassion arises easily
towards those sunk in the bog of samsara.
The siddha Saraha said:
Whoever engages in emptiness lacking compassion
will never discover the highest most excellent path.
However, the root of Buddhist teachings
is unbiased great compassion. Thus the main rule of vows for
laypeople, novices, monks and nuns in the vehicle of hearers
consists in giving up harming anyone. This giving up of harmful
action occurs motivated by compassion. If compassion is lacking,
the ethical discipline of giving up harmful actions towards
others does not come about. For those belonging to the Mahayana
path compassion is even more important. In the Mahayana the
main thing being taught is that over and above giving up harmful
actions it is necessary to benefit others–"perfect
enlightenment is born from the attitude of benefiting others",
as it says in the 37 Practices of a Bodhisattva.
In the Commentary on Valid Cognition it says: "That
which enables it
is to develop compassion."
When applying the Buddhist teachings, from among faith and
compassion, the latter is more important. Engaging in
Bodhisattva Behaviour gives the reason:
Between the Jinas
and sentient beings
if you respect the Jinas, but not
sentient beings–how would you
accomplish something like Buddha Dharma?
In his Explanation of Bodhicitta Nagarjuna also
describes the connection: From benefiting beings happiness
arises as a result. From causing harm to beings, suffering
arises as a result. The state of buddhahood can also be attained
only in dependence on living beings.
Geshe Chengawa, a scholar of the Kadam tradition, said:
"In order to attain the state of buddhahood, one has
to learn something that is unusual in the world. Among their
own interests and the interests of others worldly beings put
their own first and consider it more important to honour buddhas
than living beings. We have to do it the other way round."
Buddha Shakyamuni states in the Stream of Mineral Nutriments
Sutra:
To benefit sentient beings is the highest offering you
can make me,
to harm sentient beings is the greatest harm you cause me.
In his Essence of Good Explanations on the Interpretable
and Ultimate Meaning the great spiritual master Tsongkhapa
describes how the three types of striving–regarding
compassion for beings, faith in the Buddha and the wish that
his teachings may last for a long time–reinforce each
other.
Dromtonpa said: "Compassion is the root of a helpful
attitude. All the characteristics of bodhicitta come about
in dependence on compassion."
And the spiritual master Atisha: "If you feel unbearable
compassion for living beings, you'll abandon everything and
undertake anything that is of benefit to beings."
In the Sutra Requested by Sagaramati it says: "The
one teaching for bodhisattvas is this: great compassion that
does not crave for one's own happiness."
The Sakya master Jetsun Dragyen said:
Abandon alcohol because, if you drink alcohol, your presence
of mind will deteriorate.
Meat should be abandoned because, if you eat meat, your
compassion will deteriorate.
In his Explanation on the Three Types of Vows Kedrub
Je, a great pundit of the Gelug tradition, writes: "We
certainly do not say that the rules of ordination permit eating
meat under the power of attachment to the taste of meat. We
would not even dream of saying that something like that isn't
a fault."
Chankya Rimpoche, a great Gelug master,
also said:
Into piles of flesh, blood, bones of beings
you dig your knives and drool in a rush to devour them—
as if about to subdue hostile troops and foes
compassionate beings behold this sham of a Sangha!
I should like to turn to the members of the Sangha, persons
training in the asceticism of pure conduct, with a little
remark. How come people capable of resisting the temptation
of what seems like the greatest happiness to the conventional
worldly mistaken consciousness—the happiness of being
with a woman—are incapable of resisting the enjoyment
of eating meat from murdered animals? I wonder. But how could
I possibly capture everyone's interest making statements about
the harmful effects of eating meat ? Even if one said that
meat is poison—the persistent habit of indifference
would continue to exist and they would go on eating meat.
The teaching that it is harmful to eat meat does not apply
to monks only. It was given to laypeople and monks equally.
The ten negative actions like killing, stealing, sexual misconduct
etc. as well as negative actions relevant here—eating
meat and the like—are not harmful for monks only, but
for all the beings of the six realms as well. The rules that
apply specifically to monks are those they have vowed to abide
by before the Sangha represented by their abbot and master:
not to enter into intimate relations with women, not to drink
alcohol, not to eat in the evenings, not to hoard possessions
and many other particularities. If they transgress any of
those rules, this constitutes a negative action in the sense
of a breach of the promise they have made as monks. These
kind of negative actions do not exist for laypeople.
In the edicts of the Tibetan king Trisong Detsen it says:
In line with the rules of the ordination masters
act as explained in the three collections of teachings:
Drink tea and what is proper for Sangha members,
for food take grains, molasses and creamy cheese,
for clothing wear plain saffron-coloured robes,
for lodging live together in a temple.
Do not indulge in drink, meat, rotten food.
People wishing to make offerings are not
allowed to offer the ordained meat nor alcohol—such
offerings are also mentioned explicitly in the sutras among
the 32 impure offerings. Venerable Milarepa said:
This way of eating meat food—famished, without thinking
of future lives for even a second... When I see these people
I get frightened. Rechungpa, are you mindful of the holy Dharma?
If you do not just pay lip service to the existence of future
lives and karmic causes and effects but rather consider, from
the bottom of your heart, how these hold together, you may
develop enthusiasm about giving up meat. If you are not convinced
that future lives exist, it will be even more difficult to
gain conviction about the karmic effects of actions. However,
if you examine whether or not there are former and future
lives the reasons in favour weigh more heavily and there is
only little negative evidence. Not only Buddhists accept the
reality of former and future lives. Hindu yogis who have attained
the concentration of calm abiding and thereby achieved supernormal
cognitive powers also accept them.
In addition to that the Hindu tenet systems
posit a permanent self, holding that this self exists in all
former and future lives. They also accept cyclic existence
and liberation as well as wholesome and unwholesome actions.
We must not disparage the Hindu religion saying: this is a
non-Buddhist system. In the tantra Vairocana's Perfect
Enlightenment it says:
Do not disparage the tirthikas.
If you disparage the tirthikas,
you'll distance yourself from Vairocana.
With this in mind a famous scholar from Arig
said: "I have faith in non-Buddhists,
too."
However, Buddhists do not accept a permanent self but rather
an uninterrupted impermanent continuum of self. Although the
self accepted by Buddhists is an uninterrupted impermanent
continuum, there is no true self such as it is conceived by
our inborn grasping for an "I": the Buddhist view
is that it does not exist by its own nature.
Among those who are convinced that there are former and future
lives, again, there are various attitudes. For example some
feel undivided compassion for all living beings. They may
be fully committed to finding ways and means to eliminate
their own and others' difficulties in this life.
Others who do not accept former and previous lives have
a biased kind of love and compassion. They may benefit a lot
of beings while also harming many. One example for this would
be a person taking pity on a hungry dog and feeding it a fish
killed for that purpose. The action may be motivated by compassion
for one animal, but it causes great harm to another one.
Yet others are not convinced about former and future lives
nor about the fact that happiness is the result of wholesome
actions and that suffering is the effect of harmful actions.
These kind of people who are very self-centred and unfamiliar
with love and compassion may well be endowed with worldly
knowledge and skills. If they obtain power and high positions
they can do great damage to world peace—please check
for yourselves!
The Buddhist teachings explain rebirth, i.e. the reality
of former and future lives and the fact that wholesome actions
bring about happiness and harmful actions bring about suffering.
As all beings are the same in wanting happiness rather than
suffering, there are the teachings on great compassion—the
desire to protect all the beings of the six realms from the
temporary suffering of this life and ultimately from all the
suffering of cyclic existence—as well as the teachings
on the six perfections, patience etc., and the view of emptiness
as an antidote to ignorance, attachment, anger, wrong views,
concepts and misconceptions. Through study involving listening
and contemplating as well as the development of this wisdom
realizing the view of emptiness combined with great compassion,
through combining the concentration of calm abiding and special
insight into one union, through recognizing the ignorance
associated with mental afflictions, concepts and misconceptions
will decrease more and more, and the nature of mind will gradually
become clearer and clearer. The mind will achieve liberation
and the state of buddhahood. The profound and vast path leading
there is taught in authentic scriptures.
Author of this text is the ordained Geshe Thubten Soepa
of Sera monastery. He composed this advocacy of animal rights
in Germany after about 2550 years had passed since the birth
of Buddha Shakyamuni and about 648 years after the birth of
Lama Tsongkhapa in the year 2005 according to the Western
calendar. May this text be like a cloud of offerings gladdening
the buddhas, bodhisattvas and all those possessed of compassion.
May it also further the wishes for health and a long life
of His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama Tenzin Gyatso so that
his wholesome activities for the benefit of living beings
may continue for hundreds of eons. Also, may all masters of
the Hinayana, Mahayana and Vajrayana have a long life. May
all their wishes come true. May the holy masters of religions
believing in a creator god and religions with faith in the
law of karma interact in harmony and continue to develop mutually
beneficial relations now that this is of vital importance.
May all their shared practices of non-violence, compassion
and love be allowed to increase and deepen more and more.
Sarva mangalam
Scriptural References
Arya-Lankavatara-Sutra Q775 ngu 165a7-ngu 172b6
Arya-Angulimala-Sutra Q879 tsu 133b2-tsu 214b8
Vinaya-Vastu Q 1030 khe 260a4-nge 47b6
Acknowledgements
The Tibetan original of this book was initially translated
into German by Conni Krause. The first English version by
Philip Quarcoo was based on her German text. For a second
English version Philip retranslated—from Tibetan—my
poems as well as the versified quotations I had used, and
made various changes that proof-readers had suggested.
I discussed this second version with my current interpreter,
Karina Reitbauer, who made numerous insightful comments causing
me to add various explanations, clarifications and notes.
They have now resulted in this third version by Philip and
Karina.
I dedicate all the merit accumulated through the publication
of these two texts to the liberation of living beings. May
all living beings be free from the suffering of being killed.
Notes
46. Writing down the teachings, making offerings,
practising generosity, hearing the teachings, retaining and
understanding them, teaching others, reciting sacred texts,
contemplating and meditating.
47. The point being made here is that early
humans were very much like the gods they descended from who
only subsist on mental activity rather than impure physical
food.
48. As you take refuge to
the Three Jewels, one of the practice instructions you commit
yourself to is to give up causing harm to any living beings.
That is why it would go against the practice of refuge to
harm living beings.
49. Delusions, afflictions.
50. By Togme Sangpo.
51. I.e. the attainment of
Buddhahood.
52. "Victors"–designation
of the buddhas.
53. In other words: "Monks,
rather than taking delight in killing and eating animals,
please think about what you are doing and develop compassion!"
54. The question might be
paraphrased in these terms: "Rechungpa, do you keep thinking
of death, impermanence and your future lives while others
fail to do so?"
55. Tirthika (Tib.
mu stegs can) literally means "one belonging
to a tirtha or holy place", i.e. a worthy and holy man,
a Brahmana. However, the word came to take on a pejorative
meaning and was used by Buddhists, Jainas etc. to signify
a "heretical" adherent of a religion or philosophy
other than one's own.
56. I.e. along the path, you
will find yourself further removed from the goal of becoming
Vairocana.
57. Area in North-Eastern
Tibet.
58. The Tibetan reads phyi rol pa–apparently,
what he meant are followers of other religions who nevertheless
share certain essential tenets with Buddhists. |