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Category Archives: Harmony and Difference

Harmony of Difference and Sameness

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Enso by Kazuaki Tanahashi

The spiritual source shines clear in the light;

the branching streams flow on in the dark.

Grasping at things is surely delusion;

according with sameness is still not enlightenment.

This verse, from the Sandokai, is one that I find very helpful in perceiving and holding matters of diversity, something that I believe encompasses “race,” ethnicity, class, gender, sexual orientation, physical ability, and more. The verse cautions us against the “everything is one, so just get over it” mentality, while at the same time reminding us that we are more than our differences, that there is something that connects us all.

Over the past month, there has been a healthy stream of posts on the topic of race and ethnicity in American Buddhism. Justin Whitaker does a good job of summing up many of the threads of the discussion on this post.

Ever since I started this blog, I’ve had a category all ready to go called “Harmony and Difference.” I haven’t used it until now because, honestly, I’ve felt a bit wary about doing so.

Even though I like to think of myself as a white person who is fairly well-versed in the dynamic of white privilege and racism, I have stepped into some big piles of poo over the past few years with both white people and people of color, and with friends and co-workers at the Buddhist Peace Fellowship. Many times during that stretch, I felt like I couldn’t open my mouth without saying something that hurt or offended someone else, and without being hurt back. These were painful episodes that in some ways still do not feel fully resolved. And perhaps never will be.

Those experiences have given me a more intimate glimpse into the destructive legacy of racism in America and how it affects people of African, Asian, and Latino/a descent as well as white people (listen to Tim Wise’s eloquent words on this). Getting into some of those situations and conversations felt like ripping the scab off a deep wound, one that has been festering for centuries.

So I have felt less convinced than I used to be about the healing potential of these conversations–and I feel very cautious about getting into those dialogues online. It’s hard enough in person, where at least we have each others’ emotions and body language to tune into and guide us. In that regard, I deeply appreciate the honesty in Nathan’s post here, and for his reminder that it’s a privilege to even have a choice about dealing or not dealing with this issue… people of color have to live with the realities of racism every day of their lives.

Yet at the same time, I know deep in my heart that these conversations and relationships across differences are absolutely necessary if we are to fully embody the dharma in this country and in our own lives. And the only times that I have experienced honest and healing conversations about race have been in settings that were held in a container of contemplative practice, most notably a gathering organized by stone circles at the Garrison Institute in 2005.

So I’d like to add a few more resources to this effort that I’ve found helpful. And I want to re-commit myself to being part of this dialogue.

• Directing the Mind Towards Practices in Diversity by Larry Yang, Vipassana teacher based in the San Francisco Bay Area

• Dharma, Color, and Culture — book by Hilda Ryumon Gutiérrez Baldoquín

• The Spring 2007 issue of Turning Wheel was dedicated to the theme “Building Alliances to Address Racism.” Sadly, the archived articles from that issue appear to no longer be on the BPF website, but I found a couple of them here:

What Would You Do? (responding as an ally) by Sheridan Adams

Guidelines for Being Strong White Allies by Paul Kivel

The Shambhala community’s website has a fantastic collection of diversity resources. This is probably the most comprehensive resource list that I’m aware of coming from a Buddhist community.

• In addition to the above Buddhist-based resources, I love this collection of writing from the late Erica Sherover Marcuse. See especially “Liberation Theory: A Working Framework.”

“Let’s Build a U.S. For All of Us” is an initiative that aspires to constructively address issues of racism and build toward a more inclusive society… more good resources on this website.

Please feel free to share more resources in the comments, as well as your own reflections of working with diversity in your sangha.

Celebrating International Women’s Day

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Women in Bukavu, DRC -- photo by Paula Allen of V-Day

Monday, March 8, is International Women’s Day – a day to celebrate the economic, political and social achievements of women, and also to remember the suffering experienced by so many women and girls around the world.

Last week, I sat in the Upaya Zen Center zendo with about 50 other people as we listened, captivated, to Eve Ensler, creator of the Vagina Monologues and V-Day. You may not know this – Eve is a practicing Buddhist. She didn’t talk a lot about Buddhism explicitly, but everything she spoke about emanated dharma – realness, authenticity, deep compassion, healing and transformation, and activated practice.

By the end of the evening, I knew a lot more about the situation in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), which has been the site of a horrific war for the past 12 years. During this time, nearly 5.4 million people have died and hundreds of thousands of women and girls have been raped and sexually tortured. It is one of the most dangerous places in the world for women.

Through the work of Eve and her colleague, Dr. Denis Mukwege, the suffering of these women is coming more into global awareness, and programs are being developed to support their leadership and to, as Eve says, “turn pain into power.” But in so many other places around the planet, women continue to be the targets of oppression and brutality.

So here are a few things you can do to mark International Women’s Day:

  • Nominate someone for the Women and Engaged Buddhism Award, to be presented at the May 1 conference. This award recognizes and encourages initiatives in Engaged Buddhism by women and is intended to nurture new or little-known projects that are underway at the time of the application. Application deadline is March 26.
  • Support Eve’s project, The City of Joy, which will be located in Bukavu, DRC, and will support and train women to be community activists. They will have access to services including education and income generating activities, as well as leadership training. They will also receive programming in: group therapy; storytelling; dance; theater; self-defense; comprehensive sexuality education (covering HIV/AIDS, family planning); ecology and horticulture; and economic empowerment.
  • Attend a showing of “Half the Sky,” a one-night event on March 4 inspired by stories from the New York Times bestseller “Half the Sky” by journalists Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn about women and girls everywhere turning oppression into opportunity.

What are your thoughts on International Women’s Day?