Buddha’s Path to Peace
continued
from 24.08.2008 This is an article that
appeared in Vesak Sithivili in 1991
By Alec Robertson
These words of goodwill and peace are the recurrent
themes “throughout the Buddhist texts and they run like
golden threads throughout the vast and comprehensive
body of Buddhist literature.
The Dhammapada, one of the gems of Buddhist literature,
succincty states “Hatred does not cease by hatred.
Hatred ceases by love alone. This is the eternal law.” A
characteristic quality of the Buddha’s teaching which
promotes concord, amity, and harmony is that ennobling
and heart-emancipating virtue of goodwill and living
kindness.
It is that rare and precious quality of the heart and
mind which knows and understands and is ready to help.
Love more than any other quality promotes peace,
maturity and understanding among people and this virtue
is a rare commodity these days when there is so much of
animosity, resentment, hatred and violence among the
people of various communities and creeds.
We adopt an antagonistic and competitive attitude
towards others, mainly because of ignorance. This is
true on the personal as it is on the international
level. Despite all our avowals of mutual benevolence and
goodwill, we humans in our dealings with each other
behave very much as the other animals do. We growl and
bite, or cringe and fawn as the occasion demands. At the
risk of appearing cynical one may say that this will
always be true of humanity not only in the mass but in
the highest circles of society.
The first recorded incident of religious teacher of not
only preaching against war, but actually intervening and
preventing war is attributed to the Buddha. In fact it
is the first practical lesson in ahimsa in the field of
politics. He is indeed the Lord of peace (santi-nayaka).
One day on the banks of the river Rohini there were
thousands of women weeping, some for their husbands and
some for their fathers, brothers and others for their
near and dear ones. In such a pathetic situation the
Buddha intervened and saved them all. And he saved
Rohini from being a river of blood.
This was the incident in connection with the kings of
two realms who were making warlike preparations to
destroy each other because they could not agree on
dividing the waters for their use. The conversation that
ensued between the Buddha and the rival parties was
thus. The Master asked “How much, O Kings is water
worth?
“Water, O Lord, is worth very little.”
“How much is this earth worth?”
“The earth, O Lord is of great worth.”
“How worth are kings?”
“Kings also are of great worth. O Lord.”
“How much are your queens worth?”
“They also are greatly dear, O Lord.”
“How much worth, O kings, is your bloodbond,” asked the
Buddha at last.
“That, O Lord, is a thing even as great as Mount Meru to
us” replied they all with one accord. And thus the
Buddha said unto them:
“Why O ye men, destroy all these kings worth the world,
these loved queens and the bloodbond which are more than
all for the sake of a little water that flows into the
sea and is worthless.”
The light of wisdom dawned on them when these words were
heard and unwillingly their weapons fell to the ground
and they remained silent and non-plussed as they hardly
realised the utter stupidity at their actions. Then the
Buddha addressed them thus “Good kings, why do you act
in this manner? Had I not come to you today you would
have set flowing a river of blood.” These words acted
like a balm upon their tormented minds, and the Buddha
then expressed these sublime stanzas:
“Happily live we, free from all hatred among hating
ones:
Among men burning with hatred happily live we,
With hearts of love.”
(Dhammapada verse 197)
“Full happy we live, free from all ailment.
Even among those ailing sore,
Among men sore stricken with disease,
Full of ease do we dwell.”
(Dhammapada verse 198)
“Full happy live we, among the hankering,
From all hankering free.
Among men whoever hanker, free of all...
Hankering do we dwell.”
(Dhammapada verse 199)
The Buddha is verily the Lord of peace, and as Fielding
Hall writing of Buddhist Burma, says in his beautiful
book “The Soul of a People.”
“There can never be a war of Buddhism. No ravished
country has ever borne witness to the prowess of the
followers of the Buddha; no murdered men have poured out
their blood on their hearth stones, killed in His name,
no ruined women have cursed. His name to high heaven. He
and His faith are clean of the stain of blood. He was
the preacher of the great peace of love of charity, of
compassion and so clear is His teaching that it can
never be misunderstood.”
We live in an age of conflict and war, of hatred and
violence, all over the world. Never before has the need
been greater for all of us to remember that immortal
message which Lord Buddha the Greatest and Noblest of
the sons of India, gave to us, and to you, and to all
the world.
A living message
The message of two thousand five hundred years is a
living message today, enshrined in our hearts, and we,
draw inspiration from it to face the troubles and
difficulties that threaten to overwhelm us.” These were
luminous words of wisdom emanating from Pandit
Jawaharlal Nehru, one of the greatest thinkers and
statesmen.
The Buddhist doctrine of loving kindness, non-violence
are relevant and significant in the context of the
outburst of violence and dastardly and brutal acts
perpetrated on innocent people, and highly meaningful
and relevant in the global context when violence, brutal
massacre of innocent lives, are sacrificed on the altar
of conflicting ideological doctrines.
In the world of today, we find the peculiar spectacle
that while the majority of mankind, possibly all of
them, desire, peace, for whatever reasons, it may be
nevertheless, the force of evil and of violence are
surrounding, bringing in their train hatred and the
desire to destroy and crush others, which again spread
hatred.
Vicious circle
Surely, this is a vicious circle. How are we to get out
of it. We have failed to get out of this situation for
many years and many generations.
There must be some way or other than the normal
politicians’ way to deal with such a problem. I feel
that unless we tackle this problem in some other way,
there can be no solution to it and no assurance of
peace.
We all talk glibly of peace, goodwill and co-operation,
but yet, at the same time, we often act in a different
way, belying our own profession. We live two different
lives - one concerning practical affairs and the other
which we reserve for our scheduled secluded moments.
A stage has now come, when it has become of vital
importance that some element which is beyond the ken of
the practical politician should be found for the
solution of the world’s problems.
The forces of evil and the forces of violence have
become so tremendous that unless they are held in check,
they might lead to disaster for the world.
Dark clouds
The dark clouds hover over the world and have created an
atmosphere of war which threatens to go out of hand. It
can be controlled if man understood the message taught
by Gautama Buddha, thousands of years ago.
No new path can be found to save mankind through fresh
conflicts and wars but by pursuing the old path shown to
the world by the greatest path-finder it had known -
Gautama Buddha.
In these grave times, we see a ray of hope in the path
shown by Gautama Buddha, the greatest religious teacher
of the world.
Goodwill, loving kindness, non-violence
One of the cardinal doctrines of the Buddha which goes a
long way in promoting peace, amity, concord in the world
is goodwill and loving kindness and non-violence.
Goodwill or metta is one of the most salient and
distinguishing features of Buddhism.
It is really the hallmark of a Buddhist - a true
adherent of the sublime teachings of the Master. A true
adherent of the Enlightened One practices metta or
goodwill not merely to all human beings, but even to the
meanest creature that crawls at his very feet. In the
Anguttara Nikaya the Buddha says “Whosoever of my
disciples cultivates kindness only for a moment even,
that disciple meditates not in vain; he follows the
doctrine and discipline of the Master, and by that very
act he makes himself worthy of the food offered by the
people.”
How much more then, is it among, people who constantly
cultivate the thoughts of loving-kindness and good-will
throughout practically the whole of their lives, it must
be. The whole of the Buddha Dhamma is permeated with the
spirit of metta.
One reason why Buddhism attaches such great importance
to the virtue of metta is that metta is the antidote for
dosa or hatred, exemplified as we know by such other
words as patigha, vyapada, kroda, vairaya and so on. For
all these are the stumbling blocks to Buddhist culture.
Benevolence therefore is the antidote that destroys
these evil tendencies. It is through the cultivation of
benevolence that we can attain to a mental condition
which is free from hatred.
Feelings of hate and ill-will are neutralised by
thoughts of love and good-will, for opposite factors
neutralise each other when they are brought together
face to face.
As said by the Blessed One - “hatred does not cease by
hatred at any time. Hatred ceases by love alone. This is
an ancient law.” “He abused me, he defeated me, he
robbed me - in those who harbour such thoughts hatred
will never cease...”
“The charm of the Sakyamuni, says Anatole France, works
freely on an unprejudiced heart, Buddhism is wholly
compact of wisdom, love and pity.” The truth of these
words can best be appreciated, by those who have studied
the teachings of the Buddha closely. The fact that such
a teaching and such a personality are not known more in
the way, that ought to be known, may be one of the
reasons for the absence of an atmosphere of amity and
peace in the world today.
To be continued |