Life
is Our True Home
In the Colors of Compassion retreat
we have learned and practiced to be in
contact with our true home, the true home
that cannot be described by geographical
area, culture, or race.
Every time we listen to the sound of
the bell in Deer Park or in Plum Village
, we silently recite this poem: “I
listen, I listen, this wonderful sound
brings me back to my true home.” Where
is our true home that we come back to?
Our true home is life, our true home is
the present moment, whatever is happening
right here and right now. Our true home
is the place without discrimination, the
place without hatred. Our true home is
the place where we no longer seek, no longer
wish, no longer regret. Our true home is
not the past; it is not the object of our
regrets, our yearning, our longing, or
remorse. Our true home is not the future;
it is not the object of our worries or
fear. Our true home lies right in the present
moment. If we can practice according to
the teaching of the Buddha and return to
the here and now, then the energy of mindfulness
will help us to establish our true home
in the present moment.
According to the teaching of the Buddha,
the Pure Land lies in the present moment;
nirvana and liberation lie in the present
moment. All of our spiritual and blood
ancestors are here if we know how to come
back to the present moment. My true home
is the Pure Land , my true home is true
life, so I do not suffer or seek. I do
not run after anything anymore. I very
much want all of you who have come here
for the retreat, whether your color is
black, white, brown, or yellow, to also
be able to practice the teaching of the
Buddha in order to come back to the present
moment, penetrate this moment and discover
your true home. I have found my true home.
I do not seek, I do not worry, I do not
suffer anymore. I have happiness, and I
want all of my friends, students, and disciples
to be able to reach your true home and
stop trying to find it in space, time,
culture, territory, nationality, or race.
The Buddha offers us wonderful practices
so we can end our worries, our suffering,
our seeking, our regrets, and so we can
be in contact with the wonders of life
right in the present moment. When we have
the mind of nondiscrimination, we can open
our arms to embrace all people and all
species and everybody can become the object
of our love. When we can do this, we have
a true home that no one can take away from
us. Even if they occupy our country or
put us in prison, our true home is still
ours, and they can never take it away.
I speak these words to the young people,
to those of you who feel that you have
never had a home. I speak these words to
the parents who feel that the old country
is no longer your home but that the new
country is not yet your home. Perhaps you
can grasp this practice so you can find
your true home and help your children find
their true home. This is what I wish for
you.
Civilization is Openness
and Tolerance
If you have only one way of thinking,
one way of behaving, then you are confined
to the limits of your culture. With your
habitual way of thinking, you imprison
yourself and you cannot understand the
suffering, the difficulties, the dreams
of people of other races or nationalities.
You have a view about freedom, about happiness,
about the future, and you want to force
that view upon other cultures, other nations,
other groups of people, and you create
suffering for them. You think that everybody
has to follow a certain economic model,
a certain way of thinking, and only then
are they civilized. When you think in this
way, you have tied yourself up with a rope,
and you cause danger and suffering to yourself
and others.
We need to learn to let go and be open
to other ways of thinking and behaving.
We should not think of ourselves as superior
in terms of race, science, or ideology.
We have to practice to open our hearts,
to learn about other cultures and other
ways of thinking and behaving, so we can
establish communication with people of
other nations. If you were born and raised
in the United States you should not let
the American culture imprison you. Try
to learn about the country your parents
and ancestors came from. This will help
you develop good communication with your
parents and your ancestors; otherwise you
may be cut off from the cultural stream
that is one of your deepest roots.
Do not think that the culture and education
you received growing up in the United States
is superior. We have to open our hearts
to learn about the cultures of Asians,
Africans, Europeans, and others. Europeans
think and behave differently than Americans,
even though many Americans have European
ancestors. When we have a stubborn attitude,
caught in the values, culture, and way
of thinking of our own civilization, we
are narrow-minded and isolated. The United
States right now is isolated politically
and militarily. The way many Americans
think and respond to violence and terrorism
is not the same way most Europeans think
and respond. We need to
listen to the Europeans and to people of
other nations. We need to learn to let
go of the view that our way of reacting
and behaving is the best. When we are able
to practice the Buddha’s teaching
and come back to the present moment, we
are in contact with our true home. Then
we are not narrow-minded, we are not discriminating,
and our hearts are open to embrace all
races, all cultures.
To be civilized means to be open-minded,
to offer space to others to live according
to their views. Civilization is opening
our arms to embrace all races, all people,
all species; it is not thinking that our
race or our culture is superior to all
others. If young people can open their
hearts wide to learn about their own and
other cultures, they will begin to have
rich insights. They can help those who
are still isolated and caught in their
own culture to come together with those
from other cultures. This will allow understanding
and acceptance to grow, remove boundaries,
and heal conflicts.
Speaking to Young People
If you have a great aspiration to learn
about other cultures, to go to other countries
and to help people accept and understand
each other, you have a very great ideal.
With that ideal you will not get stuck
in despair, blaming others for your difficulties;
instead your life will be very meaningful.
I am sharing these words with the young
people. Many young people have no path
and don’t know what to do with their
life each day. So they turn to drugs or
alcohol and waste their lives. This is
such a pity, because each young person
can become a great bodhisattva, a great
enlightened being whose deepest desire
is to help people and bring together those
who are separated by hatred or cultural
difference.
Dear Sangha, I
don’t want to be narrow-minded. I
don’t say that Vietnamese culture
is the best. Vietnam has many good things,
but also many negative things. Buddhism
has many good things, but also many negative
things. One shortcoming of Buddhism is
that we just talk, talk, talk about Buddhism
but we do not practice. We can talk beautifully
about non-self but we have a big sense
of self, a huge ego.
I have the capacity to see the good and
beautiful things in other cultures and
spiritual traditions. My true home is vast,
immense. And my two arms can embrace all
nations and all religions. I do not hate,
I do not have any enemies, not even the
terrorists and those who wage war on terrorism.
I only love them. I want the opportunity
to come close to them, listen to them,
and help them to let go of their wrong
perceptions, hatred, and violence.
There is no hatred in my true home; therefore
I have happiness. Even though there is
discrimination, violence, and craving in
life, I use these things as nourishment
for my practice. It is just like a garden:
wherever there are flowers there has to
be garbage. If you leave flowers for five
or ten days they will become garbage. An
intelligent gardener will collect all the
garbage to make compost and so bring forth
an abundance of fruits and flowers. It
is not a matter of not having garbage,
it is a matter of knowing how to transform
garbage into flowers.
Surrounding us are many wonders: the
blue sky, the white clouds, the blossoming
flowers, the singing birds, the majestic
mountains, the flowing rivers, countless
animals, the sunlight, the fog, the snow;
innumerable wonders of life. The Kingdom
of God is here in the present moment, but
because we have hatred and discrimination
we are not able to be in touch with it.
The Buddha teaches us not to be foolish,
not to run after the objects of desire:
riches, fame, power, and sensual pleasure.
There are people who have a lot of money,
power, fame, and sex, but they suffer endlessly;
some even commit suicide. When we listen
to the Buddha and come back to the present
moment to be in touch with the wonders
of life, we become rich, we become free
from objects of craving, and we have the
opportunity to recognize our wonderful
true home. If we have found our true home
then we will have enough love and understanding
to help transform and heal the wounds caused
by violence, hatred, and discrimination.......continued
Page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4
|