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A Turn Around - Mundgod 1999
by Venerable Thubten Chodron©
We are used to Tibetan monks teaching the
Dharma to Westerners in the USA, Europe, and Australia. But imagine
a Western nun teaching the Dharma in English to Tibetans in India!
I was, by chance (by karma?) involved in just such an experience
when I visited Mundgod last October. In South India, Mundgod is
home to Gaden and Drepung Monastic Universities, both of which
are filled with highly accomplished and realized teachers. How
then did I find myself giving a Dharma talk to 130-150 Tibetans?
Contrary to many Westerner's (and Hollywood's)
idealistic visions of Tibetan society, the average Tibetan knows
little about the Dharma, aside from rituals such as setting up an
altar and reciting a few prayers daily. Tibetans learn some basic
Buddhist ideas and values from their parents, but most do not study
the Dharma in earnest. First,
like the average person in the West, their lives are focused on
making a living. Second, most Dharma texts are in literary Tibetan,
replete with technical vocabulary that is foreign to the colloquial
language spoken daily. Lay Tibetans may attend initiations offered
by a high lama in order to receive a blessing, but attendance is
much lower when that same lama gives public teachings on lamrim
or thought transformation. Until now, the monks in the monasteries
in India have not taught classes for the lay Tibetans in the area,
nor have the latter asked them to. In addition, although monks lead
prayers for a few minutes every day at the Tibetan schools in India,
the children do not have classes in which they systematically learn
the Dharma and its practical applications in daily life.
Ven. Tenzin Wangchuk, Ven. Zong Rinpoche's
attendant, is an old friend of mine. Progressive and broad-minded,
he is concerned about this state of affairs, and tries to encourage
young Tibetans in India to learn the Dharma. To this end, he spoke
with the principal and director of the Central School for Tibetans,
an Indian-run school in Mundgod in which the children study many
subjects in English, to see if they were receptive to the idea
of an American nun giving a talk to the students. They were and
thus he asked me if I would do it. At first I hestitated, for
it seemed preposterous that I give a talk when Mundgod is filled
with much more qualified teachers than I. But Tenzin persuaded
me that the children would be receptive to hearing the Dharma
from a "modern American" who spoke in simple language
and gave daily life examples.
The teenagers from classes 10-12 were
seated on the concrete open-air meeting area while I sat on a chair
in front. For about forty-five minutes I spoke about the applicability
of the Buddha's teachings in our lives: methods to work with anger,
to overcome shyness, to develop self-confidence, and to get along
better with parents and friends. They
listened attentively, and after they realized that it was okay,
they loosened up and laughed at my jokes. The session was then opened
for questions, which they wrote down. Slips of paper flooded forward
from the usually shy youngsters, filled with thoughtful questions
that demonstrated their sincere interest. How
did I go from a religion that believed in God to one that didn't?
What did my parents say when I did not think as they did? Where
is the hell realms -- from a scientific viewpoint, isn't it hard
to accept its existence? How did the universe begin? Is Buddhism
compatible with science? What does it mean to have faith? What does
it mean to be a Buddhist -- if we recite om
mani padme hum but don't understand
it's meaning, what use is it? How do we deal with inner turmoil,
depression, and confusion? What is a Buddha?
When time came to close, all of us were
happy. Even the school's director, who had been serious before,
was smiling. But for days afterwards,
I shook my head in amazement: how did this unique situation come
about? I was extremely grateful, for this was my offering to His
Holiness the Dalai Lama. After all the teachings he has compassionately
given me and other Westerners, if I could repay that kindness in
just a small way by teaching his people, I was delighted.
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