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Sunday, June 17, 2012
Buddha Boy's Divine Powers (video)
UPDATED June 18, 2012 - Wisdom Quarterly (REPORTING); Etapasvi.com (video)
Buddha Eyes overlook Kathmandu Valley, Bodhnath Stupa, Nepal (Cococinema/flickr.com)
The following documentary was made when Buddha Boy (now Ven. Dharma Sangha) had been meditating for three years
without food or water. Controversy swirled around him. And few seemed to
notice the more extreme miracle: It is extremely difficult if not impossible to sit in
meditation for very long. It can be done by superhuman force. But no amount of force can get a
teenager to do it for hours on end, day after day, month after month.
(Test yourself: Try to sit still for five whole minutes, then imagine
that multiplied by 288, the number of five-minute increments in a day, then by...). How many five-minute increments had there
been for Buddha Boy in the first ten months? Yet he sat motionless all day
long while people stared and filmed and tried to keep up. It's impossible, a "miracle" in and of itself. It was so unbelievable that people said it had
to be a mannequin they were staring at. But he moved slightly, he was sweating, he wasn't going to
the restroom, which he would have to if he were secretly being fed and
given water. Fasting is not the miracle. The real miracle is overcoming the mental chatter ("monkey mind") while sitting with
himself and the physical discomfort of not taking breaks.
NOTE: it is impossible and no knowledgeable person asserts
that this is the historical Buddha reborn. Having attained final nirvana
(parinirvana), there is no possibility of that. What the locals mean is that Buddha Boy is a bodhisattva, a buddha-to-be,
reborn into this world to gain supreme enlightenment and become a
teacher pointing the way to the final end of all suffering.
(Etapasvi) "Buddha Boy" is the popular misnomer of Ram Bahadur Bomjon, who was eventually ordained and became Ven. Tapaswi Palden Dorje.
Buddha Boy, Ven. Dharma Sangha, Palden Dorje
His stated goal was to sit and realize the liberating truth. The many visitors, onlookers, and investigators were disrupting him. He soon realized that would take six years, just as it had the historical Buddha (Siddhartha Gautama, Shakyamuni, "the Sage [muni] of the Shakya Clan"). When he left the area, he found a new banyan tree to sit under. But he also began to teach, and his message was PEACE. That seemed unlikely in the turmoil of Nepal, which has gone from a corrupt monarchy through a Maoist-revolution to some semblance of a republic. He also stood up to protest the barbaric "Old Testament" Brahmin practice of slaughtering an unbelievable number of animals to appease the Hindu gods (Nepal's Mass Animal Sacrifice) during the Gadhi Mai Fest. But the news reaching us today is that Nepal and its former-"last Himalayan Buddhist Kingdom" neighbor Bhutan have become the most peaceful nations in South Asia. His immediate goal seemed to have become to bring peace to Nepal. Mission accomplished.
Bhutan, Nepal most peaceful in South Asia
India.NYDailyNews.com, June 14th 2012
Vajrayana Buddhist novices (samaneras) in Nepal and Bhutan (india.nydailynews com)
Bhutan
and Nepal have been named the first and second most peaceful South
Asian nations, respectively. The Asia Pacific region is the fourth most
peaceful region in the world.
Bhutan and Nepal have taken the first and second spots as the most peaceful countries in South Asia, according to the latest Global Peace Index (GPI).
The study, conducted by the Australia and US-based Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP), has ranked Nepal in the 80th place after Bhutan among the 158 nations it took into account.
While India figures much behind, in the 142nd position, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and Pakistan have been ranked 103rd, 91st, and 149th among the countries respectively.
The GPI, released late on Tuesday, shows Bhutan tops in South Asia with the 19th position, while China has slid in the peace index to 89th from the 80th position last year.
According to the report, deaths related to internal conflict, displaced people, weapons export, heavy weapons, armed service personnel, death from external conflict, weapon imports, and jailed population have declined in Nepal. More
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