Saturday, August 30, 2008

India's Floods: a Manmade Disaster?

Jyoti Thottam (Time)


Indian Army soldiers help transport children to safer areas in Madhepura district, in the northern Indian state of Bihar, 8/29/08. An overcrowded boat rescuing people capsized in flood-ravaged Madhepura district, 95 miles northeast of Patna, killing 20 people, with the situation worsening because of heavy rains and a greater discharge of water from neighboring Nepal, officials said Saturday (AP Photo).

AP – Villagers wade through flood waters in Madhepura District in Bihar state, India, Thursday, Aug. 28, 2008.

Slideshow: Monsoon rains devastate India There was one thing different about this year's monsoon in India. As in so many seasons past, the annual rains began in June, flooding streets and villages and claiming dozens of lives. But when the Kosi River burst its banks on Aug. 18 in the northeastern state of Bihar, the destruction was much worse than anyone expected. "It is not a normal flood, but a catastrophe," Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar told reporters after flying over the affected areas.

After the river breached, it headed south and soon flooded the villages in its path. More than 2.1 million people in the worst-hit parts of Bihar are not only homeless but stranded, and 55 have been killed as the floods washed out the roads and railroad lines that connected residents to the rest of the country. "We can't reach there," says Dinesh Kumar Mishra, a civil engineer and head of the non-profit group Barh Mukti Abhiyan (Freedom from Floods Campaign), who spoke to TIME from northern Bihar, where he is trying to organize relief efforts.

"They are trapped." Mishra, who has been tracking monsoon floods for more than 20 years, says this year's flooding in Bihar is worse than previous years. "It is concentrated in a capsule form in one particular area," he says. Other monsoons may have killed or displaced more people, but the destruction was spread out over a larger territory.

Boat sinks in flooded northern India

Gavin Rainowitz (AP)

Villagers wade through floodwaters on a stretch of the National Highway 106 at Veerpur, in the northern Indian state of Bihar, Friday, 8/29/08. The Indian government has made available more than US$200 million to combat monsoon flooding in the country's north that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh described Thursday as a national calamity.(AP Photo/Aftab Alam Siddiqui)


Commuters wade through a flooded road at Madhepura town in India's eastern state of Bihar, 8/29/08 (Krishna Murari Kishan/Reuters).I


Indian flood-affected villagers wade through flood water in Sitpur in the Supaul district of India's northern state of Bihar. Massive flooding in eastern India has caused a "national calamity," the prime minister said Thursday after touring the devastated region where more than a million people remain trapped (AFP/Diptendu Dutta).


Flood-affected people catch fish in flooded water in Sonbarsha village, in India's eastern state of Bihar August 28, 2008. Indian army troops helped evacuate more than 120,000 people from floods in eastern India, but more bad weather raised fears that rivers would to continue to overflow, officials said on Thursday. The flooding, which officials say are the worst in 50 years, was caused after the Kosi river broke a dam in Nepal where it originates, unleashing huge waves of water that smashed mud embankments downstream in Bihar state(Reuters/Krishna Murari Kishan, INDIA).

Children displaced from their homes by severe flooding wait for a meal at a relief camp in North Bihar, India on 8/7/08 (Photo and caption submitted by Manish sinha).

PATNA, India -- A rescue boat filled with panicked flood victims capsized and killed 20 people in northern India, where monsoon flooding grew worse because of heavy rain and water flowing from neighboring Nepal, officials said Saturday.

The boat accident happened on Friday night in Madhepura district, 95 miles northeast of Patna, the capital of impoverished Bihar state, said O.N. Bhaskar, the superintendent of police. Those killed included one army rescue worker. Eight people swam to safety and 32 were rescued by troops, he said.

"The boat was overcrowded because people panicked to be rescued and clambered on board," Bhaskar told The Associated Press.

The death toll from this year's monsoon season across India has surpassed 800. Some 1.2 million people have been marooned and about 2 million more affected in Bihar state, where the Kosi river has burst its banks and submerged all roads leading to the region.

India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has described the flooding as a national calamity.

Rising waters have swept away and drowned at least 75 people in Bihar state since June, the start of the monsoon season, said Prataya Amrit, secretary of the state's disaster management department.

Authorities have rescued nearly 140,000 people and put most of them in state-run relief camps, Amrit said.

The situation was getting worse because of heavy rain in the region and a Kosi river breach on the Nepalese side, Amrit said Saturday.

"We can't assess the extent of the damage. It is colossal," he said. "But we will only be able to tell the extent after the water recedes."

The Indian government has made more than $200 million available to combat monsoon flooding. Nearly 1,500 soldiers have boosted rescue efforts in Bihar state and air force helicopters were dropping food to hundreds of thousand of people stranded by the rampaging river.

India's monsoon season, which lasts from June to September, brings rain vital for the country's farmers but often also causes massive destruction.

Despite the rescue operations under way, officials in Bihar have warned that the real danger is still ahead.

When the swollen Kosi river burst its banks in Nepal just north of the Indian border, it changed course, flowing through a fresh channel 75 miles to the east that has no protective embankments.

The river traditionally swells to a flood peak in October.

In 2007, monsoon floods killed more than 2,200 people across South Asia and left 31 million others homeless, short of food or with other problems. The United Nations called last year's floods the worst in living memory.

Explosion in Sri Lankan capital wounds at least 44

Bharatha Mallawarachi (AP)
Sri Lankan soldiers patrol the 'de facto' frontline at Nager Kovil in the Jaffna Peninsula. Sri Lankan troops killed 10 Tamil Tiger rebels during fresh clashes in the north as the military inches its way towards the guerrillas' political capital (AFP/File/Lakruwan Wanniarachchi).

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka -- The Sri Lankan military says an explosion has rocked the capital, Colombo. A military official says details on casualties were not immediately available after Saturday's blast. Pushpa Soyza, a spokeswoman for a Colombo hospital, says 44 wounded people are receiving treatment there. The military official spoke on condition of anonymity citing government policy. Sri Lanka is immersed in a decades-long civil war with Hindu-separatists in which more than 70,000 people have been killed. The Tamil Tiger rebels (LTTE) have been fighting for an independent state in the north and east since 1983.


Sri Lankan Tamil Hindu devotees take part in an annual cart festival by inserting hooks through their skin at Mayura temple in Colombo August 8, 2008. The act of inserting the hooks is one of the ways devotees fulfil their vows to Hindu gods (Reuters/Buddhika Weerasinghe).

A bomb destroyed bus in Kandy. Strife-torn Sri Lanka is bracing for intense and bloody battles as security forces close in on the political capital of the Tamil Tiger rebels, according to military analysts (AFP/File).

Friday, August 29, 2008

Middle Finger, Middle Way (Celebrity Mudra)

  • mu·dra /məˈdrɑ/ [muh-drah] –noun
  • 1. Buddhism. Any of a series of hand positions expressing an attitude or action of a meditator or deity.
  • ce·leb·ri·ty /səˈlɛbrɪti/ –noun
  • 1. a famous or well-known person treated like a deity.
(Compiled by Upaya Dayaka; Eds., Wisdom Quarterly) Parents of Eminem (Marshal Mathers) fans can relax -- the rapper may actually be preaching a peaceful Eastern philosophy. In his new book, Buddha or Bust, Perry Garfinkel says the Buddha’s wisdom is cryptically encoded in Eminem’s “Lose Yourself.”

The line “You better lose yourself in the music, the moment” mirrors the Buddhist meditative practice of mindfulness (vipassana), in which the practitioner lives in the here and now. “By being present in the moment, he finds himself,” Garfinkel says. Still, he adds, “I highly doubt Eminem would know a boddhisatva from a bodacious babe.” (Source)

It's not like it was back in Helen Mirren's day. Arguably it's worse. But bright lights cast long shadows. And even stars look for a guiding light and sometimes turn to the Buddha, between their misadventures that is.

There's Eminem on the one hand, but the same might be said of other celebrities, whose pop music lyrics leave a lot of room for interpretation. Canadian Avril Lavigne resists labels. However, she is attempting to put up an iconoclastic front.



And Britney Spears' well known head shaving saga was well reported, as well as apocryphal rumors of a conversion to Buddhism and ascetic reform.



Where Britney goes, it's only a matter of time before a few select celebrities follow (even if she didn't really go there outside the rumor mill). Soon squeaky clean Justin Timberlake will resort to Signing vulgarities.


And his sometimes drunk, embittered ex, Cameron Diaz:


And even sweet, down home multi-millionaire Jessica Simpson...
and "Friends" star Courtney Cox (goody two-shoes Monica)...



Michelle Williams and Heath Ledger (RIP) may even go further from Sign language to English.


Lindsay Lohan just committed to another faith -- as she fends for her girlfriend, deals with a death in the family, and blogs about her father -- and Paris Hilton was a jailhouse pre-conversion (or toted the right books and guru to cultivate that impression).


So can Kim Kardashian be too far behind?


One supermodel celebrity, Uma Thurman, is not only a well known Buddhist, she has a great dad to ask questions of (Prof. Robert Thurman, noted scholar and personal friend of the current Dalai Lama).

Kate Moss in "yoga" pose as a blonde buddha.

But it's Buddhist Kate Moss who was recently idolized in the form of a $2.8 million, 110 lb. gold statue reminiscent of the Buddha himself.

Orlando Bloom displaying a refreshingly different mudra

Orlando Bloom practices Nichiren Shoshu Buddhism (according to the World Tribune, a newsletter supporting the practice of Nichiren Buddhism, which featured him on cover). While it was known that he was a Buddhist, few knew that he was a SGI.

Orlando visited president Ikeda in Japan and wrote a poem for him:

"With the sword of the Lotus Sutra at my side,
With integrity as my staff,
with you and all of the Buddhas of the ten directions as my mentor,
With kosen-rufu as my goal, I will climb the mountainous path of the
Mystic Law until I gaze out from the peak.
There I will ready myself with gratitude for the next adventure.
I look forward to climbing many mountains -- lifetime after lifetime at your side.

"Sincerely, your disciple and friend, Orlando."

Nichiren Buddhism and Soka Gakai International (SGI), of course, advocate the chanting of the mantra "Nam myo ho ren ge kyo." SGI has a bigger star and long-time adherent in world famous singer Tina Turner. She is a remarkable chanter (even influencing the likes of Amy Winehouse), as she demonstrates for Larry King:

















Megan Fox, rushing through airports to the set of Diablo Cody's ("Juno" fame) new movie, is rumored to be "searching for herself." Then again, who isn't?


Brad Pitt and budding Buddhist mom Angelina Jolie [whose extraordinary familial piety comes in the form of a Buddhist "prayer-of-protection" (paritta) is tattooed on her shoulder in Cambodia's ancient Khmer script] are keeping open minds for all their kids: They celebrate Christmas thanks to Zahara, but also took in a Buddhist Water Ceremony on account of Cambodian-born son Maddox.



As for Madonna, who just turned 50 as she embarked on a new world tour, finding a center by meditating and studying Kabbalah is keeping her together and out of scandals (for the most part).

When all is said and done, it seems Avril Lavigne best sums up the magic of celebrity-mudras.

  • See related article on "Why People Are Obsessed with Celebrities."
  • NOTE: WQ loves celebrities, just doing their job of distracting the world and all. It is, however, not fond of the celebritization by the media (e.g., Sarah Palin).

Causes of Abdominal Discomfort


Mara, the personification of Death in Buddhism (L.A. Day of the Dead 2007)

Buddhist practitioners, like everyone else, take ill because of germs. And like everyone else, those germs come opportunistically. The cause behind them is psychological/spiritual/karmic. That is to say, weakness in a given part of the body precedes infection. The germs (parasites) are merely adventitious.

All illness has only one of four direct causes, according to Edgar Cayce, dysfunctional: assimilation, elimination, circulation, or relaxation. We must take in what we need, but then we must break it down, bring it into the cells, clear out its waste products, and have some serenity. A breakdown in any of these will lead to the manifestation of symptoms. But the symptoms only indicate the breakdown, not the cause of the breakdown that set the chain in motion. This could sometimes be past karma coming to fruition, current causes (such as stress, attack, etc.), or other conditions (diet, mental outlook, weather, etc.) weakening us. Humans do not get sick because they grow old; they grow old because they get sick.

Interestingly, for advanced Buddhist practitioners (and one assumes that this is also true of all virtuous figures regardless of their Dharma, faith, or religious label), another cause has also been identified. As the Dalai is currently suffering a bout of "abdominal discomfort," it is interesting to note the similarity to a previous case.

At times for renowned figures, Maras have been known to not take kindly to such activities or noble ideas. Thus, in the form of malicious spirits with the power of physical transformation, they have attempted to obstruct and impede the spread of Dharma (truth that runs counter to the world). Such a case occurred when Maha Moggallana was practicing meditation in a hut.

The Rebuke to Mara
The Middle Length Discourses of the Buddha (Bhikkhu Nanamoli & Bhikkhu Bodhi)

Thus have I heard. On one occasion the venerable Maha Moggallana was living in the Bhagga country at Sumsumaragira in the Bhesakala Grove, the Deer Park.

Now on that occasion the venerable Maha Moggallana was walking up and down in the open. And on that occasion Mara the Evil One had gone into his belly and had entered his bowels. Then the venerable Maha Moggallana considered thus: "Why is my belly so heavy? One would think it full of beans." Thus he left the walk and went into his dwelling, where he sat down on a seat made ready.
.
When he had sat down, he gave thorough attention to himself, and he saw Mara the Evil One had gone into his belly and had entered his bowels. When he saw this, he said: "Come out, Evil One! Come out, Evil One! Do not harass the Tathagata [one of the Buddha's many titles] do not harass the Tathagata's disciple, or it will lead to your harm and suffering for a long time."

Then Mara the Evil One thought: "This recluse does not know me, he does not see me when he says that. Even his teacher would not know me so soon, so how can this disciple know me?"

Then the venerable Maha Moggallana said: "Even thus I know you, Evil One. Do not think: 'He does not know me." You are Mara, the Evil One. You were thinking thus, Evil One: 'This recluse does not know me, he does not see me when he says that. Even his teacher would not know me so soon, so how can this disciple know me?'"

Then Mara the Evil One thought: "The recluse knew me, he saw me when he said that," whereupon he came up from the venerable Maha Moggallana's mouth and stood against the door bar.

The Wheel of Life and Death (Samsara) ruled over by Death (exoticindianart.com)

The venerable Maha Moggallana saw him standing there and said: "I see you there too, Evil One. Do not think: 'He does not seem me.' You are standing against the door bar, Evil One.

"It happened once, Evil One, that I was a Mara named Dusi ["the Corrupter" or "Corrupted One" since "Mara" is more the title of a position than a single being like Christianity's "Devil"], and I had a sister named Kali. You were her son, so you were my nephew.

"Now on that occasion the Blessed One Kakusandha [a previous buddha from aeons ago], accomplished and fully enlightened, had appeared in the world. The Blessed One Kakusandha, accomplished and fully enlightened, had an auspicious pair of chief disciples named Vidhura and Sanjiva..." (MN 50.1-9).

He goes on to recount how, as a Mara named Mara Dusi, he himself had considered that he did not know the coming and going of virtuous Buddhist monks and nuns. So he took possession of brahmin householders, telling them: "Come now, abuse, revile, scold, and harass the virtuous recluses of good character; then perhaps, when they are abused, reviled, scolded, and harassed by you, some change will come about in their minds whereby the Mara Dusi may find an opportunity." [By causing defilements to arise in their minds, he hopes to prevent them from escaping Samsara.]

Then, when he had taken possession of the brahmin householders, they did indeed abuse, revile, scold, and harass the virtuous recluses: "These baldheaded recluses, these dark skinned menial offspring of Brahma's feet, say 'We are meditators, we are meditators!' and with shoulders drooping, heads down and all limp, they meditate, premeditate, out-meditate, and mismeditate. Just as an owl on a branch waiting for a mouse meditates, premeditates, out-meditates, and mismeditates..."

[While it might sound good to meditate with the focus of an owl, the terms taken together elsewhere (MN 108.26) describe the meditation of someone whose mind is obsessed by the Five Hindrances.]

[The commentary takes great pains to point out that Mara did not exercise control over their actions (karma), in which case he alone would have been responsible and the brahmins would not have been responsible and could not have generated bad karma by their deeds. Rather, Mara caused the brahmins to imagine scenes of the monastics engaged in improper conduct, and this aroused their antagonism and induced (not forced) them to harass the recluses. Mara's intent in doing so was to make the recluses give rise to anger and dejection.]

Maha Moggallana now explains to Mara (whose name is Namuci) what happened to them as a result of their karma: "Now, Evil One, on that occasion most of those human beings, when they died, reappeared on the dissolution of the body, after death, in a state of deprivation, in an unhappy destination, in perdition, even in hell."

He further recounted how the Buddha Kakusandha told the recluses what the Mara Dusi was up to and how they should practice universal loving-kindness meditation in all directions. And how he asked them to follow that up with universal compassion, appreciative joy, and equanimity [the Brahma Viharas, "Divine Abidings," a.k.a., the "Four Immeasurables"].

This caused a problem for the Mara Dusi who considered: "Though I do as I am doing, still I do not know the coming or the going of these virtuous recluses of good character. Let me now take possession of the brahmin householders, telling them: 'Come now, honor, respect, revere, and venerate the virtuous recluses of good character; then perhaps, when they are honored, respected, revered, and venerated by you, some change will come about in their minds whereby the Mara Dusi may find an opportunity."

He did so, and as a result of their karma, when they died, most of them were reborn in a happy destination, even in the heavenly world[s]. The Buddha Kakusandha instructed the recluses on a meditation to overcome pride, negligence, egotism, conceit, complacency, and other such mental defilements. This also frustrated the Mara Dusi until he was driven to possess a boy to throw a rock at the head of one of the chief disciples causing him a bleeding gash. The Buddha Kakusandha turned to look at the Mara Dusi while stating "This Mara Dusi knows no bounds." He then fell into the Great Waste to suffer unbelievably for millenia only to be reborn as a repugnant chimera and now himself, aeons later, a chief disciple of a buddha.

What followed was the recitation of an extraordinary set of verses readers might find too hard to believe.

Exhausted Dalai Lama admitted to hospital


The Dalai Lama seen here at Lerab Ling temple with France's first lady, Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, just before taking ill (Reuters).

THE DALAI LAMA (Reuters, August 29, 2008) -- exiled Tibetan spiritual leader and head of the Tibetan Government in Exile (Dharmsala, India), has been admitted to a hospital in India with "abdominal discomfort."

The Vajrayana Buddhist leader, who canceled two foreign trips after he complained of fatigue, was "cheerful" after reaching the hospital in Mumbai (Bombay, India), a hospital spokesman said.

Doctors said there was no cause for concern. The announcement that he had been admitted to a hospital in Mumbai came a day after the Dalai Lama's office said he was suffering from exhaustion and would travel to the city for a medical check-up.

"There is nothing major to feel concerned about,'' his personal secretary Tenzin Taklha said. "But he has been admitted to the Lilivati Hospital in Mumbai because he was feeling some discomfort in his abdomen.''
---
It is expected that if he should die, the Tibetan separatist movement in China would devolve into chaos. It would also lead to some confusion regarding his succession since most Tibetans do not accept that China has abducted the Panchen Lama and nominated its own government-friendly replacement.

Chinese Democracy: Axl, Dalai Lama

Guns n' Roses is not the only group promoting Chi-nese Democracy. The Tibet Campaign is radically agitating Beijing for change and being crushed by the totalitarian state. Protests have continued before and after the 2008 Olympics.

Similarly, nine new Guns n' Roses Chinese Democracy tracks were recently leaked on the blog AntiQuiet, which was subsequently shut down and its operator arrested by the FBI to face charges for airing the songs.


Like Axl Rose, the Dalai Lama has been walking a tightrope between diplomacy and radical activity (between private serenity and behind-the-scenes work) to bring about the desired goal. The latter has succumbed to exhaustion, while the former has remained in near seclusion. Is Axl Rose a monk? Is the Dalai Lama a rockstar? If the shoe fits...

And on the topic of aging stars:

Temple balances Buddhism and Business

Modern times at the ancient Shaolin Temple, birthplace of Kung Fu

SHAOLIN TEMPLE, China (CBS, 8/22/08) -- It's an ancient temple tucked in China's mountains. But there's nothing old-fashioned about the birthplace of kung fu.


Money-Making Monks: Shaolin Temple Buddhist monks are unlike what you may think. They are peaceful but also disciplined in the art of finance. Barry Petersen reports.

The mountains echo with the prayers of Shaolin Temple's Buddhist monks. It's a place not as obscure as you might think, because it is where Kung Fu was invented, CBS News correspondent Barry Petersen reports.

The world's first live action heroes came from right there, 15 centuries ago. But temples can't live off the past. They need money for today. "To survive," says Abbot Shi Yongxin through a translator, "we seek help from all walks of society." In China, they call Abbot Yongxin the CEO of Shaolin. His days can start at his laptop, and end with a plane flight -- all about raising money for his temple.
There are some who criticize mixing Buddhism and business but these monks have something to sell to keep their temple prosperous. In this day and age, there are a lot of new ways of selling it. Like the temple's TV show, or its Web site and gift shop hawking Shaolin Temple products -- all this helping to attract some three million paying tourists a year.

Most of us know kung fu from watching stars like Bruce Lee, David Carradine and Jackie Chan, each bringing his own moves to the movies.

"When you study martial arts, you learn discipline," said Jackie Chan. But 50,000 students a year come to schools here from around the world to learn the original style and study this martial art as a kind of meditation.

Marketing his monks has made the abbot so famous in China that he gets a rock star's welcome when he walks the temple grounds. And the monks chat into cell phones, or hit the computer, as the abbot's influence brings his rank and file smack into the 21st century.

"I am a spiritual leader," he says, "who also faces the outside world." It's a brave new world where even a chopstick-fighting panda is a summer hit. We'd like to think those monks from 1,500 years ago would approve. How many art forms have lasted so long, and with a bit of savvy selling, the world will keep coming here to get a kick out of Kung Fu.

Making Female history: from Sangha to Superpower leadership

  • 9/28/08 UPDATE: The Real Palin Revealed VIDEO (3:11)


In this Dec. 13, 2007 file photo, Alaska Republican Governor, Sarah Palin, poses in her office in the Capitol, in Juneau, Alaska. John McCain tapped little-known Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin to be his vice presidential running mate, two senior campaign officials told The Associated Press on Friday. A formal announcement was expected within a few hours at a campaign rally in swing-state Ohio (AP Photo/Chris Miller, File).

McCain, on his 72nd birthday, has chosen a female running mate, conservative Republican governor of Alaska Sarah Palin. A female caller on NPR's Airtalk called this a "transparent act of desperation" on McCain's part, countering Republican hype that this V.P. candidate leveled the playing field with Barack Obama.

In 1940 Khertek Anchimaa-Toka of Tuva became the first female head of state. Benazir Bhutto was the first woman to be elected leader of a Muslim state; she was recently assassinated by exiting Pakistan president Musharraf.

The first female head of state of a Buddhist country (Sri Lanka) was Chandrika Kumaratunga in 1994. US Democrats have done a great deal to shatter this glass ceiling in America in 1984 by running Geraldine Ferraro and, more prominently, with the recent efforts of Hillary Rodham-Clinton.

The Real "Juno"
McCain's veep choice is historic and hardly known
Steve Quinn and Calvin Woodward (AP)

JUNEAU, Alaska - In two short years, Sarah Palin moved from small-town mayor with a taste for mooseburgers to the governor's office and now — making history — to John McCain's side as the first female running mate on a Republican presidential ticket. More >>

(BBC)

The choice of a female candidate is excellent news because it ensures that with either side winning, the inherent sexism and racism in the US, the world's only superpower, will be challenged -- just as it was challenged by the Buddha when he brought the Sangha and his Dispensation to fulfillment by ordaining nuns. (See history and critique of Theravada bhikkhuni Sangha).
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Although criticized for subordinating them to monks, the Buddha's paramount interest was preserving the Dharma while making this radical social move, which was far more radical 25 centuries ago. Buddhism was the first world-religion to fully include women. Prehistoric buddhas had also had fully ordained female disciples (bhikkhunis, bhikshunis), taking an enlightened view of sexual equality.

(NOTE: In India, Mahavira is said to have preceded the Buddha by ordaining women, and even today Jainism has more female monastics than male).

An American ordination:

"Why I became a Buddhist nun"

Thai police use tear gas to disperse protesters


Buddhist monks sit with anti-government protesters during a demonstration inside Government House in Bangkok, on August 28. Thai anti-government protesters besieging Government House expelled about 1,000 police from the compound early Friday, testing the prime minister's promise to end the rally peacefully (AFP).

Sutin Wannabovorn (AP)

BANGKOK, Thailand - Thai police used tear gas to disperse a crowd of several thousand anti-government protesters who were besieging city police headquarters. The prime minister said he might declare a state of emergency if the rioting worsens.



Associated Press journalists witnessed police throwing dozens of canisters of gas at the crowd of at least 2,000 people. Protest leaders claimed they had come to demand the surrender of officers who allegedly beat demonstrators earlier in the day.

Tensions rose Friday, three days after members of the People's Alliance for Democracy occupied Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej's office compound to demand his ouster.
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Anti-government protesters shout at Government House in Bangkok. Thai anti-government protesters besieging Government House expelled about 1,000 police from the compound early Friday, testing the prime minister's promise to end the rally peacefully (AFP/Pornchai Kittiwongsakul).

The alliance accuses Samak's government of serving as a proxy for former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a 2006 coup and faces several pending corruption cases. Thaksin is in self-imposed exile in Britain.

Alliance sympathizers also staged actions in other parts of the country, causing railway and airline delays and cancellations.

More than 200 railway workers staged a work stoppage by taking emergency sick leave, forcing the cancellation of 35 trains from Bangkok to major provinces, said State Railways of Thailand spokesman Pairat Rojcharoen-ngarm.

Protesters also tried to block passengers from entering three airports in southern Thailand, at Hat Yai, Krabi and the popular tourist destination of Phuket. Airport authorities announced that all three airports would close Friday night for safety reasons, causing flights in and out to be canceled.


Anti-government protesters push line of Metropolitan Police in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, 8/29/08. Thai police muscled into crowds of anti-government protesters occupying the prime minister's office compound Friday to deliver a court order demanding they leave, sparking scuffles that left several people with minor injuries (AP Photo/Wason Wanichakorn).

Earlier Friday, several skirmishes erupted outside the Government House as police and protesters jockeyed for position.

In the morning, police muscled into the site to deliver a court eviction demanding that the alliance members leave the site. Several minor injuries were reported throughout the day as brief skirmishes erupted around the perimeter of the compound and in nearby streets.

Police then announced that they would retreat in order to ease tensions.

"The situation was very volatile and a clash was likely if we pushed on," police spokesman Surapol Tuantong told the NBT TV network. "We have given way to let them back into the Government House to prevent a clash. All security forces have left the government compound."

But protesters then descended on the police station.

"We went there to demand responsibility from the police who ordered the beatings of protesters," said alliance spokesman Suriyasai Katasila. "They responded by firing tear gas at us."


Thai monk joins a rally outside Government house in Bangkok, 8/29/08 (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit).

About 10 people suffered minor injuries in that clash.

Earlier, Sondhi Limthongkul, a protest leader, vowed to continue the protests until Samak steps down.

"We definitely won't leave the Government House until we can topple Samak's administration," Sonthi told The Associated Press. "He cannot stay on for long, I am very sure of that. You can see people coming more and more to join us."

Sondhi promised that the alliance would install a "clean and efficient political system."

Arrest warrants were issued Wednesday for nine of the group's leaders on charges of insurrection, conspiracy, illegal assembly and refusing orders to disperse. Insurrection, the legal equivalent of treason, carries a maximum penalty of death or life imprisonment.

Protesters deck on the ground as Thai police shoot tear gas into them in Bangkok, 8/29/08 (AP Photo/Wason Wanichakorn).

Riot police scuffle with demonstrators outside the United Nations Building in Bangkok, 8/29/08 (AP Photo/Wally Santana).

Another court issued an order late Wednesday demanding that the protesters leave the government compound immediately and stop blocking streets. But on Friday, the court suspended the order, saying it posed a risk of further unrest.

Samak, who refuses to resign, has accused the protesters of trying to provoke violence.

After Thaksin was deposed in the bloodless coup, his party was dissolved and he was banned from public office until 2012.

Thailand's embattled prime minister has vowed to end massive rallies against his rule without force -- raising the spectre of a prolonged siege of Bangkok's main government compound (AFPTV).

But Samak led Thaksin's political allies to a December 2007 election victory, and their assumption of power triggered fears that Thaksin would make a political comeback on the strength of his continued popularity in Thailand's rural majority.

Thailand has had 17 constitutions since 1932 — a reflection of the political instability and military coups that followed the drafting of the first charter that created a constitutional monarchy. The last coup was in 2006, when Thaksin was ousted.

The prime minister spoke Friday after two meetings with the country's military chiefs to discuss the increasing unrest in Bangkok's streets caused by protesters seeking his resignation.

Supporter of the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) wipes the face of a fellow supporter after riot police used tear gas during clashes outside the metropolitan police headquarters in Bangkok 8/29/08. Protesters trying to overthrow Thailand's government launched an attack on Bangkok's police headquarters on Friday as demonstrations against Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej spread from the capital (REUTERS/Stringer).

Samak says he had ordered police to withdraw from confronting demonstrators because he hoped to calm down the situation, in which both sides scuffled roughly in the street.

But he says that after he hosts a ceremony honoring Thailand's royal family Saturday, he will consider declaring a state of emergency if the situation deteriorates.

That would allow suspending some legal procedures to restore the peace.

Anti-government demonstrators push past police barricades Friday, Aug. 29, 2008, near the Royal Plaza in Bangkok, Thailand (AP Photo/David Longstreath).

Anti-government protesters gather at the Government House in Bangkok. Thai anti-government protesters besieging Government House expelled about 1,000 police from the compound early Friday, testing the prime minister's promise to end the rally peacefully (AFP).

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

The Path to Meditation


Pranayama during meditation with kundalini caduceus rising (gnosisonline.com)

Meditation can be difficult enough. How do we get there, to the doorstep of meditation? How then do we enter deeply and sink, expand, or float (depending on the metaphor being utilized) once we arrive at the threshold?

PRANAYAMA
Control or restraint of energy (prana) through the breath is one certain route to success.

Typically, at this time, breath is only talked about in terms of Anapanasati, "mindfulness of in-and-out breathing." There is no attempt made to control, calm, or restrain the breath. It is just observed. This is the principle practice of Goenka Ten Day Retreats, which are free, worldwide, and open to all serious applicants.

Yoga, however, talks about preparing the mind (citta), body (rupa), and spirit (prana) for successful meditation. Diet (fresh, alkalizing vegetarian), flexibility (strength and stretching through poses), skillful restraints on conduct (yama) and observances (niyama) are all part of the Eightfold method of Ashtanga or Integral Yoga. This philosophy, rooted in the Vedas and the writings of seers (rishis) was much influenced by the Noble Eightfold Path, which is the direct route to enlightenment. The latter is generally only explained in very general terms. Yoga's Eightfold method, if explained at all, is much more specific. And it relates to preparing the mind for samadhi (deep states of purified concentration).

The present focus is breath taken out of the context of the other limbs or arms of the method. Breath immediately links mind and body and brings the mind under control for meditation, prepares it, soothes it, and seals it. Mindfulness of breathing then becomes easy, joyful (piti), and extraordinarily powerful.

Energetic body centers visible during meditation (amsnac4.com)

The Science of Pranayama
Swami Sivananda

The practice of breath-control (pranayama) has been viewed with fear in certain quarters on account of certain limitation, namely the absolute necessity of the nearness to a perfected guru, the dietary restrictions, and the like. Swami Sivananda has explained herein in clear terms the vagaries of such fears and has prescribed very simple and safe methods. The book contains suitable lessons for all types of practitioners. Those who follow the special instructions given towards the end of the book can be sure of their guaranteed success and safety. Breath-control is an important limb of Eightfold Yoga. It is equally necessary for all in their daily life. The science of relaxation is also a very valuable gift to readers -- Divine Life Society (publishers).

This is an exact science. Tasmin sati svasaprasvasayorgativicchedah pranayamah -- "Regulation of breath or the control of prana is the stoppage of inhalation and exhalation, which follows after securing that steadiness of asana (posture, base, seat)" -- Patanjali's Yoga Sutras (Ch. II-49).

Svasa mean inspiration, pravasa expiration. Breath is the external manifestation of prana, the "vital force." Breath, like electricity, is gross. Prana, like energy, is subtle. By exercising control over the external, one gets a handle on the inner, more subtle movement of energy. Control of prana means control of mind. Mind cannot operate without the help of prana. The vibrations of prana produce thoughts in the mind. It is this subtle or psychic energy (prana) that is intimately connected with the mind.

If one can control the breath, one can easily control the inner vital force and thereby build up one's meditation to astounding success.

WHAT IS PRANA?
"One who knows prana knows Vedas is the important declaration of the Srutis. The Vedanta Sutras state that, "For the same reason, breath is Brahman." Prana is the sum total of all energy that is manifest in the universe, the forces in nature, the latent powers (physical and mental) dormant in human beings. Heat, light, electricity, magnetism are all manifestations of prana. People manipulate the same influence as the yogi but, of course, do it unconsciously. Breath control makes this influence conscious, brought under the command of the will.

SEAT OF PRANA
The seat of prana is the heart (in exactly the same way that Buddhist Abhidharma or Buddhist Psychology states that the stream of conscious moments (citta) originates in the heart not the brain). Though prana is one, it assumes five forms according to the function it performs. These five reside in various regions of the body (heart, anus, navel, throat, or all-pervading). There are, moreover, sub-pranas.

FUNCTIONS
The five are responsible for respiration, excretion, digestion, deglutition (swallowing food), and blood circulation, respectively, and so on with the sub-pranas. In this way we can begin to understand that inscrutable "consciousness" is not a thing (not synonymous with prana). It is a function of energy.

CONSCIOUSNESS
If Western science is ever to understand it, a paradigm shift will be necessary. The Abhidharma speaks of consciousness as a process, not a "thing." The Five Aggregates (khandhas, skandhas) interact. The first is the aggregate called form or body (rupa). The remaining four are taken together as "mind" or "name" (nama). Consciousness is sometimes spoken of as the stream of countless cittas (moments of consciousness), but it is technically incorrect to think that a citta is a particle or thing that could stand alone and be "conscious." Even a citta is not a citta, as it were, not an "atom" or singular building block of reality, not a "consciousness particle." For it can be broken down and analyzed into parts -- sub-moments -- known as arising, passing away, and between the two a phase called "the turning of that which stands." More than Abhidharma theory, this is a directly observable fact visible to meditators who turn their attention to the physical heart. (To learn about the Abhidharma or to confirm these statements by direct experience, see a living Buddhist meditation master at, e.g., http://www.paauk.org/).

INTRODUCTION
Today, for quick travel, the material world presents us the railway, steamers, aeroplanes, and so forth. But Yogins claim that by yogic culture the weight of the body can be so reduced that it can fly over space to any distance in an instant. They can prepare a magic ointment, which when applied to the soles of the feet gives them power to traverse any distance on earth within a very short time [the Buddhist metaphor is "in the time it would take a strong man to flex his arm or to extend it again"]. By the practice of Khechari Mudra [hand yoga], by applying the elongated tongue to the posterior nasal openings, they can fly in the air. By keeping a magic pill in their mouth they can also move in space any any place in the twinkling of an eye.

Dalai Lama, battling exhaustion, cancels trips


The Dalai Lama (L), France's first lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy (C) and Sogyal Rinpoche (R), director of the Buddhist temple Lerab Ling, attend the inauguration of the temple on 8/22/08 (REUTERS/Pascal Guyot/Pool/France).

Ashwini Bhatia (AP, 8/27/08)

DHARMSALA, India -- The Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, was suffering from exhaustion and has canceled two planned international trips to undergo medical tests, his office said Wednesday.

The 73-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner had been "experiencing some discomfort in the past couple of days," a statement from his office said, adding that his doctors had diagnosed "exhaustion."

The Dalai Lama just returned from an 11-day visit to France, capping an intense few months since the violent uprising against Chinese rule in the Tibetan capital, Lhasa, in March and the subsequent harsh Chinese crackdown.

The Dalai Lama spends several months a year traveling the globe to highlight the struggle of Tibetans for greater freedom from China and to teach Buddhism.

He canceled two upcoming trips to Mexico and the Dominican Republic and would rest over the next three weeks, said Thupten Samphel, the spokesman of the self-declared Tibetan government-in-exile.
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Samphel said the Dalai Lama would travel to Mumbai for medical tests Thursday before returning to recuperate in the north Indian hill town of Dharmsala, where he has had his headquarters since fleeing Tibet in 1959 after an abortive uprising against China.

"He has been going to Mumbai for regular health checkups on advice from his doctors for quite a long time," said Samphel. He said all appointments and visits would be canceled for three weeks.

While the Dalai Lama is generally thought to be in good health, this is not the first time exhaustion has laid him low. In 2006, the globe-trotting Buddhist leader was grounded by his doctors because of exhaustion and canceled all his engagements for a month.

Since the outbreak of violence in Tibet, China has stepped up its campaign to vilify him, blaming him for recent unrest which Beijing says was part of a campaign to split the Himalayan region from the rest of China.

He has denied the allegations and says he only wants greater autonomy for the Himalayan region to protect its Buddhist culture.
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Dalai Lama during consecration ceremony of Lerab Ling Temple, Roqueredonde, southern France, 8/22/08 (AP Photo/Thibault Camus, Pool)