Ven. Subhuti, American Buddhist Monk; Dhr. Seven, Pat Macpherson (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
This past November 24th I helped donate and prepare breakfast and lunch for Pa-Auk Forest Monastery at Pyin Oo Lwin. I organized 28 Theravada Buddhist monks (including me) to donate a whole day's meals and fresh-squeezed apple juice. The cost came to 1,250,000 Burmese kyat (pronounced "chat"). Our donation fed approximately 530 yogis across four sections in Pa-Auk Forest Monastery. Monks don't touch money, so how is it possible for monks to donate? Let me explain.
At the end of the Rainy Season (Vassa) and on the full moon day of February, it's sort of like Buddhist-Xmas, and we get lots of gifts. Besides robes I received (three cotton and one synthetic), we got gifts like razors, blades, brooms, dustbins, and a little high-powered flashlight along with some other things. That was nice. A few days later there came two requisite slip papers worth 45,000 kyat. Below are those items.
Monks who strictly adhere to the Monastic Disciplinary Code (Vinaya) are not allowed to touch money. We can only ask for things from people who invite us to ask. There are several ways a monk can be invited. Most of my donors have given me full invitations that do not expire and are only limited to their ability and confidence (faith), which I’m supposed to gauge. These slips are of a different class of donation. It allows the recipient monk to ask for anything he needs up to the value up to 45,000 kyat from the monastery steward.
A week or two later, I give back the slips and we personally hand them to the woman in charge of the office. It was quite an event. Although meal donations by locals are down because nobody is allowed inside to witness their donations or help serve, there is still a long waiting list to donate daily meals. I tried to donate the Thanksgiving Day meal, but the best I could do was snag a cancellation on November 24th. Otherwise, I might have needed to wait until January or February 2021.
That is how 28 monks made a donation for the rest of sangha (spiritual community).
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