Do we know enough about the identity of our own children? Who are they, why are they here, where do they come from, who are accountable for their proper growth and development?
We have already spoken about prenatal care, both of the mother and of the unborn child. Once children arrive, Buddhism shows great concern about the healthy rearing of children in the home. Four segments of child care and growth of love are specifically indicated in our Buddhist literature in Pali with meticulous care [See Cattâri Sangaha-vatthûni at A.N. II.p.32]. Buddhist ethics pertaining to this area appear to be built on the belief that love, marital relations, sex and procreation are closely integrated issues. Buddhism looks upon children as the inestimable wealth of the people, i.e. of the human community [puttâ vatthu manussânam S.N. I. p.37].
This wealth is what people acquire on their own choice. According to Buddhist thinking, it may not be incorrect to say that children arrive on the family scene as propagators of the species. Therefore it is logical that they must be made to come in terms of parental needs. It is also admitted that for the successful fulfillment of this role, both parents have to play an indispensable and indisputable joint role, both in the production and the care of the children. This human body, as far as we know up to date, owes its origin solely to the mother and the father [mâtâ-pettika-sambhavo].
Rearing of children therefore is an obligation
we owe to our children. It has to be much more than their physical growth.
The physical growth of the child within the mother's womb appears to be
designed to take place even without a willed direction of the mother. We
produce below what we consider, according to Buddhist teachings, to be
very precise and very bold new thinking at world level on this issue of
'the mother and the unborn child'.
" The single-celled fertilized ovum, or later
developing embryonic human being within her uterus, cannot, by any
stretch of imagination, be considered part of her body. This new living
being has a genetic code that is totally different from the cells of the
mother's body. He or she is, in truth, a completely separate growing human
being and can never be considered part of the mother's body.
Does she have a right to her own body? Yes. But this is not part of her
own body. It is another person's body." [ ABORTION By Dr. & Mrs. J.C.
Willke. Hayes Publishing Company, Inc. Revised Edition September 1990.p.25]
This idea of the identity of the growing
up child within the uterus of the mother, with complete independence from
her, seems to be amply supported by the story of Trisha Marshall reported
by Prof. Peter Singer. Twenty-eight year old Trisha was shot in the head
on 19 April 1993. She was declared brain dead. At the time she was seventeen
weeks pregnant. A respirator, together with other medical assistance like
nutrients passed down a tube through her nose and into her stomach, kept
her bodily functions continuing.
She continued to live for three and a half months. On 3 August, a baby boy was delivered by a cesarean birth. A doctor from the hospital described the baby as 'cute'. [ Peter Singer - Rethinking Life & Death 1994. p.9ff.].
Once out of its insulated living in the
mother's womb, a child has to be fitted, as its legitimate right, into
a life in the home. A child must have a mother that suckles its young.
Parents are said both to produce and look after their progeny [âpâdakâ
and posakâ]. Once out in the world, out of the mother's
womb, custodianship of children does and must necessarily devolve on the
parents, including we should imagine, both the physical and mental
nurture. The four segments of child care referred to earlier cover these
very comprehensively.
Provision of adequate and satisfactory
food and clothing by the parents in terms of the needs of the children
is the first requirement as obligations of the parents. This [No.1] goes
under the name of dâna = providing or gifting [basically of
food and clothing]. Buddhist family ethics lists this as very high-ranking
virtue in which parents should never fail. Care of the family in this sector
referred to as putta-dârassa sangaho is deemed a success-generator
or mangala in the household life.
Coming next and closely tied up with it in
spirit is the loving care expressed in words by parents towards their children
and is termed 'loving words' or peyya-vajja [No.2].
Harshness of word directed by parents towards children, for whatever reason,
would naturally alienate the younger from the older. Senseless cruelty
of expression in the home as the outcome of the rage of the mother or the
father is not to be offered as substitutes for firmness and sternness of
expression in bringing about restraint and discipline in a home full of
growing up children.
Children would invariably feel a lack of security,
both physical and emotional, in the home in which they live and in the
hands of people in whose midst they are destined to grow up. One may speak
in favour of the choice of single-parent homes in such circumstances but
Buddhism would maintain that replacements for parental love is hard to
find. Calculated austerity in the bestowal of love upon the growing up
community would be looked upon as unpardonable niggardliness on the part
of parents who themselves are perhaps victims of psychopathic aberrant
behaviour, passed on from generation to generation.
Hence this insistence on love communicated to children
through loving words. It is an indispensable lubricant in the smooth running
of the home. Thus there arises the need for regular check-ups of the life-style
in the home, for sins of omission and commission, through regular family
get-togethers with parents and children. We shall take up items 3 and 4
in our next discussion.
May all beings be well and happy. May there be peace on earth and goodwill
among men.