'Good looking houses
do not necessarily a home make'. Without much ado, let us get down to the
basic problem of parents and children, in the presence of both parties.
In the world today, the presence of unmarried mothers and fatherless children,
both of which are no more secrets to the young or the old, seem to ramify
the problem to a lamentable degree. The
concept of parents and children, particularly in terms of their personal
relationships, is driven in many quarters to assume a mythical or legendary
character. Such things as traditionally accepted mutual love, respect
and regard between parents and children do not seem to exist any more.
It is constantly one of serious challenge with regard to what are deemed
and termed
children's rights. More seriously, they are issues of neglect or harassment
of children on the part of parents, with a threatening note of accusation.
The creation
of humans in this world apparently has now changed hands. It has now come
to be a very much down-to-earth operation. But obviously with a disastrous
lack of responsibility and accountability, quite often. With IVF,
test-tube babies and surrogate mothers, it is both manageably and visibly
in the hands of humans. So far so good. Even school going age boys
and girls of today know and are often taught as a part of their
school curriculum, everything about human procreation and equally well
about interference with it. The world apparently has assumed that it has
perfect control over the new process of genetic manipulation. Cloning,
we fear, would take the process calamitously further. It becomes
doubly serious when one is not capable of determining the honesty and
sincerity and the seriousness of motivation and purpose behind such adventures.
Asia has been more
conservative, and we do seriously expect it would be left alone to continue
being so, on the relationship of parents and children and their life in
the home. The father and the mother in the home, who are visibly there
in the presence of their children and must continue to do so, are presented
as being entitled to claim, before any other elsewhere,
divinity and the right to regulate and govern the lives of those whom
they have produced. Buddhist texts in Pali present this idea as Brahmâ'
ti mâtâ-pitaro which means ' the mother and father are
the equals of the believed-in Creator of the world '. Without any further
need for theorizing, the visibly known creators of progeny are directly
before those whom they have created. Questions of legal and biological
paternity are problems we generate today, with our extraordinary skills
of manipulation and our ingenuity to shift our responsibilities. We create
the problems within the area of domestic life and we seek legal solutions
from elsewhere.
In Buddhism, children
are regarded as the inestimable [unassessed] assets of the humans. Puttâ
vatthu manussânam - they say. Therefore let us first discover
for ourselves the distinctive role which the parents must come forward
to play, both to safeguard their own honoured position as parents and to
make available to the children their esteemed service in the interests
of mankind, through the production of worthy children. 1. It is the
mother and the father who jointly bring forth the children into the world,
whether it be through the process of normal pregnancies or through in vitro
fertilization or the more complex
mechanism of today's test-tube babies. Therefore the mother and the
father are jointly called the generators of progeny or
âpâdakâ . 2. Thereafter the parents have to
step into the next invariable role of rearing their children [posakâ
= those who nourish and support].
The mother, once pregnant,
whether she is married or unmarried, would go through the normal process
of bearing the child. This limited time span is the period of the generative
process which the Buddhist ethics looks up on with the greatest respect
for the woman as mother. The care of the would-be-mother is a matter of
serious concern in Buddhist family
ethics, i.e. adequate pre-natal care bestowed on the mother which is
called gabbha-parihâra [or taking care of pregnancy], well
before to-day's ultrasound assistance.
The earliest evidence of this is already reflected in the Angulimala Sutta, [No.86] of the Majjhima Nikaya [ II.p.97ff.]. There we are told that the Buddha himself requested the newly ordained erstwhile bandit Angulimala to go and wish well and offer blessings and comfort to an expectant mother whom he had seen to be in distressing labour pains. The thera goes to her and on the strength of the good life lived by him since becoming a disciple of the Buddha, wishes comfort and well-being to her and the baby to be born : sotthi te hotu sotthi gabbhassa.
The Mahayana tradition of Buddhism offers a similar service to expectant mothers with its concept of the Goddess of Mercy or Koyasu Kannon who takes regular care of pregnant mothers. A fair range of statues of her are seen, in countries like China and Japan, sitting pretty with a babe on her lap [ See Koyasu Kannon in Alice Getty's The Gods of Northern Buddhism, p.96f.].
In our next issue we shall discuss the fourfold system of child care or Cattâri sangaha-vatthûni [Satara sangraha vastu in Sinhala] as propounded in early Buddhist teachings.
May all beings be well and happy. May there be peace on earth and goodwill
among men.
Sabbe sattâ bhavantu sukhitattâ