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Vol. 14, No. 1: 7 January 2004
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WORDS OF DHAMMA |
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The Buddha spoke the following verses to the merchants of Rajagaha
Tasma hi pandito poso, |
Sheltering and conducive Therefore, a wise man, considering his own welfare, -Culavagga 295 |
The Gift of Dhamma
by S. N. Goenka |
THE GIFT OF DHAMMA
S. N. Goenka
Goenkaji has often talked about the gifts of dana, the mental volition of the
giver and the many ways to give dana. He talks about the supreme gift of Dhammadana,
the transmission of the Dhamma in its pure form from teacher to student through
the generations. In addition, he points out that there are ways to share in
the giving of Dhammadana, even for those who are not teachers. Following is
the concluding part of a selection of his words on this topic, drawn from various
articles and talks and adapted for the Newsletter.
The Dhammadana of Service
From a talk given by Goenkaji to Dhamma servers at Dhamma Giri in June 1986
and printed in 'For the Benefit of Many.'
What is the purpose of Dhamma service? Certainly, it is not to receive board
and lodging nor to pass the time in a comfortable environment nor to escape
from the responsibilities of daily life. Dhamma servers know this well.
Such persons have practiced Vipassana and realized by direct experience the
benefits it offers. They have seen the selfless service of the teachers, management
and Dhamma servers-service that enabled them to taste the incomparable flavor
of Dhamma. They have begun to take steps on the Noble Path, and naturally have
started to develop the rare quality of gratitude, the wish to repay this debt
for all that they have received.
Of course, the teacher, management and Dhamma servers gave their service without
expecting anything in return nor will they accept any material remuneration.
The only way to pay back the debt to them is by helping to keep the Wheel of
Dhamma rotating, to give to others the same selfless service. This is the noble
volition with which to give Dhamma service.
As Vipassana meditators progress on the path, they emerge from the old habit
pattern of self-centeredness and start to concern themselves with others. They
notice how everywhere people are suffering: young or old, men or women, black
or white, wealthy or poor, all are suffering. Meditators realize that they themselves
were miserable until they encountered the Dhamma. They know that, like them,
others have started to enjoy real happiness and peace by following the Path.
Seeing this change stimulates a feeling of sympathetic joy and strengthens the
wish to help suffering people come out of their misery with Vipassana. Compassion
overflows, and with it, the volition to help others find relief from their suffering.
Dana of Right Thought, Speech and Actions
The following message by Goenkaji discusses the opening of the first center
in Europe, Dhamma Mahi. It was written for publication in Nouvelles de Vipassana,
the French edition of the Vipassana Newsletter, appearing in June 1988.
The hour of Vipassana has struck in Europe. For many years, devoted students
in France and neighboring countries have worked hard to make the Dhamma available
to others. Now, with the purchase of a center, those efforts of so many students
are coming to fruition. I am deeply pleased to see the good results of your
work.
The establishing of a center marks a new stage in the growth of Dhamma. It is
important to understand its significance.
A center for Vipassana meditation is not a commune where members of a sect can
live in isolation from the outside world, according to their own peculiar rules.
It is not a club designed for the enjoyment of its members. It is not a temple
in which to perform religious ceremonies. It is not a place for socializing.
A center is, instead, a school which teaches one subject: Dhamma, the art of
living. All who come to a center, whether to meditate or to serve, come to receive
this teaching.
To ensure that the Dhamma is offered in its strength and purity, you follow
the discipline in all centers. The more carefully this is maintained, the stronger
the center will be. Many ordinary activities are forbidden by this discipline,
not because there is anything wrong in them but because they are inappropriate
at a center for Vipassana meditation. Remember, this is the only place in your
country where one can learn this type of Vipassana. The discipline is a way
of preserving this unique purpose of Dhamma Mahi; guard it carefully.
The foundation of the edifice of Dhamma that you will construct here is sila
(moral conduct). As you know, undertaking sila is the essential first step in
a Vipassana course since, without it, meditation will be weak. It is equally
essential that all who serve at a center keep the Five Precepts as carefully
as possible. The rule of Dhamma has been established at Dhamma Mahi. From now
on, there should be no killing on this land, no stealing, no sexual activity,
no wrong speech, no use of intoxicants. This will create a calm and peaceful
atmosphere conducive to the work of self-purification.
With the firm base of sila, the practice of self-purification can proceed. Keep
in mind that this is the most important task at the center-first, last and always.
All who come to serve at the center, even for a few hours, must not neglect
their duty to meditate here as well. By doing so, they strengthen the Dhamma
atmosphere and give support to other meditators.
This is not, of course, the only place in Europe at which meditation and the
teachings of the Buddha are practiced; but it is the only place devoted to this
particular transmission of the teachings and this particular form of Vipassana.
See that the center is kept at all times specifically for this purpose.
The final essential part of the technique is metta, and this too must be practiced
by all who come to the center, whether to sit or serve. For your meditation
and service to be beneficial, you must perform it joyfully, selflessly, and
lovingly. Whatever task you undertake, do it with the volition that by your
action all beings may be happy. Whenever welcoming others to the center, whether
meditators or visitors, do so with metta. Permeate this land with vibrations
of love and good will, so that all who come here feel that they have entered
a sanctuary of peace.
From a talk given on March 14, 1982 at Dhamma Thali to inaugurate construction
of its pagoda.
There are so many ways to help. One can help physically. One can help by speaking.
If someone has wealth, then one can help financially. These are essential; however,
the best way to help is by meditating.
The more old students meditate on this land, the more their efforts will become
instrumental in the welfare of many. During the lifetime of Sayagyi U Ba Khin,
there were so many of his students who had reached the stage of nibbana and
could experience it whenever they wished and as long as they wished. One could
ask, "How did they become free of their debt to the Dhamma, the center
and their teacher?" Others might give dana of physical effort or wealth
or other kinds of help to become free of their debts. But for such good meditators,
it is proper that at least once a week, they visit this place and sitting in
some cell for an hour, they enter nibbana. That is such a great service. The
whole center will become suffused with those Dhamma vibrations. The Dhamma strength
of the vibrations generated by each meditator will depend upon how much he or
she has meditated and what stage has been attained, but all right effort will
benefit those who come to the center.
Building meditation cells for students is in itself a very meritorious act.
However, it is much more meritorious for every meditator to come here once a
week to meditate. This is the dana of our meditation. It is the dana of our
meditative vibrations that will purify the land, will ripen it, thereby making
it easier for future students to gain more with less effort. Each person has
to put in effort, has made an effort to fight the defilements within. However,
if the environment around is charged with Dhamma vibrations, the effort becomes
easier. If the vibrations at the center are impure, they hinder progress, making
it more difficult for the student to face the defilements within. They prevent
the student from working properly. If students receive the protection of pure
Dhamma vibrations, they gain great strength, great help.
Meditators should generate metta within. By meditating at the center, we certainly
benefit ourselves. We cannot say how many others will also benefit by our meditation,
will gain from our work. People will benefit for centuries. They will automatically
become attracted to a place where Dhamma vibrations arise. So long as the Dhamma
is maintained in its pure form, people will meditate and benefit for centuries.
¦
S. N. Goenka has often said that Dhamma service is an integral part of an old
student's growth and development on this Path. Giving Dhamma service in accordance
with the Code of Conduct for Dhamma Workers strengthens a student of Vipassana
for living a Dhamma life in the outside world.
Over the years, thousands of young Vipassana meditators have benefited tremendously
by giving Dhamma service during college vacations or soon after completing their
studies. The training they receive during Dhamma service is an ideal preparation
to begin a successful career. Serving in a Dhamma land is an essential part
of one's progress in Dhamma.
Those who wish to give Dhamma service, may contact the Course Manager, Dhamma
Giri, Igatpuri 422 403. Tel: (02553) 244076, 244086; Email: info@giri.dhamma.org
or the Course Manager of the Vipassana center in their area.
The Code of Discipline for Dhamma service and the Dhamma service application
form are available at http://www.dhamma.org/os.
(Username: oldstudent. Password: behappy)
Mere sukha mem shhanti mem, bhaga sabhi ka hoya.
Isa mangalamaya Dharma ka, labha sabhi ko hoya.
May my happiness and peace be shared by one and all.
May this munificent Dhamma benefit one and all.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
(The following is from "The Clock of Vipassana Has Struck" published
by VRI.)
Question: The way to liberate the mind is essentially practical but how does
one develop these mental qualities of awareness and equanimity you have just
pointed out?
S. N. Goenka: A way was found which could be understood and practiced. It is
the Fourth Noble Truth, that is, the Noble Eightfold Path.
To start with, one should at least abstain from vocal and physical actions which
contribute to one's mental agitation. One should refrain from speaking lies,
harsh words, or slanderous talk, or idle gossip. One should refrain from killing,
stealing, sexual misconduct, and intoxicants. One should avoid a means of livelihood
that causes harm to others. With the base of this morality (sila), one makes
proper efforts and begins to develop awareness of sensations, at least in one
small area of the body. To do so, one sits quietly with closed eyes, observing
the flow of in-breath and out-breath at the entrance to the nostrils. Working
for some time with this awareness of respiration, one develops the ability to
keep the mind fixed on a single object of attention: the area below the nostrils,
above the upper lip. With this heightened concentration (samadhi), one becomes
capable of experiencing the natural, normal, physical sensations in this area.
The mind is now sharp enough to begin experiencing sensations throughout the
physical structure.
Systematically, diligently, and repeatedly, one moves the attention through
the body, gradually strengthening awareness of sensations, increasing one's
ability not to react to them. With this training-the awareness of the reality,
in the present moment, and equanimity-the pattern of thought begins to change,
from thoughts of craving, aversion, ignorance to thoughts of Dhamma, or the
way out of suffering.
But thinking, even of Dhamma, will not lead to liberation from suffering. For
that, one must continue developing awareness and equanimity. Without elation
about pleasant sensations or depression in the face of unpleasant ones, one
understands not merely intellectually but experientially that these sensations
are nothing but manifestations of the contact of mind and matter-phenomena which
are as impermanent and ephemeral as the sensations themselves. Something so
ephemeral as these sensations cannot be a basis for real happiness; rather,
they will be a source of misery. One also starts realizing at the experiential
level that the entire mental phenomenon, the physical phenomenon, and the combination
of these two is certainly not 'I', not 'mine', not 'my soul'. In this way, by
experiencing reality as it is, in its nature, with its true characteristics,
the meditator develops real wisdom (panna), and emerges from illusions and delusions.
Thus, by maintaining awareness and equanimity, one gradually weakens the old
habits of craving and aversion. Even when reaction does occur, it is less intense
and passes away more quickly. It no longer has such a powerful impact on the
mind.
The more one remains fully aware and equanimous, not allowing new reactions
of craving and aversion to occur, the more one gives an opportunity to one's
stock of old reactions, of suppressed mental defilements, to rise to the conscious
level of the mind, one by one, to be eradicated. Layer after layer, these past
conditionings come to the surface. By maintaining equanimity, one eradicates
them and thus finds relief from misery.
Whatever defilements are eradicated, to that degree one is free of suffering.
Step by step, remaining aware and not reacting, one advances on the path, until
sooner or later one reaches the stage when the entire accumulation of past reactions
has been eradicated, and the habit of reaction itself has disappeared. Freed
from all craving, aversion, ignorance-past, present and future-one experiences
total freedom from suffering.
To reach this stage, one has to work and work strenuously. Simply reading articles
or engaging in discussions or debates will not suffice. The only way to achieve
liberation is by one's own efforts-the effort to observe the reality of oneself,
within the framework of one's body, without reacting to it. This is the way
to achieve the end of suffering. ¦
VIPASSANA IN IRAN
The first Vipassana course was held in Iran in 1999. Since then, a small but
growing number of dedicated old students have ensured that Iran continues to
benefit from Dhamma. This year, eight 10-day Vipassana courses and two 3-day
courses (and a few one-day courses) were organized in Tehran, Iran. About 166
new students and 56 old students participated in courses in 2003.
The courses are being held in Varangehrood, a pleasant holiday resort in the
mountains to the north of Tehran, and in northern cities of Klardasht and in
the region south of the Caspian Sea as well as Mashhad, a big city in Iran.
Most of the courses are being held in various private homes in Tehran.
Separate courses are held for male and female students. Regular group sittings
are being organized in different parts of Tehran. Participants have come from
all strata of society. Most students have expressed joy at how beneficial Vipassana
is to them, and how the teaching appears to be like a long-lost precious part
of Iranian culture.
Old students in Iran are hoping that Satipatthana sutta course and longer courses
will soon be held in their country. 'The Art of Living', 'Healing the Healer'
and 'Discourse Summaries' have been published in Farsi language. The search
has also begun for land in Teheran and its suburbs for the first Vipassana centre
in Iran.
For more details of Vipassana activities in Iran, contact: Email: vipassana_ir@hotmail.com
or daryushn@yahoo.com
VIPASSANA GLOBAL PAGODA
Work has been completed on one of the four small pagodas (each the size of the
Pagoda at Dhamma Giri and Dhamma Tapovana). The work on the main Pagoda has
reached a height of 30 feet on the outside and 25 feet on the inside.
One-day courses are conducted every Sunday from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Those
wishing to visit the Pagoda site may contact: Tel: (022) 28452112, 28452111,
28452261 Fax: 28452112. Email: globalpagoda@hotmail.com
CHILDREN COURSES IN MUMBAI
Date Place Age Registration Date
25-1 Matunga 10 to12 yrs 22 & 23-1-04
8-2 Andheri 10 to 12 yrs 5 & 6-2
29-2 Matunga 13 to 16 yrs 26 & 27-2
Course Timings: 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Registration Timings: 4:00 p.m. to 7
p.m.
Registration Phone No.: 26834820. Contact: Matunga: Amulakh Amichand School,
Kidwai Road, Near SNDT College, King's Circle, Matunga (C.R.). Andheri: Dada
Saheb Gaikwad Sansthan, Baba Saheb Ambedkar Road, Four Bunglows, R.T.O. Corner,
Andheri (W).