S N Goenka
Mr. Goenka is a householder
teacher of Vipassana meditation in the tradition of the late Sayagyi U
Ba Khin of Burma (Myanmar).
Although
Indian by descent, Mr. Goenka was born and raised in Burma. While
living in Burma he had the good fortune to come into contact with U Ba
Khin, and to learn the technique of Vipassana from him. After receiving
training from his teacher for fourteen years, Mr. Goenka settled in
India and began teaching Vipassana in 1969. In a country still sharply
divided by differences of caste and religion, the courses offered by
Mr. Goenka have attracted thousands of people from every part of
society. In addition, many people from countries around the world have
come to join courses in Vipassana meditation.
Mr. Goenka
has taught tens of thousands of people in more than 300 courses in
India and in other countries, East and West. In 1982 he began to
appoint assistant teachers to help him to meet the growing demand for
courses. Meditation centres have been established under his guidance in
India, Canada, the United States, Australia, New Zealand, France, the
United Kingdom, Japan, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Burma, Nepal and other
countries.
The technique
which S.N.Goenka teaches represents a tradition that is traced back to
the Buddha. The Buddha never taught a sectarian religion; he taught
Dhamma - the way to liberation - which is universal. In the same
tradition, Mr. Goenka's approach is totally non-sectarian. For this
reason, his teaching has a profound appeal to people of all
backgrounds, of every religion and no religion, and from every part of
the world.
UN Peace Summit
Photo courtesy Beliefnet, Inc.
In the Summer
of 2000, Mr. Goenka, the principal teacher of Vipassana Meditation
visited the United States and spoke, along with other world spiritual
leaders, at the "Millennium World Peace Summit" at the United Nations
World Headquarters in New York.
S N Goenka
Addresses Peace Summit
By
Bill Higgins
Date:
August 29, 2000
NEW YORK
— Vipassana Acharya S.N. Goenka addressed the delegates to
the Millennium World Peace Summit as they gathered in the United
Nations General Assembly Hall today - first ever gathering of religious
and spiritual leaders in the UN.
Mr. Goenka's
speech, in the session entitled Conflict Transformation, focussed on
the themes of religious harmony, tolerance and peaceful coexistence.
"Rather than
converting people from one organized religion to another organized
religion," said Mr. Goenka, "we should try to convert people from
misery to happiness, from bondage to liberationand from cruelty to
compassion."
Mr. Goenka
gave his speech during the Summit's afternoon session to a group that
included roughly two thousand delegates and observers. Mr. Goenka spoke
in the session that followed CNN founder Ted Turner's speech. Mr.
Turner is one of the Summit's financial patrons.
In keeping
with the Summit's theme of seeking world peace, Mr. Goenka stressed in
his speech that peace in the world cannot be achieved unless there is
peace within individuals. "There cannot be peace in the world when
people have anger and hatred in their hearts. Only with love and
compassion in the heart is world peace attainable."
An important
aspect of the Summit is the effort to reduce sectarian conflict and
tension. Regarding this Mr. Goenka said, "When there is anger and
hatred within, one becomes miserable irrespective of whether one is a
Christian or a Hindu or a Muslim."
Similarly he
said to a thunderous applause, "One who has love and compassion with a
pure heart experiences the Kingdom of Heaven within. This is the Law of
Nature, or if one would rather, God's will."
Appropriately
to a crowd that included major world religious leaders he said, "Let us
focus on the commonalties of all religions, on the inner core of all
religions which is purity of heart. We should all give importance to
this aspect of religion and avoid conflict over the outer shell of the
religions, which is various rites, rituals, festivals and dogmas."
In summing up
Mr. Goenka quoted the Emperor Ashoka who in one of his Rock Edicts
said, "One should not honor only one's own religion and condemn other
religions. Instead, one should honor other religions for various
reasons. By so doing one helps one's own religion to grow and also
renders service to the religions of others. In acting otherwise one
digs the grave of one's own religion and harms other religions as well.
Someone who honors his own religion and condemns other religions may do
so out of devotion to his religion, thinking, 'I will glorify my
religion'; but his actions injure his own religion more gravely.
Concord is good. Let all listen and be willing to listen to the
doctrines professed by others."
U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan has called the Summit "a gathering of the
world's pre-eminent religious and spiritual leaders in a united call
for peace that will hopefully strengthen the prospect for peace as we
enter the new millennium."
Spiritual
leaders who've been invited to the U.N.'s first-ever conference of this
kind include Pramukh Swami of Swami Narayana Movement, Swami Dayananda
Saraswati, Swami Agniwesh, Mata Amritanandamayi Devi and Dada Wasvani
as well as eminent scholars such as Dr Karan Singh and L. M. Singhvi.
In reference
to the participants' religious and cultural diversity, Annan has said,
"the United Nations is a tapestry, not only of suits and saris but of
clerics' collars, nuns' habits and lamas' robes; of miters, skullcaps
and yarmulkes."
Though Annan
has been repeatedly questioned about the Tibetan leaders absence, he
has attempted to steer questions back to the Summit's goal, which he
says are "to restore religion to its rightful role as peacemaker and
pacifier — the problem of conflict is never the Bible or the
Torah or the Koran. Indeed, the problem is never the faith —
it is the faithful and how we behave towards each other. You must, once
again, teach your faithful the ways of peace and the ways of
tolerance."
The U.N.
leader's hope is that since 83% of the world's population adheres to a
formal religious or spiritual belief system, these religious leaders
can influence their followers towards peace.
The U.N. is
hoping the conference will move the world community towards, in the
words of one document, "to acknowledge its spiritual potential and
recognize that it is within our power to eradicate the worst form of
human brutality — war — as well as one of the root
causes of war — poverty. The time is ripe for the world's
spiritual leadership to work more closely with the United Nations in
its effort to address the pressing needs of humankind."
The Summit
will end this Thursday on 31 August when participants will sign a
Declaration for World Peace and form an International Advisory Council
of Religious and Spiritual Leaders, which will work with the United
Nations and the U.N. Secretary-General in peacemaking and peacekeeping
efforts.
"The goal of
the International Advisory Council of Religious and Spiritual Leaders
is to enhance and strengthen the work of the United Nations," said Bawa
Jain, the Secretary-General of the World Peace Summit. "It is our
earnest hope that in times of conflict, the world's great religious and
spiritual leaders can be parachuted into these hotspot to seek
non-violent resolutions to the conflicts."
UN Address
Universal Spirituality for
Peace By S N Goenka
Universal
Spirituality for Peace, by S.N. Goenka - Real Video Format
The
following is the complete text of the address given by Mr. Goenka
on Tuesday, 29 August 2000 in the United Nations General Assembly Hall
to the participants of the Millennium World Peace Summit.
When there is
darkness, light is needed. Today, with so much agony caused by violent
conflict, war and bloodshed, the world badly needs peace and harmony.
This is a great challenge for religious and spiritual leaders. Let us
accept this challenge.
Every
religion has an outer form or shell, and an inner essence or core. The
outer shell consists of rites, rituals, ceremonies, beliefs, myths and
doctrines. These vary from one religion to another. But there is an
inner core common to all religions: the universal teachings of morality
and charity, of a disciplined and pure mind full of love, compassion,
goodwill and tolerance. It is this common denominator that religious
leaders ought to emphasize, and that religious adherents ought to
practice. If proper importance is given to the essence of all religions
and greater tolerance is shown for their superficial aspects, conflict
can be minimized.
All persons
must be free to profess and follow their faith. In doing so, however,
they must be careful not to neglect the practice of the essence of
their religion, not to disturb others by their own religious practices,
and not to condemn or belittle other faiths.
Given the
diversity of faiths, how do we surmount the differences and achieve a
concrete plan for peace? The Buddha, the Enlightened One, was often
approached by people of different views. To them he would say, "Let us
set aside our differences. Let us give attention to what we can agree
on, and let us put it into practice. Why quarrel?" That wise counsel
still retains its worth today.
I come from
an ancient land that has given rise to many different schools of
philosophy and spirituality over the millennia. Despite isolated
instances of violence, my country has been a model of peaceful
co-existence. Some 2300 years ago it was ruled by Ashoka the Great,
whose empire extended from present-day Afghanistan to Bangladesh.
Throughout his realm, this compassionate ruler caused edicts to be
inscribed on stone, proclaiming that all faiths should be respected;
and as a result, followers of all spiritual traditions felt secure
under his sway. He asked people to live a moral life, to respect
parents and elders, and to abstain from killing. The words in which he
exhorted his subjects are still relevant today:
One should
not honor only one's own religion and condemn other religions. Instead,
one should honor other religions for various reasons. By so doing one
helps one's own religion to grow and also renders service to the
religions of others. In acting otherwise one digs the grave of one's
own religion and harms other religions as well. Someone who honors his
own religion and condemns other religions may do so out of devotionto
his religion, thinking, 'I will glorify my religion'; but his actions
injure his own religion more gravely. Concord is good. Let all listen
and be willing to listen to the doctrines professed by others. (Rock
Edict12)
Emperor
Ashoka represents a glorious tradition of tolerant co-existence and
peaceful synthesis. That tradition lives on among governments and
rulers today. An example is the noble monarch of Oman, who has donated
land for churches and temples of other faiths while practicing his own
religion with all devotion and diligence. I am sure that such
compassionate rulers and governments will continue to arise in future
in many lands around the world. As it is said, "Blessed are the
peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God."
It is all too
clear that the votaries of violence primarily hurt their own kith and
kin. They may do so directly, through their intolerance, or indirectly,
by provoking a violent response to their actions. On the other hand, it
is said, "Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy." This
is the law of nature. It may equally be called the decree or way of
God. The Buddha said, "Animosity can be eradicated not by animosity but
only by its opposite. This is an eternal Dharma [spiritual law]." What
is called Dharma in India has nothing to do with Hinduism, Buddhism,
Jainism, Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Sikhism or any other "ism". It
is this simple truth: before you harm others, you first harm yourself
by generating mental negativity; and by removing the negativity, you
can find peace within and strengthen peace in the world.
Peace of Mind For World
Peace
Every
religion worthy of the name calls on its followers to live a moral and
ethical way of life, to attain mastery over the mind and to cultivate
purity of heart. One tradition tells us, "Love thy neighbor"; another
says, Salaam walekum - "May peace be with you"; still another says,
Bhavatu sabbamangalam or Sarve bhavantu sukhinah - "May all beings be
happy." Whether it is the Bible, the Koran or the Gita, the scriptures
call for peace and amity. From Mahavir to Jesus, all great founders of
religions have been ideals of tolerance and peace. Yet our world is
often driven by religious and sectarian strife, or even war - because
we give importance only to the outer shell of religion and neglect its
essence. The result is a lack oflove and compassion in the mind.
Peace in the
world cannot be achieved unless there is peace within individuals.
Agitation and peace cannot co-exist. One way to achieve inner peace is
Vipassana or insight meditation - a non-sectarian, scientific,
results-oriented technique of self-observation and truth realization.
Practice of this technique brings experiential understanding of how
mind and body interact. Everytime negativity arises in the mind, such
as hatred, it triggers unpleasant sensations within the body. Every
time the mind generates selfless love, compassion and good will, the
entire body is flooded with pleasant sensations. Practice of Vipassana
also reveals that mental action precedes every physical and vocal
action, determining whether that action will be wholesome or
unwholesome. Mind matters most. That is why we must find practical
methods to make the mind peaceful and pure. Such methods will amplify
the effectiveness of the joint declaration emerging from this World
Peace Summit.
Ancient India
gave two practices to the world. One is the physical exercise of yoga
postures (Asanas) and breath control (Pranayama) for keeping the body
healthy. The other is the mental exercise of Vipassana for keeping the
mind healthy. People of any faith can and do practice both these
methods. At the same time, they may follow their own religions in peace
and harmony; there is no necessity for conversion, a common source of
tension and conflict.
For society
to be peaceful, more and more members of society must be peaceful. As
leaders, we have a responsibility to set an example, to be an
inspiration. A sage once said, "A balanced mind is necessary to balance
the unbalanced mind of others."
More broadly,
a peaceful society will find a way to live in peace with its natural
setting. We all understand the need to protect the environment, to stop
polluting it. What prevents us from acting on this understanding is the
stock of mental pollutants, such as ignorance, cruelty or greed.
Removing such pollutants will promote peace among human beings, as well
as a balanced, healthy relationship between human society and its
natural environment. This is how religion can foster environmental
protection.
Non-Violence: the Key to a
Definition of Religion
There are
bound to be differences between religions. However, by gathering at
this World Peace Summit, leaders of all the major faiths have shown
that they want to work for peace. Let peace then be the first principle
of "universal religion". Let us declare together that we shall abstain
from killing, that we condemn violence. I also urge political leaders
to join in this declaration, given the key role they play in bringing
either peace or war. Whether or not they join us, at least let us all
make avow here and now: instead of condoning violence and killing, let
us declare that we unconditionally condemn such deeds, especially
violence perpetrated in the name of religion.
Certain
spiritual leaders have had the sagacity and courage to condemn violence
committed in the name of their own faith. There may be different
philosophical and theological views of the act of seeking forgiveness
or regretting past violence and killing; but the very acknowledgment of
violence performed in the past implies that it was wrong and that it
will not be condoned in future.
Under the
aegis of the United Nations, let us try to formulate a definition of
religion and spirituality highlighting non-violence, and refusing to
countenance violence or killing. There would be no greater misfortune
for humanity than a failure to define religion as synonymous with
peace. This Summit could propose a concept of "universal religion" or
"non-sectarian spirituality", for endorsement by the U.N.
I am sure that this Summit will help focus the
world's attention on the true purpose of religion:
Religion sets us not apart;
it teaches peace and purity of heart.
I
congratulate the organizers of this historic Summit for their vision
and efforts. And I congratulate the religious and spiritual leaders who
have had the maturity to work for reconciliation, giving hope to
humanity that religion and spirituality will lead to a peaceful future.
May all
beings be free from aversion and be happy.
May peace and
harmony prevail.
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