We need some 'rising great compassion' ourselves

by Joan Chittister

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While Sunnis were fighting Shi'as and Arab
Palestinians were fighting Jewish Israelis and U.S. Christians were
fighting Iraqi Muslims, I was sitting in a Buddhist monastery on the top
of a mountain in Taiwan. From the mountain top, the city in the distant
valley below was barely a memory, a phantom of another kind of life. Noise
and tumult, smoke and car horns had yet to touch this place.

Sounds idyllic, doesn't it? Shades of Shangri-la. A refuge. A hiding
place from life. A moment out of time.

Think again.

Here, on the top of this mountain, I heard something that made me
think. "Nowadays," I heard a young woman say, "People take on religion
just to hurt one another."

Clearly, here on the top of this mountain something new was happening
that was, in its own way, completely in touch with Afghanistan, Iraq,
Israel, Palestine, Christians, Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus and Jews
everywhere. If anything, it was a sliver of the world to come, not a
retreat to the past.

All over the world, armies, militias, insurgents, terrorists were
fighting guerilla religious wars. But here, on the other hand, the
intention was to be part of a worldwide movement among religious leaders
in order to stop them.

When Thomas Merton went to Bangkok in 1968, he went to discover what
Eastern and Western monasticism had in common. Now, almost 50 years later,
the connections are becoming clearer and clearer.

Ecumenical gatherings have been a feature of the ecclesiastical
landscape for over 40 years now, ever since Vatican II ushered Catholicism
into the 20th century. At the same time, most of the groups formed were
either highly theological or blandly communal, meaning affable, amiable,
cordial, and genial -- but not really serious about it.

The first group concentrated on the search for common theological
understandings. The second type devoted itself to creating social
get-togethers designed to bring into contact various denominational groups
that had previously lived their lives on opposite sides of longstanding
historical barriers.

Both types of gatherings were tentative, at best. Or, as the old joke
put it: "How do porcupines make love? Very carefully."

Both tasks -- the creation of interpersonal bonds and the pursuit of
theological commonalities -- made important inroads into religious
rivalries. But in a world where religion has become one of the deadliest
weapons of them all, academic discussions and interfaith clubbiness are
clearly not enough. Now, perhaps, we are on the verge of a new kind of
more global religious conversation.

The one in Taipei last week, for instance, was both fresh in content
and new in composition.

The Woman's Global Peace Initiative, a U.N. Partnership Organization,
at the invitation of style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold; FONT-SIZE: 10pt; COLOR: #000099; FONT-FAMILY: Arial"
href="http://www.dharmadrum.org/index.asp">Dharma Drum Mountain
and
its charismatic abbot, Master Sheng Yen, launched, for the first time, an
interfaith conversation among Buddhist, Hindu and Catholic nuns. More than
that, the conversations included adult lay practitioners and members of
the local youth group, as well. Most important of all, perhaps, is that
all the participants this time were women.

The theme of
the meeting, " style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold; FONT-SIZE: 10pt; COLOR: #000099; FONT-FAMILY: Arial" href="http://www.dharmadrum.org/news/NewsDetail.asp?PKey={B7BFC28E-4D3B-4623-9F9E-4C79180A069C}">The
Rising Great Compassion
," aimed at determining the role of women's
monastic communities in the world today -- no small topic for groups
identified, at least in recent history, with walls and grills, with
hermitages and seclusion, with withdrawal and silence.


Three days of joint discussion dealt with the problems facing women
monastics in relation to their own formation, the balance between
tradition and contemporary needs, the value of monastic-lay integration,
and the challenge of balancing contemplation and compassion in action in a
world full of pain, awash in injustice, and starved for equality.

And all of this was going on in Taiwan. On a mountaintop. In one of the
largest Buddhist monasteries in the world.

These were anything but refugees from life.

More striking even than the particular topics of the conference,
however, were the reports of the individual groups.

First, the group called clearly for international outreach programs for
their young people. Unlike the tendency in the United States to think of
ourselves as the center of the world by which every other culture measures
itself, these young people assumed that getting to know young people in
the rest of the world was the key to the future. I got the distinct
impression that their view of the world will be decidedly more global than
the view most of us took into public life.


Second,
the monastics, rather than being devoted to converting the rest of the
world to their own spiritual practices, values and traditions, called for
interfaith dialogue for monastics themselves. They are seeking to
understand how God works with the rest of the world and to link hands to
bring the Great Compassion that is needed now.


Third, whatever the Western notions that monastic life is of
diminishing value in the modern world, lay practitioners begged women
monastics to devote themselves to providing spiritual development in
contemplations and action for adults.

Religion, the women said, is not just about rules. "You don't give
people direction," they said. "You give people light so they can find
their own path."

And then they said what struck me most deeply. "Nowadays," they said,
"People take on religion just to hurt one another."


It
was clear to see that the young people, even in a culture where people go
to monasteries as children, are really confused about the role of religion
in society. It was clear what they are not seeing in us, despite all our
posturing, despite all our rituals, despite all our declarations -- or
maybe because of them, and what they are looking for: the Rising Great
Compassion.


From where I stand, the question is: Would they see it in us as we make
the bombs now dropping in the Middle East? Would they see it in the way
we've run Guantanamo Bay? Would they see it in our minimum wage
legislation? Would they see it in our churches when we define other
religions as spiritually lesser, theologically inferior? And maybe,
therefore, the God who made them, too?

Maybe we should have one of these conferences -- for religious, lay
practitioners and the young. All at once. Listening to each other. Most of
all, learning from one another.

But that would be impossible, right? After all, we -- whoever we are --
already know all the answers.

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