“Looking
deeply into the present moment, we know what to do and what not to
do to save
our precious planet and each other.” Thich
Nhat Hanh
How can social activists use meditation? 
Jack
Kornfield warns that social action without attention to our personal
needs is dangerous: “When peace protestors (like me) bring
aggression and hate to the generals and politicians, we are simply
recreating
their war. Instead, we must remember that the world’s current
problems are fundamentally a spiritual crisis created by the limited
vision
of human beings. To face the sorrow in the world around us, we
must face
these forces in ourselves.”
Thich Nhat Hanh writes: “After
a period of intense involvement, people engaged in political, social
and environmental work may become
discouraged if they lack the strength to sustain a life of action.” He
offers mindfulness meditation instruction as a way to develop the
deep, inner peace that will support an activist’s work. He
says: “I
have seen this peace in the people of various religious and cultural
backgrounds who spend their time and energy protecting the weak,
struggling for social justice, and so forth. They show the fruits
of meditation – clarity,
determination and patience – which you can cultivate if you
practice mindfulness in each moment of your daily life.” He
offers specific mindfulness meditation instructions in the books
listed
below.
Joanna Macy’s book, World
as Lover, World as Self is
about moving off our meditation cushions and into the world. Writing
specifically
to social activists, Macy says: “Haunted by the desperate
needs of our time and beset by more commitments than we can carry,
we may wonder
how to make time for spiritual disciplines.” Macy
offers dozens of meditation exercises to “wake up the spiritual
power within us” including this one: The Great Ball of Merit,
which is designed to take heart and gather strength for difficult
work.
“Relax and close your eyes. Open your awareness
to the fellow beings who share this planet time with you. See their
multitudes in your mind’s
eye. Now let your awareness open wider still, to encompass all
beings who ever lived of all races and creeds and walks of life,
rich, poor,
kings, beggars, saints and sinners. See the vast vistas of these
fellow beings stretching into the distance, like successive mountain
ranges.
Now consider the fact that in each of these innumerable lives,
some act of merit was performed. No matter how stunted or deprived
the
life,
there was a gesture of generosity, a gift of love, an act of valor
or self-sacrifice,
on the battlefield or workplace, hospital or home. From these beings
in their endless multitudes arose actions of courage and kindess,
of teaching and healing. Let yourself see these manifold and immeasurable
acts of merit."
“Now imagine you can sweep together these acts of merit, sweep them into
a pile in front of you. Use your hands. Pile them up. Pile them
into a heap viewing it with gladness and gratitude. Now pat them into
a ball. It is the Great Ball of Merit. Hold it now and weigh it in your hands.
Rejoice in it, knowing that no act of goodness is ever lost. It
remains ever and always a present resource, a means for the transformation
of life. So now, with jubilation and gratitude, you turn that great ball.
Turn it over into the healing of our world.”
Books Available from Amazon
A
Path With Heart, by Jack Kornfield ($12) A meditation
teacher and social activist, Kornfield offers practical advice
and personal anecdotes about meditation.
Meditation
for Beginners: Six Meditations for Insight, Greater Clarity and
Cultivating a Compassionate Heart, by Jack Kornfield
($20) hardback book with CD or CD
without the book. Kornfield uses clear language and
step-by-step demonstrations to show how simple it is to start -
and stick with - a daily meditation practice. In this complete
beginner's course, Jack introduces the "Insight" tradition
of Buddhist meditation.
The
Miracle of Mindfulness: A Manual on Meditation, by Thich
Nhat Hanh ($10) and on
cassette ($13) This book offers 30 specific meditation
exercises that anyone can practice to develop mindfulness. Its
an excellent
introduction to the subject.
Peace
is Every Step: The Path of Mindfulness in Everyday Life,
by Thich Nhat Hanh ($11) Commentaries, meditations and anecdotes.
World
as Lover, World as Self, by Joanna Macy ($11) Macy writes
about meditation in action, detailing how to 'make sense of the
world adn find the capacity to enter it and take action creatively
and with authority.'
Links
Jack Kornfield co-founded the Insight Meditation Society www.ims.org and
Spirit Rock meditation center www.spiritrock.org. His
biography and teaching schedule are available at the Spirit Rock site.
Thich Nhat Hanh founded a practice center called Plum
Village. Their site has information about him
and his teaching schedule.
Joanna Macy's biography and teaching schedule
are posted at www.joannamacy.net
The Buddhist Peace Fellowship was founded by Robert
Aitken. Pema Chodron, thich nhat hanh and Joanna Macy are on the
advisory board. The BPF site has links to socially engaged groups of
meditators. www.bpf.org
Dharmanet.org has links to socially engaged Buddhist
groups and other social activist organizations at www.dharmanet.org.