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Tip:

At long last, the report from Gerard Bouchard and Charles Taylor on reasonable accommodation in Quebec has been released, and provides a wealth of story ideas for reporters covering religion in Canada.  For an abridged pdf of the full report, check out this webpage for "Building the Future: A Time for Reconciliation".   Bear in mind that the Commission was launched out of concerns in Quebec over Muslim headscarves, Sikh kirpans, and the possibility of sharia law coming to Canada….so the implications of accommodating religious practices, values, traditions and rights are analyzed within the framework of Canadian society and national values.  Here is the website:

http://www.accommodements.qc.ca


Article Details

Article Added On: January 14, 2005 - over 3 years ago
Title: Adversity can strengthen us
Author: Eve Edmonds
Publication: Richmond News
Publication Date: January 01, 2005 - over 3 years ago
Faith Groups: Buddhist
Themes: Religion and society

Abstract: A Buddhist master in B.C. donated his life savings of $100,000 to tsunami victims. the monk Jin Puti says we are only as secure as the person beside us or on the other side of the world. In Buddhism, adversity can be transformed into a tool to strengthen people; poison can turn into medicine. It may be too early to see the "bright side" of the tsunami disaster, Puti says, but he is confident there will be one.

It's hard to believe anything good can come out of the devastation in Southeast Asia, but it was only through extreme suffering that Buddha found enlightenment, explains Buddhist master Jin Puti.

"Adversity can strengthen us in the end," said Puti, through a translator.

Puti, the director of the Canada Buddhist Dharma Society, recently donated his life savings - $100,000 - to tsunami victims in the primarily Buddhist country of Sri Lanka.

While most of us cling to our life savings for security, Puti simply says we are only as secure as the person beside us, or on the other side of the world.

"When others are secure, I'm secure."

Compassion and detachment are the two cornerstones of Buddhism philosophy.

It might seem presumptuous to tell a grief-stricken parent to practice detachment, but in the face of such immense tragedy, we must let go to find "inner equanimity," Puti explains.

While Puti's donation leaves him without any life savings, it certainly doesn't leave him destitute.

At his non-profit meditation centre in Union Square there is an abundance of reverence for "the master," as his followers refer to him.

In fact, the money he sent to the Red Cross was a collection of what his disciples in China had sent him to help him get established in Canada.

His faith leaves him confident more will come, as it's needed.

When Puti was a child growing up in China he was extremely frail and sickly. At age seven he went with his family to a province of China close to Tibet. It was there he learned the power of meditation and healing.

Although Tibetan spiritual practice was forbidden in China, Puti studied with the Lamas and went to what is called the "yellow school" of Tibetan Buddhism. It's the same school the Dalai Lama went to.

Not only was his illness cured, but by his mid-20s he was being sought by others.

"I realize that I had the power to help people through meditation and healing. I always knew it, but at about 25, 26, I started to practice."

His reputation grew as he travelled through the country gathering disciples.

At one point, he had a vision of a beach and coastline and knew some day he would come to Canada, which he did in 1999. He opened the Puti Dharma Meditation Centre in Richmond last May.

It may be too early to see the "bright side" of the tsunami disaster, but Puti is confident there will be one. Religious and cultural groups are coming together. The world is uniting in compassion, he notes.

"It is only when we are in real pain that we go to the doctor for healing," he said. "This tragedy causes us all to have a more expansive view of the impermanent nature of life and material things, and to expand our hearts. Buddha had a big heart. We must practice to have a big heart."

Original article



 
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