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His Holiness the Dalai Lama's
Comments on
Prison Life.
By Bhikshuni
Thubten Chodron©
During the time he
was teaching in New York City in September, 2003, His Holiness the
Dalai Lama met privately with a group of former inmates. They told
him about their experience in prison and their endeavors to practice
the Buddhadharma there. His Holiness later shared his reflections
on this meeting when he spoke to the thousands of people attending
his teachings at the Beacon Theatre and the estimated 65,000 who
attended his Sunday morning talk at Central Park. What he said was
similar, though not exactly the same, on these two occasions, and
I share with you what I remember (I didn't take notes, nor was I
at the meeting).
His Holiness was very
appreciative of the meeting and said how touched and saddened he
was hearing the suffering that people experienced while incarcerated.
He admired their efforts to learn and practice the Dharma in such
a hostile and violent environment and said that the cultivation
of compassion is extremely important.
He also commented on
the injustices present in a prison system designed to punish rather
than rehabilitate, a system which brands people as "evil"
instead of seeing their potential and the purity of their Buddha
nature. The structure of the prison system is in bad need of reform,
he said. Looking directly at the audience, he stated emphatically:
"But I am not a citizen of this country, you are. Therefore, you
are responsible for changing this system. You need a system that helps
both the inmates themselves and society in general." A loud round
of applause by the audience followed this statement.
Having done prison
work myself for several years -- both corresponding with inmates
and teaching Buddhist groups in prisons -- I was very moved by the
depth of His Holiness' knowledge of and care for people who are
generally feared and therefore discarded by society. His care was
not only for the individuals themselves, but for the system in general,
in which everyone -- inmates, their families and friends, guards,
and prison staff -- is trapped. I wished that all those imprisoned
could have heard His Holiness directly and experienced his tremendous
compassion for them.
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