---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Dec 27, 2011 at 9:33 AM
Subject: Revolutionists follow Buddha's teachings
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*PACIFIC DAILY NEWS*
Dec. 28, 2011

*Revolutionists follow Buddha's teachings
*
A. Gaffar Peang-Meth

In three days, the New Year 2012 will be upon us. The next 366 days await.
What we do or do not do will influence our future. As usual in the holiday
season, we reflect on what we have or have not done as we contemplate our
new year resolutions.

As I wish all readers, Christians and non-Christians, a merry Christmas and
a happy New Year, I find in this occasion a good opportunity to write on
Lord Gautama Buddha's teachings from 2,500 years ago, which continue to
provide good lessons for mankind today.
Past, present, future

The past is a lesson for the present. The present is a guide for the
future. Spanish philosopher George Santayana said, "Those who cannot learn
from history are doomed to repeat it." Earlier, German revolutionary
socialist Karl Marx asserted, "History does nothing; it does not possess
immense riches, it does not fight battles. It is men, real, living, who do
all this."

Yet, it was Lord Buddha who preached that, "Each morning we are born again.
What we do today is what matters most." He taught mankind: "Do not dwell in
the past, do not dream of the future; concentrate the mind on the present
moment."

Santayana, Marx and Buddha actually see human beings as the shapers of
history. Each person is an activist and an "actionist," a maker of the
world.

Buddha characterized those who dwell in the past, which cannot be changed,
as stuck, and said that those who dream of an imagined future equally waste
the present moment, the here and now that provide an opportunity for one to
influence the future.

Buddha did not tell us not to learn from the past. He taught us to learn
from it, but not to live in it, which boxes us in, making us unable to move
forward to the future, which will be created based on the actions we take
in the present day. "I never see what has been done; I only see what
remains to be done," said Buddha.

He taught us, "Pay no attention to the faults of others, things done or
left undone by others," but "consider only what by oneself is done or left
undone." In other words, never mind what others do; but mind what one has
"done or left undone."

"Work out your own salvation. Do not depend on others," Buddha preached.
Revolutionists

Of Cambodia's 14 million people, about 70 percent are younger than 30 years
of age and 50 percent are younger than 20. With about 95 percent of the
population Buddhist, Cambodia should logically have more than 13 million
Cambodians, activists and "actionists," who are resources for transforming
autocratic Cambodia into a Buddhist country of rights, justice, and
compassion.

The Khmer Lotus Revolutionists, whose members: attempt to group Cambodians
of different political leanings into a movement to remove Cambodia from the
yoke of Vietnamese colonialism; overthrow the royalist-Khmer Rouge-Hun Sen
dictatorship; and build a free, independent, democratic Cambodia, have
called for a boycott of Cambodia's elections, which they charge are
"rigged, manipulated, under threats and intimidation, therefore, unfair and
nonfree" that only "perpetuate" Vietnamization and dictatorship over
Cambodia.

Conscious of the failure of signatory powers and the United Nations to help
in the "effective implementation" of the 1991 Paris Peace Accords and the
1993 Cambodian Constitution, the Lotus Revolutionists, who heed Lord
Buddha's advice to "Work out your own salvation," have declared that "the
end justifies the means (as a last resort!)" to attain their goals.

In a recent statement, the Lotus Revolutionists called on Cambodians to
reject the Hun Sen regime's proclamation of Jan. 7 as a national holiday
commemorating the capture of Phnom Penh by the Vietnamese and the
installation of a Cambodian regime loyal to Hanoi. A protest in front of
Vietnam's Embassy in Paris is scheduled for that day.

I am taken by the statement the Lotus group has published, "Our
Determination," which seems drawn from the members' Buddhist cultural
roots, grounded as it is in the notion of self-help. I have translated the
original Khmer text into English, below. Some of its musicality is lost in
translation, but the sentiment aligns with the New Year's message I have
sought to present in this last column of 2011.

"If you don't want dictatorship, please don't moan;

If you don't like foreign domination, please don't whisper;

If you have problems bringing down a dictatorship, please don't shed tears;

If you have problems evicting the foreign aggressors, please don't yell in
solitude;

If you have political differences with the royalists, the republicans, or
have personal problems, please don't color and seek stories with one
another;

If it's not certain you will win elections over the oppressors, please
don't go serve them;

If you cannot shake off personal motives, please don't do revolution.

For centuries, Khmers waited for (mystical) Preah Batr Dhammik to come to
their rescue, but Preah Batr Dhammik seemed not to have heard Khmers'
prayers. Therefore, we must wake up and believe in ourselves."

Amen!

Happy New Year 2012!

*A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam. Write
him at [email protected].*

http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201112280400/OPINION02/112280306





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