Thurman illuminates Zen path
By ERIC BARTELS, Portland Tribune, Mar 18, 2005

Robert Thurman is the eminent American authority on Tibetan Buddhism

Portland, (USA) -- Buddhism, the first Westerner ordained as a monk by the 
Dalai Lama himself. But Thurman's decades-long search for spiritual serenity 
hasn't kept him from enjoying the movies "Kill Bill: Vol. 1" and "Kill Bill: 
Vol. 2," on which his daughter Uma collaborated with hyperviolent filmmaker 
Quentin Tarantino.




"They were quite marvelous, actually," he says. "I couldn't be prouder of all 
the work our wonderful daughter has done."

Tarantino's oeuvre doesn't exactly conform to the enlightened dharma of the 
great historical figures cited throughout Thurman's new book, "The Jewel Tree 
of Tibet."

But Thurman, 64, seems at peace with Tarantino's explanation that the almost 
cartoonish mayhem of his films actually creates an aversion to violence in 
moviegoers.

"Quentin kind of insists that the violence is meant to turn people off," he 
says. "We were a little disturbed at the level of it, but that is Quentin's 
thing."

Thurman, a professor at Columbia University, will be in Portland tonight to 
promote his new book, an expansion of a retreat he led several years ago. It's 
a sort of "how to" guide for employing millenia-old teachings against the 
stresses and anxieties of modern life.

Buddhism remains something of a mystery to most Americans, Thurman says.

"Buddhism does not have the compulsion to run out and convert people. It is a 
way of understanding things rather than belonging to some group," he says. "The 
Dalai Lama is exceptional in that he says in the modern period world religions 
should give up the competition for followers.

"Sometimes belief, if it's too intense, can be like a disease. Like 
fundamentalism. That's a real danger on the planet."

Thurman says religion may be on the rise as people seek answers to a confusing 
postmodern world.

"The economy, terrorism, the incompetence of various governments, corporate 
misbehavior, pollution . some of the negative trends in the world lead people 
to want inner peace," he says.

"All of these things are pushing to the brink. People are seeing more and more 
the need for self-control, more sane behavior."

The first order of business, Thurman says, is for individuals to ratchet down 
their own stress levels. Here, he says, is where the quiet reflection and 
honest self-examination found in Buddhist teachings comes in.

"It's not just simply another religion," he says. "What it has to offer is a 
very sophisticated methodology and psychology of self-transformation."

He says meditation, seen by some as a crackpot devotional exercise, is proving 
itself to the scientific community.

Thurman points to the work of University of Wisconsin neuroscientist Richard 
Davidson, whose studies have shown actual changes in brain patterns with the 
development of meditative ability.

Jon Cabot-Zinn of the University of Massachusetts has determined that the 
principles and practices of hatha yoga reduce anxiety and depression, thereby 
alleviating mental illness.

Thurman says all manner of social ills - family violence, road rage, heart 
attacks - are products of the unenlightened mind.

"It's a toxic thing, uncontrolled emotion," Thurman says. "Buddhism can offer 
tremendous methodology."

Thurman recognizes that barriers stand between Eastern belief systems and the 
Western mind. "Anything new that they're unfamiliar with," he says of 
Westerners, "they take one aspect of it and they get confused by it."

"The Jewel Tree of Tibet" is filled with such puzzling notions. Adversity is to 
be seen as an opportunity for self-realization. Every individual is, in fact, 
God. And the world we live in is a perfect "bliss state."

But despite its slightly complex cosmology, Thurman says, Buddhism is nothing 
more than a blueprint for self-transformation - not a religion but "merely a 
set of responses to the needs of beings."

"It's not a Pollyanna thing," he says. "It's the basis of all religions."

Robert Thurman talk and book signing, 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY, March 18, Powell's City 
of Books, 1005 W. Burnside St., 503-228-4651, free



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