Buddhism comes to Bible Belt
By KAY CAMPBELL, The Huntsville Times, March 17, 2006

Practitioners look for an inner peace, discipline, harmony with world

Hunstville, Alabama (USA) -- For Glen Adams, it was a movie. For Jeff Simson, 
it was a with-it teacher at his high school. And for Jim Gordon, it was a time 
of crisis in his marriage 17 years ago that propelled him into the self-help 
and spirituality sections of the bookstore to save the marriage and his own 
peace of mind.


 
But once they'd stumbled across Buddhism, all three men were surprised to find 
a personal resonance with ancient traditions of meditation and philosophy.

Being Buddhist in America takes a certain amount of philosophical 
adventurousness - or desperation, Gordon says.

"You're not going to have a Buddhist coming to the door to proselytize," Gordon 
said Saturday as he discussed Buddhism in the garden zendo, a meditation room, 
behind his home on Green Mountain.

"People who come to Zen in the United States usually come through tortuous 
paths," he said. "They generally come through, if not crisis, a lot of 
introspection just because it is so foreign, so removed from mainstream 
society."

But Buddhism is becoming less foreign than it's ever been in the United States, 
even in the heart of the Bible Belt. Sponsored by Buddhists in Florence and 
Huntsville, Gen Kelsang Mondrub, a Buddhist monk based in Atlanta, will speak 
locally this weekend.

Mondrub comes because of requests, not because Buddhists have discovered an 
evangelical impulse, says Caroline Lopez, a leader in the Buddhist community in 
Florence.

"We are not trying to convert anyone into becoming a Buddhist," Lopez wrote in 
an e-mail about the Mondrub visit. "We are offering a path or opportunity for 
people who are interested to learn practical methods on how to develop lasting 
inner peace."

Adams, a deacon at First Presbyterian Church in Huntsville, incorporates 
Buddhist ideas and practices into his life as a Christian. Adams began reading 
more about Buddhism a few years ago after seeing the movie, "Seven Years in 
Tibet," based on the true story of a British pilot after World War II.

Adams helped sponsor the Interfaith Mission Service's Interfaith Dialogue 
series at the church for members to learn more about other religions. And his 
Sunday School group also did more studies on Buddhism.

"I don't see Buddhism as a threat to Christianity or that it undercuts Jesus' 
divinity," Adams said last week. "Buddhism emphasizes living fully in the 
moment. You can find the same sort of thing in the New Testament."

Adams said the daily practice of meditation, of attempting to keep his mind 
quiet and ready but emptied of his own thoughts for a while, has brought him 
tranquility and better mental discipline.

Buddhism, in fact, is not a religion, but a recognition of the 
interconnectedness of all life.

"The closest Buddhists get to a concept of God is something like Jung's cosmic 
consciousness, that we're all one," Gordon said.

"There are no prayers to anyone, no deity, no creator," said Simson, a 
Huntsville man who studied to be a Buddhist monk for several years and now 
works at an area veterinary office.

Simson said that during the '70s, only a few years after he first learned about 
Buddhism from a high school teacher, he was perhaps the only Buddhist at Auburn 
University. He said he experienced outright disdain for his beliefs then, but 
that now people seem to be more accepting of them, particularly in the 
relatively cosmopolitan atmosphere of Huntsville.

"Thank God for (Wernher) von Braun and the Germans!" Simson said. "Huntsville 
is more accepting of other people's ideas than other parts of Alabama."

Buddhism is so different from a god-centered religion that it's hard to 
explain, he said.

"Buddhism's driving force is to be here now and to contemplate life to be the 
best person possible," Simson said.

Gordon found in Buddhism a practical morality that seemed kinder than the 
judgmental fundamentalism of his mother. He found a reverence toward the 
mystery of life that seemed more complete than the atheism of his father but 
without conflicting with the science he studies and uses as a physicist. And 
the mental discipline of meditation helps him calm an active mind.

The bells, incense, mantras and postures used during meditation are simply ways 
to help each person find the Buddha, the awakened one, within, Gordon said. The 
bows to a little statue of Buddha or to the other members of the sangha, 
gathering, are to show humility before those elements in each person, not to 
worship each other or idols.

Often, Gordon said, people who come to Buddhism after rejecting the faiths of 
their childhood, find in Buddhism a peace with those faiths.

Buddhism teaches followers not to value attachments to possessions or people or 
even ideas, and to be respectful of every path people take.

"A lot come to Zen though Christian or Jewish traditions and therefore have 
rejected everything," Gordon said. "But the longer they sit (meditate), the 
more accepting they get. The goal is to live in harmony with other people - and 
dogs and cats and mosquitos - all those things that grow." 



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