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Occupy Buddha: Reflections on Occupy Wall Street

Posted: 11/28/11 01:08 PM ET

The word "Buddha" means to wake up. More precisely it means to see what is really going on (in other words, "dharma"), and understand that it has always been so. The Occupy Wall Street movement and its 1,000 offshoots worldwide is that kind of awakening. Its overarching theme is inequality: rich and poor, haves and have-nots, just and unjust. It has always been so, but the scale of it varies through time. In the U.S., the objective reality and statistical fact of this economic divide has been brewing since the 1980s (for an excellent historical perspective, see this article by Bill Moyers in The Nation magazine).

But now in times of unemployment and bread-line level deprivation, that reality has broken through the veil of public unknowing, taken form as the Occupy movement and has been transmitted at light speed from city to city courtesy of social media and the web.

Many of my Buddhist friends are sympathetic to this movement, and want to help. Many of them, like me, were themselves youthful demonstrators once, long ago when the issues were civil rights and the Vietnam war. Just as now, that awakening in the 1960s was to perennial truths to which we had up to then been oblivious. "Black people in the South can't vote! They are oppressed!" Yes, as they had been forever. "This war is unjust. It's horrible! The innocent die!"--another perennial truth. In those days it was television, rather than the internet, that broadcast these truths into everyone's living rooms and woke us up.

I was once one of those youthful anti-war protestors, linking hands and facing down riot police armed with batons and guns. We self-righteously referred to the police in those days as "pigs," ignoring the unwiseness of hurling such insults at a phalanx of heavily armed men. We too were beaten, bloodied, and in a few cases killed. When I look back through the lens of my own youth at today's protestors and their pithy slogans ("We are the 99%") I see myself.

However, we Buddhists all need to remember that Gautama was in his time a one-percenter or worse--he was, after all, a prince. He had his own awakening from unknowing (or so the accounts of his life tell) when he walked out of the palace as though for the first time and saw what was really happening -- "People are old and poor! People are sick! They die! Look, a monk!" This is an archetypal moment (referred to in Buddhist literature as the "four sightings"); I think it happens in some fashion for each generation--an onrush of awakening that keeps societies from sinking totally into the quicksand of their own corruption.

My Buddhist friends think of conveying well-meaning instructions to today's Occupiers about non-violence, compassion, and meditation, so they will not become angry in the face of the injustice they see. This is good, but I am not sure that is exactly the right medicine. Maybe it is good that they are angry. Maybe they don't need meditation instruction just now. Gautama, after all, was not schooled in meditation when he experienced the four sightings. He just opened his eyes, which anyone can do.

Others say the Occupiers need a goal, demands, a program. Perhaps. I'm not sure today's protestors need anything right now except to be appreciated for the truths they are speaking and the role they are playing at this critical time in the development of human consciousness. They have already discovered what the Buddha taught in his second Noble Truth -- that the root cause of our unnecessary suffering is grasping, clinging, selfishness, and greed -- often for money, sometimes for emotional or physical safety, nearly always for power. The energy of greed is the prime distorter of human community. The Buddha clearly saw this.

My feeling is that we are seeing the first raw beginnings and baby steps of a giant leap forward, one that will transcend and outgrow whatever form the Occupy movement is currently taking. Let it develop, let it learn what nourishment it needs. If it needs or wants our gray-haired advice -- and it may not -- then let it ask. I am ready if anyone asks, knowing that my time on the barricades was long ago and that I may not know the answers. If no-one asks, I am content to be watchful, to appreciate, and to allow this fervent historical moment to unfold.

One last note: much later, when I had become a Buddhist teacher, I met a policeman who had been on that police line where I demonstrated in front of the Oakland, California Army Induction Center so long ago. By now he too was a Buddhist. He told me how it was for him back then. "We were scared," he said. "We didn't know who you were or what you would do. We didn't know what weapons you had or whether you would riot. And when you started screaming at us and calling us pigs, we got mad. We weren't pigs (well, a few of us were brutes, he admitted) we were just people trying to do a job. I understood that you were angry, but I didn't like being called a pig. I wasn't a pig."

The policemen, the firemen, the teachers, the workers everywhere -- they are all part of the 99%. And more to the point, this really isn't just about the 99%, it is about the 100% -- in other words, all of us. Who knows what Gautama was like in the years before he walked out of the palace. He may have been a self-satisfied aristocratic twit -- until he woke up. People can change. That is the unwritten liner note to the 2nd Noble Truth -- the deep truth of human suffering is for everyone, it is about the 100%. For Buddhists, this 100% is not just human beings, but everything living, the air and the clouds, even the whole earth itself.

Occupy Buddha!

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Angel Soto, 32, of Staten Island, meditates at the Occupy Wall Street protests in Zuccotti Park, Sunday, Nov. 6 in New York. Now entering their seventh week, the protests have continued to attract demonstrators young and old across different income classes and cultural backgrounds.
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The word "Buddha" means to wake up. More precisely it means to see what is really going on (in other words, "dharma"), and understand that it has always been so. The Occupy Wall Street movement and ...
The word "Buddha" means to wake up. More precisely it means to see what is really going on (in other words, "dharma"), and understand that it has always been so. The Occupy Wall Street movement and ...
 
 
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06:49 PM on 12/24/2011
I don't know what it is about American 'Buddhists', particularly those who are writers, but it just tickles me wrong. Maybe it is the whole American superiority/self-righteous/opinionated thing which doesn't really mesh well with the whole Buddhist humility/non-self/egoless thing. Or maybe it is that I just came back from living in the jungles of Sri Lanka practicing meditation for a year with the monks. There was no talk of "I am a Buddhist" there; no self-validation. Oh well, I like that these 'occupiers' are meditating, pretty cool.
02:36 AM on 12/08/2011
Wow! I like how EVERYthing has become "occupy"! Can we possibly use the word "occupy" enough? After I occupy this article, I'm gonna occupy some meditation, then occupy me some coffee and breakfast! Then I'll occupy my job, occupy lunch, occupy some shopping...cool!
OCCUPY SONG! OCCUPY DANCERS!! Let's occupy all the way!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jared Keith Jones
your friendly neighborhood buddhist
09:51 PM on 12/02/2011
Occupy Everything. Occupy Nowhere.
Occupy a mind which leaves no trace.
12:19 AM on 12/02/2011
I might suggest that the only way to truly "Wake Up" individually is to recognize that the cops are fully human too and only doing what they are to try to be good providers, husbands and--in their own views--men of their various communities. I've seen true fear in the eyes of young cops as they kettled hundreds of thousands of angry angry anti-war protesters and realized the moral ground was not theirs, and in some deep recess of their minds they were the shills of evil forces. The easiest way to make things worse is to make the cops into inhuman, unfeeling automata--even if their actions seem to justify it.
We of the 99% should go the extra mile and point out to the cops that their pension funds are in danger and that the 1% will support them only to exploit them in the long term. Cops have parents, cousins, neices and nephews often without health insurance and even jobs. We all do better in stressing our common humanity rather than temporary power over another.
A mad mob of tens of thousands can do great violence to a few hundred cops; but a few hundred badly instructed police with modern weapons & methods can create a slaughter of thousands if not properly trained.
09:53 PM on 12/27/2011
The scenario you describe is a fiction in this case. No one is provoking the cops. No one is angrily demonizing cops at OWS. I think the article was going the other way.
11:06 PM on 12/01/2011
They need to start "occupying" some of these "so-called" churches.
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kamachanda
Mr. President, Tear this Wall Street down!
09:06 PM on 12/01/2011
To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven:
A time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted;
A time to kill, and a time to heal; a time to break down, and a time to build up;
A time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance;
A time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together; a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing;
A time to get, and a time to lose; a time to keep, and a time to cast away;
A time to rend, and a time to sew; a time to keep silence, and a time to speak;
A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of peace.

Ecclesiastes 3
American King James Version

Now is the time to gather stones together.
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David4FreePress
I am a volunteer, Tong Ren distant energy healer.
03:34 PM on 12/01/2011
Everything is energy.
Every god is an energy source.
Economics is the energy flow of society.
Money spent by the government on the poor is recycled through the economy and works like $5.
Almost every untaxed dollar of income to the rich is just squirreled away to be used for leverage.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steelsil
Alan Grayson for President!
12:15 AM on 12/01/2011
If a Buddhist calls himself a good Buddhist, he is probably joking.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steelsil
Alan Grayson for President!
12:00 AM on 12/01/2011
Anyone with a conscience and empathy knows that for people who have so much money that they could never count it all to keep getting richer by destroying other people's rice bowls is deeply wrong.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bohol2528
of course I am a agitator, I design t shirts
08:13 PM on 11/30/2011
After reading the comments here I people want to argue over just what a "good" Buddhist is. Just because your a follower of the teaching of the Buddha does not mean you can't take part in the world, be involved in politics or even be a cop. To be a Buddhist is to revere life at all levels, to respect ones self as well as others and to free oneself from the greed of the world.

Many Christians feel that to practice Buddhist teaching is to betray their faith. And yet the teachings of the man Jesus were a lot like that of the Buddha. And until we as a people can put aside our petty differences and free ourselves from our greed, jealousy and everything that goes with them we will never achieve our full Potential .
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khanti
Cultivator
03:23 AM on 12/01/2011
Buddhist can take part in demo or whatever but not in tha name of Buddhism nor official representative of Buddhism. Buddha forbid monks to be involved with politics or hold position. Just like the disicples of Jesus not being involved with politics nor holding official governing position. The Buddha and Jesus work by touching the hearts of people to awaken their compassion. It is by compassion that the rich will share with the poor. Even the Dalai Lama has officially given up involvement in the governing of the exiled Tibetans he remains as their spiritual leader . The Dalai Lama represent the Spiritual Leader of Tibet, the title given by a Mongolian ruler when he was also the ruler of China. The awarding of the title National Spiritual Leader was practiced by the previous China Dynasties unfortunately the Spiritual Leader is kept within the palace temple.
05:34 PM on 12/02/2011
"Buddhist can take part in demo or whatever but not in tha name of Buddhism nor official representa­tive of Buddhism."

I guess I missed that sutra. Or, you know, tell, for example, Thich Nhat Hanh, Bernie Glassman, or Kaz Tanahashi (just from my own tradition) that the Buddha is SUPER ANGRY with them for being engaged with the world.

Everything may be empty, but that doesn't mean you don't have to do anything.
09:57 PM on 12/27/2011
My guess is that you might just worship buddha and the priests, but I could be wrong. Buddhism in the west is engaged in social action and rooted in "meditation". And you still haven't responded to Soryu's pointing out of Thai or Bernie's social, buddhists actions.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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Klarsonent
Semi-retired landlady, small business entrepreneur
12:19 PM on 11/30/2011
Thanks, Lewis Richmond, for a very good article.
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Jared Keith Jones
your friendly neighborhood buddhist
10:09 AM on 11/30/2011
Most become distracted with fixing the world and forget to fix themselves. If you do not forget to fix yourself while involved in fixing the world, then the latter path is superior. However, compassion - in the strictest sense of Karuna (the desire to remove suffering and the causes of suffering from all beings without exception) and not in the sense of empathy, pity, relating with someone, attachment, etc - would not motivate you to do anything except that which removes your own fundamental ignorance and delusions. Fixing your own fundamental ignorance is the only method to be able to put a permanent end to thing like famine, war, social inequality, corrupt governments, etc.
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khanti
Cultivator
12:39 AM on 11/30/2011
If you are not a teacher I am not so worried.
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Tyler Austin
Decentralized Commons and PR voted Senate please.
11:29 PM on 11/29/2011
Can't pray with pepper spray.