{"id":70209,"date":"2017-09-30T21:50:54","date_gmt":"2017-10-01T03:50:54","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/?p=70209"},"modified":"2017-09-30T14:34:17","modified_gmt":"2017-09-30T21:34:17","slug":"case-of-a-modern-day-arahant-i","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/2017\/09\/30\/case-of-a-modern-day-arahant-i\/","title":{"rendered":"Case of a modern day Arahant &#8211; I"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><em>By Rohana R. Wasala<\/em><\/span><\/h2>\n<p>September 14, 2017<\/p>\n<p>There is no doubt that Buddhists were shocked and pained \u00a0and gravely upset by what Ven. Samanthabhadra\u00a0 Thera recently said about two of the most venerated objects of Buddhist worship in the country: the Dantha Dhatu or the Sacred Tooth Relic and the Lalata Dhatu or the Sacred Frontal Bone Relic, both believed by them to be those of the Buddha. During acts of worship, these sacred relics make the devout Buddhist worshippers feel as if the Buddha were \u00a0before them in flesh and blood. But Ven. Samanthabhadra Thera remarked that the first is a tooth of a wild boar, and that the second is a seashell. He further said that the foolish devotees worshipping these things will be reborn as mala perethayo\u201d (a class of manes in local Buddhist belief born into a state of misery) for what he called this foolish superstitious practice (of worshipping what he\u00a0 alleges to be animal bones). He also referred the lay official in charge of the Tooth Relic as \u2018mala perethaya\u2019). This information is from a You Tube video recently posted by Siri Sadaham Ashramaya, where the maverick monk resides.<\/p>\n<p>Ven. Samanthabhadra Thera styles himself as an Arahant. \u00a0It is well known that the monk who now appears by that name was ordained, and until a few years back known, as Pitiduwe Siridhamma. Of course, if he is really what he says he is, only he will know it. But are we obliged to take his word for it? Certainly not! Accepting anything on mere report or hearsay or scriptural authority without experiential evidence is not the Budddhist way as explained in the Kalama Sutta. In this case, Buddhists\/or other interested observers must look for external signs (evidence) of his Arahanthood to convince themselves of the authenticity of his claim. I don\u2019t mean that he must possess miraculous powers that some simple unsophisticated ordinary Buddhists attribute to Arahaths in popular tradition such as alleged abilities of clairvoyance, mind reading, magical aerial transportation etc. Instead, one should look for characteristic behaviours of his that convince us that he is a person who has annihilated the illusion of self and put a final end to samsaric suffering. \u00a0Though he could have attained that state for all we know, his recent actions and speeches in the course of his normal religious ministry leave at least some of us sceptical about his claims.<\/p>\n<p>At the very outset, I\u2019d like to kindly remind my readers that, as usual, my attitude as an essayist or newspaper columnist\u00a0 can be simply expressed thus: \u2018This is what I think about this matter, i.e., \u00a0here, the case of Ven. Samanthabhadra Thera,\u00a0 and these are my reasons for\u00a0 my opinion. What do you think, if you happen to take an interest in the subject?\u2019 My personal belief is that jointly searching after the truth in any situation is socially beneficial and individually satisfying, promoting the central goal of Buddhism: social harmony and individual happiness (an idea articulated to me by a Buddhist scholar I personally know, who, I believe will prefer not to be named, because he is least concerned with name and fame or selfhood). I am mindful of the fact that by some of my readers I could be reduced to the position of one among \u2018Fools (who) rush in where angels fear to tread\u2019 as the early 18<sup>th<\/sup> century English poet Alexander Pope wrote. He was writing \u2018An Essay on Criticism\u2019 (1711) about good literary criticism and bad. I am here applying it to a critical characterization of a controversial personage who is important to us \u00a0which I am indulging in at present, but I don\u2019t feel like a fool at all.<\/p>\n<p>I have the highest regard for Ven. Samanthabhadra\u2019s scientific attitude to Buddhism. His incisive, analytical explanation of the Dhamma to the average Buddhist upasaka upasikas (male and female followers of the Buddha Dhamma) in simple clear language is admirable. His criticism of popular Buddhism in Sri Lanka as a false deviant version of the original teaching of the Buddha is a valid one. That there are avaricious, corrupt, worldly monks who resist a reestablishment of the true Buddhist way of life among themselves and their followers is also a fact. My focus here, however, is the undesirability of the monk\u2019s bull in a china shop behavior (as seen in his indiscriminate attack on fellow bhikkhus\u00a0 and the Mahanayake Theras among whom many, I believe, are as virtuous and as erudite as he is himself) which ultimately is bound to defeat his purpose. There is no question about the need to reform these aspects of the Buddhasasana. But it is up to the Maha Sangha themselves to set things right in a non-political religiously acceptable manner without letting well intentioned lone monks play the role of the skilled physician, called upon to cure a person suffering from indigestion, who boasted, when his patient died during his treatment: Although my patient died, he purged well\u201d!\u00a0 My friends who disagree with me are kindly invited to produce counter arguments to demolish mine.<\/p>\n<p>According to Ven. Dr Walpola Rahula Thera, an unrivalled authority on both Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism, an Arahant\u00a0 is one who is free from all fetters, defilements and impurities through the realization of Nirvana in the fourth and final stage, and who is free from rebirth\u201d (\u2018<strong>What the Buddha Taught\u2019 <\/strong>{First published by Gordon Fraser, London, 1959; but I am using here the 2006 edition of the book published by the Buddhist Cultural Centre, Dehiwala, Sri Lanka} p. 142. This is the most comprehensive yet succinct treatise on Buddhism that I have read). Verse 92 of <strong>Dhammapada<\/strong> as translated by Indian monk Ven. Sri Archarya Buddharakkhita (1922-2013)describes \u2018The Perfected Ones\u2019 (Arahants) as<\/p>\n<p><em>\u00a0\u2018Those who do not accumulate<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>and are wise regarding food,<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>whose object is the Void,<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>the Unconditioned Freedom \u2013<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>their track cannot be traced,<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>like that of birds in the air.\u2019,<\/em><\/p>\n<p>where the translator elucidates <em>accumulate<\/em> as also including accumulation of kamma, and <em>food<\/em> as referring to physical nutriment, sensory impressions, volitional activity and rebirth consciousness, all of which feed the process of continued existence. In his translation of the Dhammapada, German oriental scholar F. Max Muller (1823-1900) defines \u2018the <em>Void<\/em>, the <em>Unconditioned Freedom\u2019<\/em> \u00a0of Verse 92 as \u2018Nirvana\u2019.<\/p>\n<p>The illusory I\u201d consciousness, the illusion of self\/soul\/ego, is a great source of the unsatisfactoriness of life according to the Buddhist teaching. An Arahat has completely eliminated the erroneous sense of self. But, to me it appears (my observation could be wrong, of course) that Ven. Samanthabhadra constantly shows a deep preoccupation with himself (egoism), in fact, egotism, the notion that he is superior to all others. How could he celebrate his birthday, calling it an alms giving though, in the form of a buffet lunch with flower-bedecked uniform-clad young women in attendance, with a vast array of dishes to choose from including a \u2018pork curry\u2019 (to which he drew special attention), a far cry from a simple frugal meal that bhikkhus (mendicant monks) would be normally satisfied with, particularly at a time when many poor people of the country fail to properly feed their children most days? This is puzzling to me as it must to many others as well. If such behavior were found in an ordinary person, I\u2019d have wondered: \u2018Could there be something gone wrong here?\u2019 But such a notion about Ven. Samanthabhadra Thera, of such spiritual attainments, is inconceivable.<\/p>\n<p>The reason is this: My observation reminded me of something I read in neuroscientist and student of Buddhism Dr Sam Harris\u2019s book <strong>\u2018Waking Up: Searching for spirituality without religion\u2019<\/strong>(Transworld Publishers, London, September 2014); he claims that he has done meditation, including vipassana meditation taught in Buddhism, for many years. (Incidentally, Ven. Samanthabhadra often stresses the importance of this form of Buddhist meditation for final Emancipation and communicates to us a lucid practical explanation of the subject.) The book has some valuable advice for serious practitioners of meditation. It warns them about the danger of pathological responses to meditation occurring, a field where little research has been done, as he points out. Dr Harris thinks that this is something that both teachers and students of meditation should guard against. Buddhist scholars are not unaware of this danger. Ven. Dr Walpola Rahula Thera devotes one whole chapter of the aforementioned book to the subject of meditation: Chapter VII \u2018Meditation\u2019 or Mental Culture: Bhavana\u2019 (pp. 67-75). The chapter begins with a statement of the Buddha, which says that there are two kinds of illness in the world, physical and mental, and that although there seem to be people who stay physically healthy for one or two or even for a hundred or more years, few in this world are free from mental illness even for a moment, except those who are free from mental defilements (i.e., Arahants). The chapter spells out the prescribed way for meditation that forestall pathological responses (though of course, Dr Harris\u2019s phraseology is not anticipated there).<\/p>\n<p>Ven. Samanthabhadra Thera used to be a very popular preacher in the past as Pitiduwe Siridhamma Himi. He has been claiming for a few years now that he has attained Arahanthood which is the highest stage of spiritual attainment in Buddhism and it is identical with the attainment of the ultimate Nibbanic bliss. Nibbana is the summum bonum of Buddhism. \u00a0Unlike in other religions, one does not have to die before one can attain that state of perfect happiness that the realization of the Ultimate Reality brings. Ven. Samanthabhadra Thera also\u00a0 says in a You Tube video that I watched\u00a0 that he is \u2018inebriated with the Dhamma\u2019, meaning that he has studied it thoroughly and imbibed all the doctrinal information it contains. It is more than obvious that he sincerely believes that he has achieved a perfect understanding of the Dhamma. For sure many other monks and lay Buddhists can justifiably make the same claim. Yet his extraordinary Arahanthood claim is problematic because his behavior shows signs, which, in an ordinary lay person, would be interpreted as symptoms of a serious personality disorder. But in the case of Ven. Samanthabhadra Thera, I hasten to add, such a diagnosis is out of the question, is in fact, utterly unthinkable.<\/p>\n<p>Buddhism can be variously defined as a form of practical psychology, an ethical philosophy, a science-based conceptual analysis of human existence, and a religion free from god-belief and mysticism. Buddhism is Buddhism. It is unique. It cannot be totally identified with any of the above. In popular practice, though, it has the three basic distinguishing elements of a religion: a unique worldview, a system of rituals, and a prescribed way for achieving spiritual perfection. The last characteristic of a religion (the way to perfection) in Buddhism takes the form of transformative enlightenment about the truth of change and suchness\u2026\u201d . Here I am appropriating American Professor Robert Cummings Neville\u2019s ideas about religion, arbitrarily applying them to Buddhism. The phrase quoted is from him. Professor Neville (b. 1939), Emeritus, Boston University School of Theology, is philosopher, theologian, and Confucian scholar among other things. Ven. Ajahn Sumedho Thera, American monk of the Thai Forest Tradition of Thai Theravada Buddhism, defines suchness in Buddhism Now website (November 21, 2014) as follows: Suchness, or Tathata, the Tathagata, is\u00a0<em>right now. This\u00a0<\/em>is the way it is. But sometimes, when I say, \u2018This is the way it is,\u2019 somebody will say, \u2018You mean this is the way it is forever?\u2019 No! RIGHT NOW \u2014 this is the way it is. The only way it\u00a0<em>can\u00a0<\/em>be is the way it\u00a0<em>is\u00a0<\/em>right now! It\u2019s changing, but at this moment, the Suchness of this moment, is just\u00a0<em>this\u00a0<\/em>way. The thinking mind has to stop. Otherwise you will want to ask, \u2018Where is it? What is he saying?\u2019 You just have to stop your mind and listen, or watch. Then you will be relating to Suchness, the Suchness of the moment, the as-is-ness\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>Though the essence of Buddhism \u2013 the Four Noble Truths \u2013 is the same across the Buddhist world, there are numerous divisions of Buddhism as a religion, the three main ones being Theravada, Mahayana, and Vajrayana. (Even a Western version of Buddhism has developed over the recent decades.) Of these three, Theravada (which is found in such countries as Sri Lanka, Myanmar and Thailand) is considered\u00a0 to be closest to the pristine form of Buddhism. These various sects developed in different lands over the centuries as Buddhism got acculturated to those alien societies. Now, Buddhist devotional rituals are culturally shaped. These must be maintained for the perpetuation or survival of Buddhism. A mere religious ideology, however\u00a0 rational, however noble it may be, will not survive for long unless it is packaged in ritual observances. Ritual worship serves as a vehicle (medium) for the relevant religious ideology. Buddhism itself is safe from attack. What is to be protected is the Buddhasasana.<\/p>\n<p>(<em>The Island <\/em>published two very interesting articles by Professor M.M.J. Marasinghe, formerly of the Department of Pali and Buddhist Studies, University of Kelaniya,\u00a0 about the adulteration of Buddhism by Mahayana under the titles:\u00a0 \u2018The great betrayal of Theravada Buddhism?\u2019and \u2018The transistion from Buddhism to Beggism\u2019 respectively on May 21, 2014 and August 3, 2016. I think one could quote these in support of Ven. Samanthabhadra\u2019s arguments against certain elements of Buddhist ritual worship.)<\/p>\n<p>Ritual worship (enacted through devotional offerings\u00a0 or amisha puja, marking holy days, celebrating festivals, conducting peraheras, alms giving, and \u00a0observing age old traditions, etc.) contributes to making a religion a force for unifying a community, besides giving it a sense of emotional security. They also sustain and increase the piety of the adherents. It is due to amisha puja that Ven. Samanthabhadra conducts alms givings at his temple, is able to send his disciples on alms rounds so devotees perform amisha puja. The same responsible for the huge donations that the devout make towards the monk\u2019s charitable projects. We are told that he is going to build the biggest Buddhist temple complex on a 50-acre land that has been donated by philanthropist.<\/p>\n<p>The twin goal of Buddhism is creating empowering harmony for the society and enduring happiness for the individual. In ultimate terms, any religion is concerned with the ultimate fate of the individual. But what is the happiness of a single individual relative to that of a whole society? Ven. Samanthabhadra Thera\u2019s outrageous attack on an important aspect of essential Buddhist devotional worship will be counterproductive. Instead of promoting Buddhism as the beautiful ethical-philosophical system (what the ordinary adherents follow, part as ritual, part as serious practice), the venerable thera\u2019s sudden onslaught on relic worship is likely to endanger its very existence, particularly at a time like this when the country\u2019s ancient Buddhist cultural heritage is being threatened in various ways.<\/p>\n<p>The attainment of spiritual goals including the highest is strictly a personal matter that does not concern others, like regaining good health after an illness. If Ven. Samanthabhadra Thera has attained Arahanthood, it is for himself. It is none of our business. Other Buddhists need not initiate a personality cult centering on him, as he seems to be encouraging them to do (e.g., by erecting a statue of himself at his temple. This is something that most Buddhists cannot rationalize). Each individual must realize the Ultimate Truth for himself or herself. \u00a0But a person of high spiritual attainments can and usually does play a useful social role. Such a person inspires others to follow his or her example and to make the same achievements; he or she can teach and guide others, but the teacher and guide cannot make spiritual attainments for others. In Buddhism, there are no saviours, but only compassionate teachers and guides. Ven. Samanthabhadra Thera conducts himself as if he has attained to the status of the highest type of such teacher.<\/p>\n<p>Yet , even if this self-assessment is true, he cannot be any more important to others than as a teacher and a mentor. However thoroughly steeped in the Dhamma he may be, however spiritually accomplished he may claim himself to be, and however sincere in his intentions he could be, what he felt provoked to say about the Tooth Relic and the Frontal Bone Relic is absolutely frivolous and unimaginably foolhardy. Ordinary Buddhists are not concerned about the authenticity of the relics they worship. If Ven. Samanthabhadra Thera was taken seriously by the average Buddhists (when he insulted both those objects of veneration and the worshippers who venerate them), he would have been consumed by \u00a0their outrage at what would be universally condemned as a sacrilegious speech, for \u00a0such an apparently baseless attack on the long established Buddhist devotional ritual of relic worship would be like touching an exposed high voltage electric cable with his bare hands. Fortunately for him, the average Buddhists are still patient with him. Buddhists traditionally respect the civaraya that the Buddha used to wear\u201d (Don\u2019t they call it Arahat dhajaya or Flag of Arahanthood\u201d?).<\/p>\n<p>However, on several occasions, groups of Buddhists staged protests against him, not because of their fault. They are now familiar with the subversive anti-Buddhist activities of certain fanatical religious groups that employ corrupt individuals with a smattering knowledge of Buddhism disguised as Buddhist monks, particularly active in remote village areas where poverty makes spirituality a secondary concern. It is natural that people tend to believe that this monk is also one of them, though personally I do not subscribe to that view at all (for his explanation of the Dhamma is compatible with a rational approach to it in spite of his controversial utterances, which are not unfounded, criticizing traditional Buddhist practices ). A couple of months ago, there was an incident at Piliyandala involving Ven. Samanthabhadra Thera, where the Buddha\u00a0 civaraya (robe) he was wearing could barely save him from being manhandled. Some protesters who disapproved of his unorthodox style of preaching threw eggs at him, and nearly assaulted him, before the organizers of the Dharmadeshana (preaching) event managed to get him out of the place. I am painfully concerned that such things should happen in my predominantly Buddhist country. Wouldn\u2019t \u00a0it be better if our venerable monk be wiser in his ministry? (<strong>To be concluded<\/strong>)<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By Rohana R. Wasala September 14, 2017 There is no doubt that Buddhists were shocked and pained \u00a0and gravely upset by what Ven. Samanthabhadra\u00a0 Thera recently said about two of the most venerated objects of Buddhist worship in the country: the Dantha Dhatu or the Sacred Tooth Relic and the Lalata Dhatu or the Sacred [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[91],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-70209","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-rohana-r-wasala"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/70209","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=70209"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/70209\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=70209"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=70209"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=70209"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}