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Advice book

Advice and Practices for Various Countries

The Best Leader of All

Date of Advice:
Date Posted:

A student wrote that she was a feminist who strongly believed in democracy and women's power. Rinpoche said the best leader is the Buddha, or a bodhisattva who "cherishes everybody and is able to guide with wisdom and compassion, not with ignorance."

Lama Zopa Rinpoche turns the prayer wheel at Kopan Monastery, Nepal, December 2015. Photo: Bill Kane.
Lama Zopa Rinpoche turns the prayer wheel at Kopan Monastery, Nepal, December 2015. Photo: Bill Kane.

My very dear one,
I understand what you are saying, and of course that’s OK. You want to be what you thought. You are totally free to become what you want to in this world, I am not holding you.

May I say a few words? Generally in the world if a country is controlled by one man—whether a king or a president—or if it is a democratically run country, there is the possibility of mistakes, because people don't have omniscience, the fully knowing mind. So they can make mistakes. Not everything is a mistake, but there is that possibility. Whether the country is run by one person or democratically, if one person or the group, the public, doesn’t have omniscience, then there is the possibility of making mistakes.

For example, arhats who have direct perception of emptiness see everything as empty from the beginning, existing in mere name. They have not just realization, but direct realization, and they develop that and cease even the seed of ignorance, which is the root of samsara—the ignorance holding the I and the aggregates as truly existent, when they have never been.

Arhats are free from the oceans of samsaric suffering—the suffering of pain, the suffering of old age, sickness, death and so forth. They are free from the oceans of samsaric sufferings and all the samsaric pleasures, and from where those two come—the pervasive compounded suffering and the contaminated aggregates. The aggregates are contaminated with the seed of delusion, caused by delusion and karma and pervaded by suffering, so then we experience suffering because we are under the control of karma and delusion.

Arhats are free from all these sufferings, but they haven’t completed the merits of wisdom and merits of virtue and they haven’t ceased all the obscurations, the subtle obscurations. They have unimaginable, unimaginable, unimaginable qualities, but they make mistakes. For example they don't know subtle karma—only the Buddha, the Omniscient One, knows subtle karma. Arhats don’t know subtle karma, for example, peacock feathers are different colors, but they don’t know what is the cause of each color, or what is the cause of different marks on a butterfly or a human being. They can't see the cause of all the tiny details on a flower, the different colors, shapes etc. They can't see the cause of these, the subtle karma. Only the Buddha sees the subtle karma.

Then there are secret actions that only the Buddha’s omniscient mind can see. Arhats cannot see the great distances, the unbelievable, unbelievable, unbelievable distances. It’s so difficult for them to see that, but the Buddha can see the great distances and places and time, unbelievable, unbelievable. This is called the unknowing minds,1 the four causes of unknowing which arhats haven't abandoned, haven't purified, and they still can't see that.

Therefore they still can't do perfect works for the sentient beings because of these four unknowing minds, even though they have unbelievable, unbelievable, unbelievable psychic powers and so forth, that we don’t have. So there is still the possibility of making mistakes. Even if one person guides democratically, because everyone doesn't have omniscience, it’s not necessarily always correct.

For example, if I tell you a simple thing, if you don’t have clairvoyance, which is achieved through calm abiding, tantra realization of the Six Yogas of Naropa and so forth, you can make mistakes. You can't tell when you are going to die, you can't see in the future, which day or month, you have no idea, and you can't tell how to have success or failure in your work.

If doctors are not clairvoyant, they can't really know how to help patients. There is general understanding, but they still don't know every single thing. They can’t diagnose and know what medicines are needed, especially nowadays, the diagnoses are upside down. It even says in the Tibetan texts that as the times get more degenerate there are more dangers of wrong diagnoses or medicines that worked before do not work now. So doctors need clairvoyance very much to be able to heal patients.

Also for business you need clairvoyance to know the future, and the government definitely needs clairvoyance. Ordinary people without clairvoyance can make so many mistakes by believing something but not knowing all the obstacles and methods. Therefore you need clairvoyance for everything, even if you don’t have omniscience, even if you are not perfect.

My view is that both sides can make mistakes, therefore the best leader of sentient beings, the best one, is the Buddha. He has omniscient mind, knowing all the past and future directly at the same time. Seeing the future directly, then having all the methods to cure all the sufferings and all the problems. Directly seeing and having the power to reveal the methods; having omniscience and infinite compassion for all sentient beings and perfect power to reveal the methods.

Arhats don't have all those things, so they are limited. At least if the leader of the world could be a bodhisattva, who has given up cherishing the I and cherishes the sentient beings most, just as a mother cherishes her child most in her life. She does everything that is best for her child and if the child gets a degree or somebody praises the child, the mother is so happy. Like that, bodhisattvas cherish every single sentient being the most and no-one is left out.

Even breathing in and out is only done for sentient beings, not for self, then with all that loving kindness, compassion, bodhicitta, depending on which level of path that the bodhisattva has achieved, then with that much quality he is able to benefit others. So it depends on which level of path the bodhisattva has achieved.

I would say then, yes, that is the best leader. If not Buddha, then a bodhisattva who cherishes everybody and is able to guide with wisdom and compassion, not with ignorance. Otherwise there are a lot of problems in the world. If there is a democracy or just one person running the country with ignorance, then there is so much fighting, like what has been happening. If the leader of the country is not a bodhisattva, then often becoming a leader is to gain power for oneself, for one's own happiness and not for others.

Most of the countries in the world are run by one person, however, some could be bodhisattvas, for example, Tibet was run by His Holiness the Dalai Lama who is the Buddha of Compassion, not just a bodhisattva. In general the countries are mostly run by one person with a self-cherishing mind, ignorance, so then that person makes mistakes or does it only to gain power for himself rather than to gain [happiness] for others. Probably people don’t get happiness and even if they don't fight or complain, they are not very happy. Many countries are like this.

That’s why democracy is better, because even though not everybody has omniscient mind, they are not bodhisattvas, people can say things when they want to say them. So it can get better all the time, though it doesn’t necessarily mean the decisions are always correct and they don't create problems. Democracy is being able to have different views and what the majority like is considered, so I guess it’s more or less done that way, but not necessarily always without mistakes and people not having problems, it's not like that. If the public develop their wisdom and compassion more, that can help the country to run better, with  more happiness for the people, by developing more compassion and wisdom.

So people need to develop more wisdom and compassion, that’s the whole issue. Even to guide you and even in your own life, you need to have more compassion and wisdom. Otherwise you follow your own ignorance or other peoples’ ignorance, other people giving ignorant advice, like the blind guiding blind people.

You are a young intelligent girl, so I am just giving my views. I hope you don’t mind. It's very important you use your intelligence and wisdom.

I don’t know if other religions in the world have said this, but the Buddha said: “Bhikshus, wise ones, check my teachings, like examining gold, by cutting, by burning, by rubbing and examining well my teachings. Only then take my advice.” The Buddha didn’t say in the beginning to just believe, don’t question. I think in the world the Buddha is the only one who gave freedom like that.

With much love and prayers...


notes

1 Four types of very subtle ignorance. They are: the inability to see the secret actions of a buddha, the inability to see the subtle karma of sentient beings, the inability to see things that happened a very long time ago and the inability to see very long distances. [Return to text]

Improving the Conditions in Spain

Date of Advice:
Date Posted:

Rinpoche sent this response to students in Spain who had requested his visit. 

Rinpoche said he will come to Spain, like a rabbit coming from Nepal. Rinpoche said it’s very important for Spanish people to create the karma to improve the conditions of the country, especially the economic one. Mainly due to karma, the conditions are difficult, [due to] a lack of charity.

According to Rinpoche’s observations, the Prajnaparamita in 8,000 Stanzas has to be recited. Maybe the geshe and students who know Tibetan can do it.

Advice for the Whole Country

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Rinpoche gave the following advice in August 2012 on what can be done by the government of a country for the benefit of its people. These practices can be for the people of America or any other place.

Annually:

  • Read the Kangyur (Buddha’ s teachings) five times for peace
  • Read the Tengyur (the commentaries on Buddha’ s teachings, by the great pandits, Nagarjuna, Asanga and so forth) eight times
  • Do the wrathful puja to dispel obstacles by throwing the torma
  • Do the extensive Medicine Buddha Puja 10 times

Each day:

These practices are not only to decrease the amount of murders in the country, but also to stop the dangers of fire, water, air, earthquakes, tsunamis, etc. Some years the country may need more or less pujas, depending on the obstacles. Also it can be different depending on the different states. The pujas have to be done by good practitioners, for example Khadro-la or Khamtrul Rinpoche.

 

Practices for Columbia

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In July 2009, Rinpoche checked what could be beneficial for Colombia, as a whole, and sent the following advice to the director of an FPMT center there.

My very dear one,
I hope you very well. I wish we could have met in France; the meeting was very good. I hope I can come to Colombia soon. Your good Colombian friend, the doctor, is here and asked me for some advice for Colombia.

I checked and this is what came out as very good to practice for Colombia:

1.  Every month make three incense torma offerings to all the devas and protectors called Gyab Ngen Lhasang. If possible, do five a month.

2.  As much as possible, throughout the country, spread the Compassionate Buddha mantra OM MANI PADME HUM and Chenrezig meditation. The center and students should do strong meditation on Compassion Buddha. Also, pray for all the drug dealers and gangsters in Colombia to develop compassion. Think that beams of light come out from Chenrezig and purify all the negative karma and defilements collected since beginningless time, and think that the beams fill all the beings in Colombia and the whole world completely with great compassion.

3. Generally, it comes out very good to have many Chenrezig initiations given in Colombia.

4. Recite seven Vajra Claws every day for the country and for peace. Students of the center could do this. Or, if there are any monks or a geshe there, they could do it.

5. Build a statue of Padmasambhava of nine, ten, or thirteen storeys, if possible, at least nine feet high, in the aspect of “Accomplishing Wishes—Sampa Lhundrup.” This is for peace for the whole country and it would be best if the government helped in some way (I am not sure if they will), or business people could contribute towards it.

There was one great Lama in Tibet who advised that if a large Padmasambhava statue had been built in Tibet before China invaded, then Tibet would not have been invaded. The statue wasn’t built. Instead, they built a statue of Yamantaka.

If any geshes visit, they can do some or any of these things. Also, the practices can be shared by students at different centers.

With much love and prayers to you and all the warm-hearted Colombian friends.

The Situation in Tibet

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A student wrote to Rinpoche giving his opinion on the situation in Tibet. Rinpoche sent the following advice.

My very dear Jack,
Thank you for sending this. You know it is very important to have a clear understanding of things.

In the beginning in this world we were all in animal form. We did a lot of bad things to each other, like eating each other, then we evolved a little bit, but there was still so much fighting and causing harm to each other, all over the world. My point is that nobody was enlightened from the beginning. In Tibet, in the beginning, there was the Bon religion, then came Buddhism. It is wrong to think that everyone was good or everyone was bad, that doesn’t make sense. How can one expect or think that in Tibet everyone is good or everyone is bad. Mostly everyone is born with anger, ignorance, and attachment. Everyone is like that.

A very important thing about Tibet is that many great holy beings achieved the path, achieved Amitabha, and were able to benefit others, bringing unbelievable benefit, deeper than the oceans, vaster than space. Still, those great holy beings can show the aspect of being displeased when someone does wrong, and show the aspect of being pleased when someone does good. Good and bad exist. Bad has suffering results and good has the result of happiness and peace. What the holy beings want is for everyone to be good, to try to follow the correct path, practice, have realizations, and achieve the highest enlightenment.

Of course, there were many problems in the past in Tibet; there is no doubt about that. Some of what we hear is accurate, some may be exaggerated. The difficulty is that some scholars and professors often only talk about certain aspects of the culture—they don’t understand the great achievements of the holy beings.

You can’t think that if one person is bad then everyone is bad, or if one person is enlightened then all people are enlightened. Your mind has to be a universal mind and see all the different aspects, not just the good and not just the bad. You have to see the different mixtures, the different aspects, otherwise you get yourself in trouble.

In the beginning, when Buddhism came to the West and people heard about Milarepa, they all had this very high view that if you are Tibetan you must be a great yogi and free of all negative emotions. In my view, Westerners really thought like that, especially during the time when LSD was popular. They only saw all these unbelievably good things, and didn’t see the not so good aspects.

The great achievement in Tibet that no other country achieved was the preservation of the complete Buddhadharma. In the beginning, Buddha taught 84,000 teachings, the entire path to enlightenment. Then, the great Indian pandits, in particular the Six Ornaments and Two Jewels of India, preserved the Dharma—Buddha’s teachings—and condensed them. Then, many great lamas in Tibet, like Lama Tsongkhapa, studied and experienced the path. So did the great Indian yogis.

In Tibet, for over 1,300 years, the complete Buddhadharma was translated and spread, starting with Padmasambhava and Atisha. It was taught extensively, and many studied and practiced in hermitages and caves in the mountains all over Tibet. Where individuals actualized the path, some of them did it living in vows. So many achieved enlightenment in all the four traditions, and had great attainments. They lived in those caves, completely giving up this life. This is Tibet’s unique and great achievement, preserving the Buddhadharma in its complete form.

If the Tibetans hadn’t preserved the Buddhadharma, where would we be now? There would have been a complete degeneration. But because they preserved it, now, many are still studying, living, and practicing the Dharma. Because this is possible, the Tibetan people can hand back the complete Buddhadharma to the mother land: India. This is a very, very special achievement. So many bodhisattvas, holy beings, and enlightened beings came about in Tibet. Even in other Buddhist countries it was not like this, the complete entire Buddhadharma was not preserved. They had meditators, of course, and correct understanding, but not the entire Buddhadharma. Also, Tibet was subdued by Chenrezig. That is its connection with His Holiness the Dalai Lama.

Anyway, the essence is I want you to see the incredible achievement of the Tibetan people, the vast achievement of preserving the entire Buddhadharma, not only the intellectual understanding of the complete Dharma. Of course, Tibetan people also are just very simple people, living with yaks and dogs, not doing business with other countries. But that is the point—essentially the Tibetan people were focused on Dharma and developing inside, there was very little effort in developing outside.

This is my news, this is not the CNN or BBC news, but Sherpa Yeti from Mexico City talking to Dear Jack in the United States of America.

With much love and prayers...

A Letter to the King of Nepal

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Rinpoche sent the following letter to the King of Nepal in June, 2002.

Your Royal Highness, the King of Nepal – beautiful and holy Nepal, our country.

My name is Thubten Zopa, Lama Zopa for short. I was born in Solu Khumbu, close to Namche Bazaar. When I was young I went to Tibet, lived there for three years, then escaped through Bhutan to India when Tibet was overtaken by communist China. I lived in India for about eight years. During this time I studied Buddhist philosophy together with the monks who had escaped from Lhasa and who were from the largest monastic university, where there was the most extensive learning of Buddhist philosophy, as taught by Buddha 2,500 years ago.

Then I returned back to Nepal, my home. Together with my Guru-ji, Lama Yeshe, we started to teach Buddhism – philosophy and meditation – to Westerners. We gave teachings mainly in Nepal, also sometimes in India. This has continued now for 32 years. The people who came to Nepal to listen to the teachings and practice meditation consequently found that their lives became very meaningful and beneficial. With whatever teachings and meditation practices we taught them, they went back and started centers, of which there are now 135. Most of them are meditation centers, while some are hospices for dying people, leprosy projects, destitute homes, and schools – universal education schools.

Universal education schools offer very special education to develop the children’s’ good heart – loving kindness and compassion, universal responsibility and tolerance, and to practice kindness in everyday life toward others: friend, enemy, stranger, anybody. This is the schools’ aim. Bringing up children with all these precious qualities, qualities which are in the mind, gives so much peace and happiness. Firstly, there is peace and happiness in the family – in his or her home – then there is so much peace and happiness in this life and in all lives until that person is liberated from the oceans of samsaric sufferings and their causes – delusion and karma – until that human being achieves full enlightenment. Therefore, children brought up in this way are able to bring peace and happiness to society, in their country as well as in the whole world.

I think that giving this special education to young people, a special education that develops compassion and loving kindness – kindness with everyone in everyday life – is very, very important. Not only does it affect the person’s life, but also how children are educated in the present determines how the near future world will turn out. It all depends on how they are educated now. Whether the new future world will be much worse than the present, much more wild and harmful, all depends on the present. Bringing this kind of education to public schools is the method to stop this. Children who grow up with these very precious human qualities – the good heart of loving kindness, compassion, tolerance – and practice kindness, compassion, and universal responsibility, feel, “I am responsible for all living beings’ happiness. I am responsible for all living beings.”

This project, Universal Education, doesn’t involve religion. It is basically education to develop a good heart, tolerance, and the practice of kindness in everyday life toward others and the special attitude of taking universal responsibility. From different traditions, the models of great compassion and the life stories of those who brought peace and happiness to this world are taught. For example, Mahatma Gandhi-gi, and Mother Teresa from the Christian tradition. Those like her offered incredible service to people who were hopeless and unable to recover. If they were dying, she looked after them. She tried to sacrifice her life for all these kinds of people. Being such a great example of compassion, she brought so much happiness and peace to so many people. Saint Francis was also a great saint, also from the Buddhist point of view. His wishes were for what he could do to help others and his supreme powers came from only cherishing others, being totally detached from this life. He offered himself as a servant to all living beings. Although he appeared as a Christian, praying to God and so forth, his realizations were exactly those of a Buddhist saint. He is another example of great compassion, and brought so much peace and happiness to this world. Everyone liked him, whether rich, poor, communist, non-communist; everyone respected him.

Also from Buddha’s past life stories, when he was a bodhisattva in Nepal, he sacrificed himself for others. At one place called Namo Buddha, on the mountain, on seeing a tiger family with five cubs in danger of dying of starvation, he generated great compassion and gave up his body to the tiger family. There are many stories of his practice like this, sometimes being born a king, giving his wealth and offering charity to others. By reincarnating in different forms, he sacrificed himself in the service of others. Practicing charity and morality, patience and perseverance, concentration and wisdom, and so forth for three countless great eons, he served other sentient beings. He collected merits, good karma, purified all the gross and subtle defilements, and then completed the path and achieved enlightenment for sentient beings. Then he revealed the path to us, that path which he, himself, actualized, and which liberated him from the oceans of samsaric sufferings, from all the delusion and karma, from ignorance, anger, attachment, and so forth. Becoming totally free, he achieved peerless happiness and full enlightenment then revealed the path to us, sentient beings. So, children learn of a few of Buddha Shakyamuni’s past life stories as a bodhisattva, and about great holy beings from different traditions, as examples of great compassion, who brought so much peace and happiness into this world. Also, they learn about this through drama, so that eventually they become like that, able to become a great holy being, to serve, and bring so much peace and happiness to sentient beings.

Another subject of Universal Education is philosophy, which is basically the science of mind. Without understanding mind, there is no way we can fully understand external phenomena. This philosophy is not just blind faith, but uses reasoning in the same way that scientists analyze phenomena, how they exist, how they function, like that. It is an analyzing, reasoning kind of philosophy, hence the clearest philosophy that relates to life. In reality, it seems to be what the Buddha explained, but we also put together philosophy from other, including western, traditions. We put together anything that is beneficial to mankind. It all comes under the category of science and basically it is the science of mind.

In educating the children, the understanding of why in our life we need to help others and why it is not enough, not sufficient, to live life only to achieve happiness for oneself, can be made deeper by giving reasons. Thinking only for oneself not only doesn’t work, it brings so many problems. Neither can you achieve happiness for others, nor can you even succeed for yourself. Regarding happiness for oneself, there are two kinds: temporal and ultimate. Ultimate happiness is not what ordinary people know about, or experience in their own lives; this kind of happiness is only temporal, sensual pleasure, dependent on external phenomena. For ordinary people, that is what their view of happiness is. So, the need to practice compassion for others is also presented with reasons.

Then there is the development of wisdom, to understand the reality of the “I,” the self, or the person, and what the “I” is. This is extremely valuable and the most important subject to study: learning about oneself, the ultimate nature of the “I,” the five aggregates – form, feeling, cognition, compounded aggregates, and consciousness – which are the basis of the imputed “I.” There are so many different things to learn. Basically, it is studying what you are and the potential of your mind: how you have the potential to be free from all the dukkha and to achieve total, ultimate liberation from all suffering and its causes; how this mind has all the potentials and can achieve even peerless happiness, great liberation, full enlightenment; that the mind can be completely pure, free from gross and subtle karmas, all the wrong notions; and to realize that the problems and sufferings that we are experiencing now are only temporary, that this ignorance, anger, and attachment, all these heavy emotional minds which are so painful and bring so many problems in life, are only temporary. This must be realized. Then you discover how much unbelievable freedom you have in your life. One has freedom to achieve all happiness for oneself, both temporal and ultimate, and to achieve, to cause all happiness, for countless other living beings. It is like that.

So, these are the three main subjects of universal education: firstly, the good heart; secondly, the life stories of those persons who are great models of compassion – the source of so much peace and happiness in this world; and then, lastly, science or philosophy.

Additionally, there are secondary subjects. One is healing. The children learn various types of healing so that they can help so many other people in this world, those who have sicknesses, mental and physical problems. There is also astrology, to do things at the right time, so that everything succeeds, without obstacles. For whatever one does, whether starting projects or any other thing, by knowing the right time to do things, they become successful and obstacles do not occur. In Tibet, also, this was one way to help to solve peoples’ problems and to help them have peace, happiness, and success in their lives. Another subject is feng shui, which is a Chinese term, but exists also in Tibetan Buddhism. In the Chinese tradition this is very common: building, arranging, and decorating the house and garden in such a way that the family has a long life, good health, all the children have a good education, and all success comes in business. This study has a lot of benefits: prosperity, wealth, and health.

From these methods, and through consultation, through discussion, many people can change their minds and then they can stop their problems, including emotional problems, since the basis of a problem is the concept. If one looks at a situation in life, interpreting it as “bad” then one thinks “bad.” If it appears “bad” to you then you believe it is “bad,” and then you get angry, upset, and unhappy. Basically it comes from your mind. Recognition of unhappiness in the midst of trouble in one’s life comes from one’s own concept which gives a negative label to a situation. At a certain time, when there is change, one gives it a negative label because our attachment doesn’t like it, or the self-cherishing mind comes in. Self-cherishing arises and doesn’t like what is happening and then one puts a negative label on it, because one’s mind follows or is a friend of those minds of attachment and self-cherishing. So, it is like that. In the view of the trained mind, the pure and free mind, such a situation doesn’t come about at all. When one doesn’t achieve material gain or reputation, praise from others or comfort, in the view of the trained mind this is not a problem at all. There is peace and happiness. However, in the view of attachment, when attachment is there, then when these things happen, when these conditions occur, then there is a problem. Attachment labels these situations as “negative” and “bad,” and then they appear as bad. That is why the person becomes depressed and unhappy, angry and jealous. Similarly, when certain things don’t happen, then the self-cherishing thought dislikes this. What the self-cherishing mind wants – reputation, praise from others, material gain, comfort – when these don’t happen, then the self-cherishing thought is upset and unhappy. Not liking it, it then gives it a negative label: “bad” or “harm.” Then the person experiences harm. When others feel harmed or are upset, are angry, it has come from their own act of giving something a negative label. It came from the self-cherishing thought, from making a wrong relationship.

In helping with and consulting as to what children need, when people can’t communicate and can’t help someone through talking, either they can’t understand the language or for some other reason, then there are other ways to help to solve a person’s problems, either through feng shui, healing, and so forth. Lastly, an extra subject of universal education is psychotherapy, not the old western psychotherapy, but the new type. We have students who are experts in this field and they teach this.

So, I am hoping that maybe you can try to experiment with education like this in Nepal.

Your Excellency, Your Majesty the King, Nepal has been a very simple, serene, peaceful, and holy place, which has also Mount Everest and the rest of the mountains. Nepal has many very beautiful aspects, together with many ancient and beautiful traditional cultures: Buddhist, Hindu, and so forth. Being from Nepal, I was therefore terrified by the changes in Nepal’s situation in recent years: that things are in turmoil; that there are people from villages who are meant to be helping the poor but it is not certain whether their motivation is pure, and also their methods are totally wrong – they use violence. This never works; it only causes people to kill each other. Before, people from the Western world found Nepal very beautiful and they liked to learn about the ancient traditions and enjoy the beauty of Nepal.

Buddha was also born in Nepal, at Lumbini. Buddhism has now spread all over the world, and His Holiness the Dalai Lama teaches to millions and millions of people, outside of Tibet, in many different parts of the world, including the west and the United States. Through Buddhism, which I have been teaching in so many countries, so many, many people have been able to find peace and happiness, and have made their lives meaningful. Now they can enjoy their lives, experiencing satisfaction and fulfillment, and can benefit all living beings, from life to life. They can devote their lives to the spiritual path and can complete it. All this has come from Nepal; it is a gift from Nepal, from this country. Please rejoice in this. Teaching Buddhism is my contribution to world peace, while in this world; this is Nepal’s gift. Buddhism has spread all over the world, to all the educated countries, where there is so much development and where there is now so much interest in Buddhism. So many very educated people want to learn and practice.

Therefore, I think we really need to preserve Nepal. We shouldn’t lose it. We should study extensively and educate the people, not just intellectually, but have them actualize their learning and develop into good human beings, beings who have peace and happiness, compassion and wisdom, are able to help themselves and others. To do this is so important. If things degenerate and are then lost, then I think, not only will we have to learn Buddhism from western people, but we will have to learn the other traditions of Nepal from Western people also, and that would be very shameful. People in the world, in Europe, in the United States, from hearing about Buddhism and by reading this wisdom from Nepal, come here to practice and learn, to see the ancient and holy places blessed by Buddha and great enlightened beings, and to visit the monasteries and learn the depth of the practice in order to actualize it. In these ways, Nepal becomes a very important country in the world, and very beneficial. These are incredible things to offer to the rest of the world and to the mind, which is the most important thing. Nepal offers peace of mind, not only day-to-day peace of mind but everlasting happiness, the total cessation of and liberation from the entire suffering of samsara and its cause – full enlightenment. This is something that everybody in Nepal can feel really happy about, can rejoice in, that Nepal can help the rest of the world to become free from suffering.

In particular, the government of Nepal can help its country. There are people here who have learned Buddhism and other religions, and from them there are many methods to overcome the recent problems. From Buddhism, from sutra and tantra, there are many methods. From among the monks in the monasteries here in Nepal, there are very high lamas who are supremely qualified to perform pujas to stop this harm from people. If the government was to request these high lamas to gather, for the monasteries to take responsibility to perform pujas, and if the government could make offerings to cover the expense of the pujas suggested in order to overcome the situation and change the minds of those who want to make trouble and cause harm in Nepal, I promise this can help. Also, if all the Sangha, the monks and nuns, could be requested to gather together and make appropriate prayers, this would also help, as would offering clothes to the great stupas of Swayambunath and Boudhanath.

Also, there is a supreme mantra from the great saint, the Bodhisattva Ksitigarbha, to recite when others attack the king or the country. It also gives peace to oneself as well as to one’s people. It is very, very good. As my service, I am suggesting these things, from the little I know about the Buddha’s teachings. My very humble suggestion to Your Excellency, the King, is to recite a few malas of this mantra each day, the practice of which I have put together here, translated from Tibetan texts. It is very good for the whole of the King’s family, friends, and even for the government to recite, whoever wishes. It is very good and helpful: the problems can be solved through peaceful means, through changing the minds of those giving harm.

Humbly and in your service,

Thubten Zopa