Jakarta, Indonesia -- Different people take different
paths in an effort to attain perfection. While a few people are endowed
with extraordinary talent or intelligence to invent or create, most
people need not worry about that and simply follow or apply what the
inventors or creators have discovered for us.
Waisak offers precious momentum for Buddhists to apply - and not
necessarily to simulate - what he taught and demonstrated during his
lifetime.
The same is true in the religious realm. While religion and religious
teachings were in place hundreds or even thousands of years ago, people
of the latter and present times should just put in practice what
religion and religious teachings have taught and provided for them.
The celebration of Waisak, or Buddha’s Day of Enlightenment, on
Saturday is therefore the perfect time for Indonesians, particularly
Buddhists, to take a break from their daily routines and refresh their
minds with noble ideas and teachings of Siddhartha Gautama in the
pursuit of a balanced life and spiritual perfection.
Waisak, essentially a commemoration of three important events in the
life of Siddhartha, namely his birth, his enlightenment after which he
became Buddha (literally meaning “the enlightened one”) and his death,
therefore offers precious momentum for Buddhists to apply - and not
necessarily to simulate - what he taught and demonstrated during his
lifetime.
Born the prince of a small kingdom in India, Siddhartha was showered
with riches and shielded from the poor, the sick, monks and death,
through to adulthood. However, his eventual encounter with those whose
lives had been touched by sickness, death, poverty and monks made him
realize that his life was not eternal and he then decided to abandon his
riches and left his wife and young son to live a monastic life.
The
teachings of Buddha focus on ways to escape the cycle of wants and
desires, to end suffering (nirvana). Devout Buddhists should therefore
endeavour to lead a noble life according to the teachings, including
commitments to abstain from harming living beings, stealing, sexual
misconduct, lying and intoxication. As part of a heterogeneous society,
Buddhists are expected and always reminded to live in harmony with
people of other faiths and to respect the beliefs of other people as
Buddha taught.
Buddhism, as well as other religions, teaches and expects its
adherents to strike a balance in life - to pursue ones’ dreams as
individuals who have ambition and expectations, but at the same to have
empathy and concern for others, particularly the hapless ones.
And in such a plural, multicultural and multiethnic Indonesian
society, with the yawning gap between the rich and the poor, truly
implementing the teachings of Buddha will at least help soothe the
impact of such critical differences on the nation and benefit the
adherents - individually - in their pursuit for religious perfection.