Showing posts with label Buddhism Development. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buddhism Development. Show all posts

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Status of Buddhism in Uganda



Forwarded By
JW Buganga
Kampala-Uganda

Most Uganda Buddhists are affiliated to an organization called the Uganda Buddhist Center. It is registered as a national non-government organization, with responsibilities of inculcating peace through the teaching of Dhamma, and the practices of meditation and yoga. But because attaining of peace also manifests through material satisfaction and livelihood development, the center finds itself busy with the noble work of extending essential life-support facilities to communities-in-need such as clean and safe water. It is provided free of charge. It has got a resource center for students, curious individuals, and institutions to research on Dhamma. It has also gone ahead to nurture young university students, through provision of management and humanitarian service skills, knowledge, and experience, and with a critical emphasis of ethical and moral issues in application of those newly acquired attributes. 

Inter-religious, Inter-cultural and Inter-traditional Work
Over the years, we integrated the aspect of inter-religious/faith/spiritual/traditional/cultural in our work. So far we have been working closely with two famous Kingdoms, namely; the Kingdom of Tooro and Buganda. These, until now, act as mediums through which to express uniqueness of their respective cultures and traditions, and subsequently; developing and preserving them. This has proved very useful economically. Eco-tourism is now growing rapidly in the country, which provides additional revenue to the Kingdoms and country in general. With equal resistance, we have been facing serious disappearance of forests due to insensitive ‘developments’ around the country.

Inter-cultural and Inter-Tradition Conflicts
It can be noted that the world we live had got problems arising from dominance of one culture or tradition over multitude of others in utilization of the natural resources and access to development opportunities, and greedily ensuring status quo. As Marxists say, ‘the oppressed will always rise against the oppressor.’ As such, the world will always be assured of the trouble of violence. But then, violence by Man is not only targeting fellow men; it is sharply being experienced by the physical environment, characterized by over exploitation of nonrenewable resources and destruction of the green cover. Since violence yields violence, the consequences to such actions have been dire. Natural disasters have been widespread, in the forms of food shortage and starvation, uncomfortable very cold or very hot weather, destructive floods and hailstorms, and so on.

Our Plans on Inter-religious, Inter-cultural and Inter-traditional for Peace
We have plans to undertake forestry recovery programme around the country with cooperation from local leaders, and private land owners. We are already part of partnerships with local universities, and environment bodies to help recover the threatened nature. While we have direct contacts and closely working with the two Kingdoms above, we are working around the clock to open links and working relationships with other monarchs and chiefdoms. In doing this, we aim at demystifying myths about Buddhism mission in Africa, and only work together towards making communities and environment better.

For Man to be happy, he must deal with his culture of violence. Buddhism provides a mechanism of dealing with self destructive or aggressive impulses by letting sufferer to rise above them, and prompting consistently Dhamma-friendly decisions. Essentially, all cultures and traditions agree to peaceful existence and co-existence. And they can use their diverse experiences to improve on relations among men, and that with the physical environment as well as wild life. We are working on instituting a collection facility of all such traditions and cultures, so that we can continue to nurture life through right understanding of the principles of Dhamma, which are collectively known to all other traditions.

Aspects to Consider
We all know that Dhamma represents diversity of things and beings, which cannot necessarily be the same; thinking, feeling, and acting that way. No. Unfortunately, some groups break off from mainstream cultures and traditions to specialize in promotion of misconceived Dhamma knowledge and practices. Mainstream traditions have the duty to help provide platform to them with the aim of causing reinstatement, through means that resuscitate right mindfulness, and right administration of Dhamma principles, through meditation. In this way the realities of diversity would not be fought to cause accelerated misery and destructions, instead. The mainland traditions have an equal responsibility; through their unique strategies engage the lost world in ways that help to shape wrong intentions in favor of those that propagate peace. Forums as these (tradition and cultural exchange) help to identify those unique endowments in every tradition and culture to meet the common development needs of men, sustainably. Besides, it provide an avenue to express each other views before others, to listen to one another, to be understood, to be respected, to learn from one another, and to develop universal principles for future cooperation and peace.  I urge you and everyone involved to continue with this kind spirit for a peaceful and prosperous world, and to even to spread, and involve other traditions and cultures that are not here today.

Conclusion
With those few remarks, I end here by thanking you all for listening to me and inviting Dhamma teachers with a background of interreligious, cross-traditional, and cross-cultural approaches, to volunteer with us in Uganda. We allow a volunteering period of between three to six months. Uganda is one of the leading culturally diverse countries in the world. With such a background, it provides volunteers with the right experience of working across cultures and traditions. Among other roles, will be to write reports, to create archives about universal aspects of cultures, and to development and participate in community development programmes.

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