Aung San Suu Kyi, Burma's Revolutionary Leader
The Nobel Peace Prize winner talks about the secret weapon in her decades of struggle—the power of Buddhism
- By Joshua Hammer
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2012, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
The physical and mental strain of prison life, along with continued harassment, took a heavy toll on Gambira. In March he reportedly suffered a nervous breakdown. The monk left the monastery, returned to layman status and moved in with his mother near Mandalay. “He does not want to speak to anybody,” she told me when I called. “He is not in good mental condition.” Gambira’s plight, supporters say, is a reminder of the tenuous nature of the government’s liberalization.
I visited Gambira’s former monastery, newly reopened, tucked away in a leafy section of Yangon. The golden spires of an adjacent temple poked above a dense grove of coconut palms and banana trees. Sitting cross-legged on the veranda of his dormitory, the abbot, also a former political prisoner, told me that the monastery is still trying to recover after the devastation inflicted by the military. At the time it was forcibly shut in 2007, “there were 18 monks, a dozen HIV patients and three orphans living here. Most have disappeared.” I asked if he was grateful to Thein Sein for the reopening. “I do not need to thank this military government for returning what belongs to us,” he told me. He was bitter about the treatment of Gambira, whom he considered a protégé. “Gambira was moved to many prisons and tortured. He has not been right since.”
Gambira is not the only monk who has run into trouble in the new Myanmar. I traveled a dirt road through rice paddies two hours outside Yangon to meet with Ashin Pyinna Thiha, 62, a prominent Buddhist scholar and political activist. A spiritual adviser to Aung San Suu Kyi and critic of the junta, Pyinna Thiha tried to instill a spirit of political activism in thousands of young acolytes at his Yangon monastery. He met with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton when she visited Myanmar early last December, and honored Aung San Suu Kyi with a Nobel Prize ceremony at his monastery in January. Late last December, the Supreme Council of Burmese monks—47 abbots approved by the regime—banished Pyinna Thiha from his monastery and ordered him into domestic exile.
He now resides with 15 monks in a rural compound donated by a supporter. “We are out of touch here,” said the moon-faced, pudgy monk, as we gazed out on fallow fields from a thatched-roof structure, its bamboo walls decorated with photographs of Pyinna Thiha with The Lady. “Things are changing in Myanmar,” he said. “But one thing has not changed, and that is religion.”
Monks are the biggest potential organizing force in Burmese society, he explained; the government remains fearful of them. The council, he says, serves as “a puppet” of the regime, its members corrupted by privileges. “They get houses, cars,” he told me. “This is not Buddhism. This is luxury.”
Back at the reopened NLD headquarters in Yangon, Aung San Suu Kyi is reminding supporters that the struggle is far from over. Standing on the third-floor balcony of the tenement, festooned with yellow, white and red NLD banners, she tells them that the Yangon police have been bullying street vendors and urges “mutual respect” between the authorities and the people. Then she turns her attention to the crisis of the moment: crippling electricity cuts across Myanmar, the result of rotting infrastructure and the selling of most of the country’s hydroelectric power and gas to China and Thailand. As if on cue, the downtown lights go out. Enveloped in darkness, the opposition leader, again invoking the Buddhist spirit of nonviolent protest, urges the crowd to “light a candle.” The street is soon transformed into a sea of tiny, flickering flames.
Watching The Lady from the VIP section is a rising member of her inner circle, Kyaw Min Yu, 43, a founder of the 88 Generation, an organization that includes many former political prisoners. Sentenced to life in 1990 for his role as a student organizer in the 1988 uprising, he was freed in February after nearly 22 years, as part of the general amnesty. A wiry man with chiseled good looks and capable English, Kyaw Min Yu believes that his embrace of Buddhist practice saved his life in prison. Initially he was “full of rage” at his captors, he tells me after the rally; he was tortured and placed in solitary. Then, Kyaw Min Yuu found himself in the same cell as a monk, who began to teach him vipassana meditation.
Soon he was meditating for an hour each morning and evening. Other prisoners began to follow his example. “I diminished my anger and hatred, so I could see the guards as poor, illiterate men, with small brains, who understood only two things—following orders and making threats,” he said. He ended outbursts toward his guards. The beatings gradually ended, and guards who once brutalized him began to smuggle radios, food, novels and an English-language dictionary to him and to his fellow inmates. “These things helped us survive,” he told me. Even in the darkest corners of the regime’s gulag, Buddhism served as a source of light.
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Comments (10)
I Just ask to Daw aung san suu kyi in what ways has Aung San Suu Kyi improved human right? how did she benefit from helping peoples right improved?
Posted by on September 3,2012 | 02:12 AM
Vipassana is only one practice in the extensive palette of meditation techniques developed and refined over centuries by Buddhist monks, yogis and lay practitioners. The feature here is misleading in this respect. Aun Sang Suu Kyi is the widow of Micheal Aris who was a Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhist practitioner, which differs from the Theravada tradition in Burma. But in essence, Buddhist meditation is rooted in two principles: Samatha (calm abiding) amd Vispassana (insight). Some traditions place emphasis on one, some on the other. But all ackowledge that both need to be nurtured in order to attain results in meditation.
Posted by Mary Finnigan on August 29,2012 | 04:45 AM
@Carina Dolce There is no genocide of Muslims in Burma. Jihadists are attempting to destabilize the newly liberalizing nation by terrorist attacks on peaceful Buddhists and fabricating photos of fictional atrocities. Read the truth here: http://seanrobsville.blogspot.com/2012/06/muslims-massacre-buddhists-in-burma.html
Posted by Robsville on August 28,2012 | 01:41 AM
Vipassana insight meditation is not just mindfulness of sensation it is also mindfulness of mental states. When being mindful of pain you also are to try to be mindful of the minds’ aversion for the pain. Then you watch how the pain keeps increasing and decreasing in intensity; the processes of body and mind come in waves of sensation and waves of conscious thought. One of the goals is to see the impermanence of body and mind at an intuitive deep level at increasingly smaller and smaller units of time. This leads to transcending the wheel of time and attainment of the timeless peace of Nibbana (Nirvana).
Posted by Kenneth Elder on August 28,2012 | 08:30 PM
gi li: There are many types of meditation, and not every method is alike. Most of them bring benefits, but not exactly the same benefits. Vipassana, or insight meditation, is the meditation method that the Buddha came up with, and is also the method that is practiced the most in Theravada Buddhist countries like Burma, Thailand and Sri Lanka. Vipassana helps you see through delusions and the limits/tricks of your mind. It has many benefits, the greatest one being that it eventually leads to the end of suffering. I recommend you consider taking a retreat to learn meditation the correct way. Here is a Vipassana manual in the tradition of Venerable Mahasi Sayadaw: http://www.buddhanet.net/pdf_file/mahasit1.pdf (it's not a product and it is free of charge, only provided because gi li asked). If you Google Vipassana you will find others.
Posted by Metta Matt on August 28,2012 | 10:31 AM
what a crock, this lady is another useless puppet, she is doing nothing regarding the genocide of Myanmar Muslims. She is one of reasons there is ongoing protest of Nobel Peace Prize winners, they are all criminals of crimes against humanity of late
Posted by Carina Dolce on August 28,2012 | 07:35 AM
Hi,the first thing i wanna say is if any person kills someone or even he/she keeps silence and doesnt do anything for that, No matter what its a killer and one it should pay for that... This example can be seen in Burma s horrible killing and the support and the silence of these people(specially Aung San Suu Kyi) made that true!! So how we can trust the noble prize when their owners are (often) criminals???
Posted by Me! on August 21,2012 | 08:21 AM
Fascinating article. Hearing all time about meditation I wonder how one does it? Following set of rules?
Posted by gi li on August 21,2012 | 04:35 AM
I Just ask to aung san suu kyi, what is peace and human rights? why u don't stop killing rohingya in Burma and why did u gave powers to buddhist to kill to rohingya small babies and why did u go to UK and USA to get nobel prize before get nobel prize u should know about peace and human rights and even stop killing rohingys.
Posted by hamid ullah on August 20,2012 | 12:05 AM
At first, i would like to inform my best regards all the people around the world and secondly, i would like to know from the burma buddhist what is peace? why the burma buddhist have been killing rohingay for a long time, besides that, what did rohingya small baby wrong with buddist and why r u killing thousand thousand babies? muslims, christians,hindus,and buddist all are human being .hey buddhist, why u don't know about human rights and peace?go some europes countries to learns human rights and peace, after learned peace and human rights, u will know what did u do to rohingya and what was ur wrong.
Posted by hamid ullah on August 20,2012 | 11:53 PM