his experience  reinforced  his ability for compassion, his human   qualities.
There   are a   number  of  cases   where   Tibetans    who spent   many    years   of
hard    labor   in  Chinese gulags  told    me  that    it  was their   best    period  for
spiritual   practice,   for developing  patience    and compassion. One of  my
personal    physicians, Dr. Tenzin  Choedrak,   who years   later   managed to
come    to  India,  was quite   clever. In  the gulag,  he  was prevented   from
having  the rosary  and was forced  to  read    Chairman    Mao’s   Red Book.   So
he  used    the syllables   of  the words   as  his rosary  and recited Buddhist
prayers,    but in  the eyes    of  the Chinese guards, he  was very    seriously
studying    Mao’s   book!
“So,    like    in  Nelson  Mandela’s   case,   when    you are imprisoned, as  you
said,   it’s    normal  to  experience  great   difficulties.   But these   experiences
can,    with    the right   way of  thinking,   lead    you to  have    great   inner   strength.
So  I   think   that    this    is  something   very    useful, particularly    when    we’re
passing through difficulties.”
I   was quite   struck  by  the Dalai   Lama’s  phrase  of  “passing    through
difficulties.”  We  often   feel    that    suffering   will    engulf  us, or  that    the
suffering   will    never   end,    but if  we  can realize that    it, too,    will    pass,   or  as
the Buddhists   say,    that    it  is  impermanent,    we  can survive them    more
easily, and perhaps appreciate  what    we  have    to  learn   from    them,   find    the
meaning in  them,   so  that    we  come    out the other   side,   not embittered  but
ennobled.   The depth   of  our suffering   can also    result  in  the height  of  our
joy.
Shantideva, the Buddhist    monk    and scholar,    described   the virtues of
suffering.  Because of  the shock   suffering   causes  us, our arrogance   falls
away.   Suffering   also    gives   rise    to  compassion  for all others  who are
suffering,  and,    because of  our experience  of  suffering,  we  avoid   actions
that    will    bring   suffering   to  others. Lopon-la    and Dr. Choedrak    would   have
known   these   teachings   by  Shantideva  and may have    clung   to  them    during
the years   of  hardship    and seemingly   endless suffering,  making  meaning
out of  what    must    have    at  times   felt    like    meaningless agony.
The Dalai   Lama    and the Archbishop  were    emphasizing that    some
degree  of  tolerance   and acceptance  is  essential,  as  is  realizing   that    these
sorrows happen  to  all people, not just    to  us, and not because we  have    done
                    
                      rick simeone
                      (Rick Simeone)
                      
                    
                #1
            
            