📄 Extracted Text (280,139 words)
Blessing One: Not Associating
with Fools 1
a manual
of peace:
38 Steps towards
Enlightened Living
2 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
A Dhammakaya Foundation
Paperback
First Edition 2005
Published by the Dhammakaya
Foundation
EFTA01160176
Department of International
Relations
23/2 Moo 7., Khlong Sam,
Khlong Luang
Patumthani 12120 Thailand
Tel. (+66 02) 524 0257-63
Copyright © 2005 by the
Dhammakaya Foundation
All Rights Reserved. No portion
of this book may be reproduced,
stored in a retrieval system or
transmitted, in any form or by any
means, electronic, mechanical,
photocopying, recording or
otherwise,
without the prior and express
EFTA01160177
written consent of the publisher
National Library of Thailand
Cataloging in Publication Data
Dhammakaya Foundation
A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
Bangkok: Dhammakaya
Foundation, 2005
466p.
1. Buddhism
I. Title
294.315
ISBN 974-93135-5-0
Printed in Thailand by :
Craftsman Press Co.,Ltd
487/42 Soi Wattanasilp,
EFTA01160178
Rajprarop Road,
Makkasan, Rajthevee, Bangkok,
Thailand
Tel: +66-2-2533009, 2533298
Blessing One: Not Associating
with Fools 3
May the meritorious fruits
accruing
from the study of this book
be dedicatedfor the benefit of
George, Annie, Alice, Lilian,
Richard, Harry, Alfred George,
Arthur, Norman, Ivan (nee
Lee) & Evelyn Ayre, Ellen Mary
Stokell, Hannah Carr, George
EFTA01160179
& Charles F. Lee, Elizabeth,
John & Margaret Curry, Anne
Fenwick, Annie Jarman, Dennis
George, Dennis Arthur &
Malcolm Woods, Emily Mary
Casbon, William Jabez & Ethel
Dawes, Moses Edmund, Gladys,
Hilda, Cecil, Reginald and
Marie Heaton wherever they
have been reborn.
4 Contents
Contents 5
Preface to the First Edition
7
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The Manual of Peace in Action
10
Abbreviations
18
Orientation
19
BLESSING GROUP I.:
TURNING YOUR BACK ON
UNWHOLESOMENESS
25
1. Not Associating with Fools
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2
7
2. Associating with the Wise
37
3. Expressing Respect to those
worth of respect
51
BLESSING GROUP II.:
TURNING TOWARDS
WHOLESOMENESS
65
4. Living in an Amenable Location
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67
5. Having done Good Deeds in
one's
past
77
6. Setting Oneself up properly in
life
91
BLESSING GROUP III.:
SETTING ONESELF UP IN
LIFE
101
7. Artfulness in Knowledge
1
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03
8. Artfulness in Application
113
9. Artfulness in Usage
119
10. Artfulness in Speech
131
BLESSING GROUP IV.:
HARMONY IN THE FAMILY
LIFE
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139
11. Cherishing our parents
..141
12. Raising our children
153
13. Cherishing our husband or wife
165
14. Not Leaving one's work
undone
177
BLESSING GROUP V.:
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BECOMING A PILLAR OF
SOCIETY
183
15. Generosity
185
16. Dhamma Practice
197
17. Looking after one's extended
family
205
18. Blameless Work
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213
Contents
6 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
BLESSING GROUP VI.:
PREPARATION OF MIND
223
19. Abstaining from
Unwholesomeness
225
20. Restraint from Drinking
Intoxicants
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233
21. Non-recklessness in the
Dhamma
2
43
BLESSING GROUP VII.:
INSTILLING ONESELF WITH
BASIC
VIRTUES
251
22. Respect
253
23. Humility
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261
24. Contentment
269
25.
Gratitude
281
26. Listening Regularly to
Dhamma Teachings
291
BLESSING GROUP VIII.:
INSTILLING ONESELF WITH
HIGHER
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VIRTUES 301
27. Patience
303
28. Openness to Criticism
.... 311
29. The Sight of a True Monk
3
21
30. Regular Discussion of the
Dhamma
331
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BLESSING GROUP IX.:
PRACTICE FOR THE
ERADICATION OF
DEFILEMENTS 34
5
31. The Practice of Austerities
34
7
32. Practising the Brahma-Faring
357
33. Seeing the Four Noble Truths
371
34. The Attainment of Nirvana
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38
5
BLESSING GROUP X : THE
FRUITS OF HAVING
PRACTISED UNTIL
REACHING AN END OF
DEFILEMENTS 393
35. A Mind Invulnerable to
Worldly Vicissitudes
395
36. Sorrowlessness
403
37. Freedom from Subtle
Defilements
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411
38. The Blissful Mind
421
INDICES
I. General Index
425
II. Pali Index
449
III. Index of Similes
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454
IV. Index of Illustrated Examples
456
Preface 7
Preface to the First
Edition
How this book should be used
Most problems in the world can be
traced back to the
habits of the people inhabiting the
world the things
we do, say and think until having
become used to it.
These habits can either be good or
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bad. Supposing
you have good habits, the sort of
things which you
do, say and think again and again
will be the things
that bring you happiness in life —
especially the habit
of being responsible for human
dignity on a personal
level, human dignity of others in
society and
responsibility for fair economics.
All the thirty-eight
virtues discussed in this Manual of
Peace need to
become our habits if they are to be
of any use to us —
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simply to know `about' the virtues
is of no use to us.
The aim in studying this Manual
for students of all
levels should be to incorporate the
virtues as their
habits following the following four
stage plan:
1. in the short term to learn rules
and regulations that
protect us from behaviours
contrary to the virtues
of the blessings;
2. in the medium term to educate
ourselves
according to the information on
each blessing in
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the text to get answers to three
questions about
the virtue, namely:
• `what' they are (concept and
definition);
• `why' the Buddha taught them
(why a
particular behaviour was either
prohibited or
advocated) and;
• `how' they can be put into
practice in everyday
life.
3. Doing that virtue so regularly
that it becomes
our habit
4. train up the people around you
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to practise the
thirty-eight blessings as their
habits.
The important conclusion we get
from this threestage
process of acquiring the
thirty-eight blessings
of life is that we need to look
deeply at ourselves to
see how many of the virtues we
have accrued for
ourselves first. We should regard
ourselves as still
in our infancy as far as the spiritual
teachings go,
and make the appropriate
adjustments. Only when
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we've mastered ourselves can we
have something
to offer to the world, to reach out
to others as a good
friend to build up a network of
virtue in society.
Sources used for this book
This book draws primarily on
translated transcripts
of eighty hours of lectures entitled
Monkol Jivit given
by the Most Ven.
Phrabhavanaviriyakhun (Luang
Phaw Dattajeevo), acting abbot of
Dhammakaya
Temple in Thailand in the
mid-seventies to those
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of undergraduate age. The beauty
of this lecture
series was abundant use of
examples from the Buddhist
scriptures and also from his own
life experiences.
A second major source used for
this book,
which was supposed to summarize
materials from
the first source into a short book
designated for
schoolchildren to do revision for
their Path of
Progress Ethics Quiz Contest was
Ven. Maha Dr.
Somchai Thanavuddho's Monkol
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Jivit: Path of
Progress edition (1982). This latter
gives no exam8
A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
pies, but offers a more structured
version of the
Mangala Sutta materials,
simplified in a way Asian
people can understand.
This text misses nothing of the
core content of either
these two sources. However, after
teaching these
materials to a group of western
Buddhist newcomers
in Belgium, there were still many
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questions in
the audience's minds left
unresolved. Things like
respect and gratitude don't come
as second nature
to westerners. Not drinking alcohol
requires more
than a fleeting explanation in a
western culture. The
long lists of meritorious fruits of
various virtues had
to be replaced as far as possible by
`why' rationale
and where possible examples of
the damage which
can happen when certain virtues
are neglected. The
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Most Ven.
Phrabhavanaviriyakhun's Kainphi
Gu
Wikrit Chart (2000) helped to
illustrate many social
ills from the neglect of the Six
Directions in this respect.
Ven. Maha Dr. Somchai
Thanavuddho's
Nippan ben atta reu anatta (1999)
almost completely
replaces the explanation of
Nirvana originally given
in Blessing Thirty-four. Also some
of the illustrative
examples have been replaced if
repeated. Some have
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been supplemented by western
anecdotes. Where
sets of Dhamma headings are
repeated, they are usually
described in full at the first
appearance and crossreferenced
in subsequent appearances.
Finally, wherever
possible, illustrative examples and
Dhamma
headings have been traced back to
their scriptural
reference in the PTS Pali Buddhist
Scriptures to allow
students to cross-reference to other
mainstream
and academic Buddhist works. In
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finding the references
and fuller illustrative examples,
heavy use was
made of Ven. Paiboon
Dhammavipulo's Dachanee
Thamm Chabab Monkola Soot
(1997, 2000, 2002). The
resulting version of the Manual of
Peace, dubbed the
Theatsheet version' in its
homepage form has been
better received by western
audiences, has had a good
web readership and is currently
being translated into
other western languages
Who should use this book
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This book discusses key practical
virtues in a sequential
path of Buddhist practice. As such
it offers
more than just a dry, theoretical
approach to
Buddhist study, but can actually
form the basis of
subjective practice by students.
The level of difficulty
of this book is designed for:
• students of Buddhist studies in
the upper secondary.
In the U.K. curriculum this book
would
be suitable for students studying at
Key Stages 4
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+ 5. In Scotland, for Scottish
Levels SG + HS. Although
study of Buddhism at Key Stage 4
is timelimited,
use of the index can help students
to look
in depth on selected aspects of the
agreed syllabus.
At Key Stage 5, the text can be
used for research
on project work.
• students of Buddhist Studies or
Comparative
Religion at Bachelors' or Masters'
level of
university.
• This book is useful
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supplementary reading for
the GB102 course of the
Dhammakaya Open
University.
• overseas students of the Path of
Progress Ethics
Quiz Contest
• Buddhists or those interested in
Buddhism
wishing to supplement or
consolidate their
knowledge of lifestyle-related
Buddhist
teachings
What does it offer to lecturers
teaching these courses?
Lecturers will find this book has a
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good range of
illustrative examples and
metaphors to support
their teachings or assemblies.
Scriptural references
are given for nearly every
example.
Student learning features
In each chapter:
• Definitions
• Links to other chapters
• References
At the end of each chapter:
• Metaphors
• Illustrative Examples
At the end of the book:
• general index
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• Pali index
• index of similes
• index of illustrative examples
Preface 9
Acknowledgements
The publication of this book was
made possible
only by the special efforts of many
staff and volunteers
at the Dhammakaya Foundation in
Thailand.
This includes most importantly the
source
works in the Thai language already
mentioned by
the Most Ven.
Phrabhavanaviriyakhun, Phra
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Maha
Dr. Somchai Thanavuddho and
Phra Paiboon
Dhammavipulo. Thanks also to
Phra Nicholas
Thanissaro who has translated,
compiled and field
tested this version of the text in
English. Thanks
to Phra Jessadah Kittithano for
help in tracking
down references, to Lalita
Prasertnopakhun,
Peungpit Poopornanake & Chalom
Srijarus (administrative
assistance), Anant Kittitawesin
(cover
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design), the Dhammakaya
Foundation's still photography
volunteers (colour photography),
Tassin-
Sipang-Pangbaramee-Pangboon
Boontang,
Manop-Vararat-Dhitinand
Kawmark, Suwachara
S.-Thanachaporn Nishiyama &
Sukultra-Sabrina
Catts (cover shoot).
10 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
Education on inner peace in the
style laid before us
in this Manual of Peace, is a must
for humanity today.
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Modern day education has many
shortcomings as
illustrated ironically by the fact
that the majority
of today's disasters, come from
supposedly the best
educated being on this planet —
namely the human
being. The trouble with much of
the curriculum
materials taught in schools
nowadays is that they
ignore the concept of peace
completely. The higher
one goes in education, the
narrower one's
knowledge becomes and the
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further it becomes
estranged from the concepts
fundemental to peace.
Many of the violent acts
committed in the world
are perpetrated by highly educated
persons and
often the victims are those who
have received little
education.
Education for peace needs to start
by imparting
awareness of the consequences of
one's own actions
to young people — because every
action, whether
good or bad, has an effect on the
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doer's life and
others' lives as well. One cannot
afford to be
complacent or irresponsible about
one's actions.
This is why any form of education
which advocates
certain actions by a student has to
have
considerations of the peacefulness
of those actions
built into it, in order to prevent the
sort of misdeeds
done intentionally or
unintentionally that upset
society.
The sort of education that provides
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awareness of
peace issues is known as `Inner
Peace Education'
(IPE). It is a form of education that
helps us know
ourselves better and know how to
manage life
properly. As a result, it is the key
success factor
behind the world peace that we are
striving for.
Provision of IPE is not as
straightforward as
conventional curriculum content.
However, as
compared with usual spiritual
provisions in school,
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it has the advantage of not being
based on belief or
faith — but rather experience and
evidence. It is
based on practical knowledge. It's
applied
knowledge that offers each person
an individual
approach to true happiness
regardless of race,
nationality, religion, culture or
occupation. It is
knowledge that can form a firm
foundation to any
other form of academic knowledge
to guarantee
that the applications of that
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knowledge are for
peace. It is self-education that you
can start upon
anytime, anywhere (for as long as
you are still a
human being!) — and can be
practised throughout
the day alongside our regular daily
activities in
order to increase our efficiency
and effectiveness.
It maximises the efficiency of our
time management,
rather than being a burden on our
time — if a certain
period of time each day is
allocated to it. It needs
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no formal classroom, and demands
no tuition fees
either!
However, more than conventional
education, it
demands time, concentration,
perseverance,
tolerance and goodwill. These are
qualities which
are too easily eroded away by
materialism. It is only
students who are determined and
motivated who
can succeed in their studies of IPE.
IPE is not yet
The Manual of Peace
EFTA01160219
in Action
The Manual of Peace in Action 11
widespread because the value and
benefits of it are
not yet widely known.
Furthermore, because it is
evaluated on the basis of inner
experience, it is
difficult to measure success in
empirical terms.
Nonetheless, great opportunities
exist for
pioneering work in IPE. There's
already a great deal
of expertise in this field, with an
emerging group
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of people who realize their lack of
knowledge
concerning peace and who are
willing to learn. If
we can overcome the obstacles that
prevent us from
realizing the real nature of peace
and avoid the
influences of segregation and bias
which are so
easily instilled by race, nationality
and religion —
through interactive communication
we can really
start to understand peace from the
inside out. Thus
although IPE is derived from
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Buddhist values, it
emphasizes key human qualities
that transcend
cultural differences. It is
something that should be
a part of every child's education
from their earliest
years.The idea of IPE is that the
attitudes it instils,
will not be erased by
circumstances. It will remain
in a child's character, shaping him
to be reasonable
rather than emotional when
making decisions,
instilling a sense of responsibility
toward himself,
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his nearest and dearest, his
economy, society and
the environment. To be studied,
IPE concepts need
to be translated into learning
activities by teachers
or parents. By intensive study of
advanced IPE,
young people can understand
themselves better
and have a clearer sense of purpose
in life.
Youngsters, parents and teachers
alike like to
participate actively in peace
education projects as
participants and organizers and
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also form an active
network of peace volunteers
throughout Thailand
down to the present day,
generation by generation
through word-of-mouth. It is
important that before
becoming organizers and teachers
of such programs
that they first understand peace
and means of nonviolent
conflict resolution themselves —
under this
proviso, the organizers can even be
older children
organizing activities for their
younger fellows.
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During the history of the `Path of
Progress' Ethics
Quiz Contest, the scale of
participation has grown
from one person to a small team
then a larger and
larger one. Over the last thirty
years, the lives of
total of over twenty million young
people in
Thailand have been touched by the
IPE curriculum
— and this can have made no
small contribution to
peace in the world community —
helping children
to open up their hearts to listen to
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the teacher inside
and understand the reality of life
and the world —
healing differences, celebrating
similarities and
promoting world peace through
inner peace.
PATH OF PROGRESS ETHICS
QUIZ CONTEST
The main learning activity for
implementing IPE
amongst young people is the
so-called `Path of
Progress' Ethics Quiz Contest
which has been held
nationwide every year in Thailand
since 1982. The
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aim of the project is to bring
children's ethical
development to higher levels
resulting in positive
behavioral changes in a way that is
relevant to those
Teachers' round of the `Path of
Progress'. Teachers must
become familiar with IPE materials
& issues before being
able to communicate peace values
before being able to
communicate them effectively to
their students.
12 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
of all nationalities, races and
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religions. The `Path of
Progress' shares the same
curriculum of the Thirty-
Eight Blessings of Life described
in this Manual of
Peace. The number of participants
started with 382
in 1982 and rose in 2002 to four
million from 13,000
educational institutes — ranging
from
kindergartens, universities, police
and military
colleges — students and teachers
alike from all over
Thailand. The winners of the
contest receive plaques
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of distinction from H.M. the King
of Thailand and
representatives of many
international organizations.
Besides honorary plaques, winners
are
granted scholarships and
certificates for their
success in each category.
Case Histories of Schools
Participating in the Path
of Progress IPE Scheme
Suteetorn Kindergarten, Nakorn
Prathom, Thailand.
"We find that the teachings of the
`Path of
Progress' programme eminently
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suitable to the
curriculum at our school. The
`Path of Progress'
program helps students realize the
value of
morality. Students can also adapt
these morals
to practice in their daily lives. The
Home of Peace
program (see p.16) focuses more
on the practices
of the learners, so students can
really practice
what they have learned. This is the
reason why
both programs are so beneficial for
our school.
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At the beginning, we taught the
Manual of Peace
to small groups of students. As
years went by,
more students got interested, so we
had to
change the workshop format into
assemblies.
We had such an assembly each day
for the
students from first to sixth grade.
Furthermore,
our school has many activities that
are involved
with morals and ethics. For
example, the school
will let the students meditate along
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to an audio
cassette of meditation instruction.
The students
usually attend Buddhist services
and practise
meditation afterwards. Later, the
students have
their own group discussions to
analyze and
comment about how they can
improve their
virtues.
Kindergarten infants, do not join
the assembly,
but they will have a homeroom
teacher. Most of
the time, the teacher focuses on
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meditation
practice. The teaching for them
makes heavier
use of illustrations to overcome
their reading
difficulties. Also, they seem to
enjoy looking at
the pictures too.
We once had a boy named
Pruchya. He had
received an `Olympic' gold medal
for winning a
math contest. In all his interviews,
Pruchya said
that he always wishes to be a
virtuous person
rather than being merely a smart
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one. From
listening to his interview, it made
us really proud
to see that he had lived up to our
ideals of a good
student.
In my opinion too, to be a virtuous
child is
more important than to be an
intelligent one
because at least virtuous people
can co-exist
peacefully in the world. If a person
is endowed
with self-discipline, they have the
potential to
develop intelligence and have a
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successful
future. When the youth have
morality in their
hearts, they can differentiate what
is right or
wrong. They have awareness of the
consequences of every action they
do. Therefore
they perform good deeds for the
benefit of
themselves, society and the
world."
Headmistress
Interreligious participation in the
`Path of Progress'.
Christians, Buddhists & Moslems
take the teachers' round of
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the `Path of Progress' so that they
can accurately pass on the
IPE concepts to their
schoolchildren.
The Manual of Peace in Action 13
School Track Record:
• 2,600 students from kindergarten
to Grade 6 have
joined the `Path of Progress'
Ethics Quiz Contest
every year from 1990 to present;
• first prize winner in the primary
school category
for 1998;
• first prize in the primary school
team category
for 2000, 2001 and 2002;
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• recognized by the Thai Ministry
of Education as
`best school for cultivation of
virtue in students'
Singha Samutra High School,
Chonburi, Thailand
"The intention of our school in
joining the
`Path of Progress' scheme was
originally only
to evaluate the level of knowledge
of our
students concerning the Buddha's
teachings
and also to see where our students
stood as
compared to other schools.
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However, when I saw the students'
enthusiasm in joining the
competition, I too
started to read the book, the
Manual of Peace. I
started to be involved gradually
with tutoring
the students for competitions.
After teaching
for a while, I became fascinated by
the
Buddha's teachings. I felt that I
had become a
better person morally as well as
spiritually. '
I think one of the reasons has to do
with the
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fact that I am teaching Manual of
Peace to the
students. I mean, can you imagine
a person
managing to teach Manual of
Peace without
understanding moral or ethics
themselves? I
couldn't be like that.
So I felt like my attitude towards
life has
completely changed because of
this book. The
most rewarding thing I have
witnessed is to
be able to transfer my knowledge
about how
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to conduct good deeds to my
students. I try to
put the basic teaching from
Manual of Peace into
all of my mainstream lessons."
One single teacher's effort,
inspired senior
students to organize a tutorial
activity of peace
for their juniors. Finally it became
the most
popular club amongst our
students."
Sompong Hunsadee: Coordinating
Teacher
School Track Record:
• 3,800 high school students from
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Grade 7-12
joining the `Path of Progress'
Ethics Quiz Contest
every year from 1983 to present;
• first prize in the team category
for seven years
running from 1993-9;
• first prize in the individual and
team categories
for the 19th contest.
• first prize in the secondary
school team category
in 2002.
Recovery of a former drug-addict
"Ever since I was born, the person
I
remembered seeing the most is my
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mother. She
always taught me to be a good
person and to
do good things to others as well.
Well, you may
think I would probably turn out to
be just like
Qualified teachers instruct their
students. Teachers need
to be role models of IPE and
knowledgable of its concepts to
instil virtuous habits in their
students.
14 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
other kids but it's not so.
It started when I was in high
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school. I had a
big argument with my teacher and
therefore, I
decided to drop-out. I thought
school was not
necessary any more. Instead of
helping my
mother, I started to go out every
night with my
friends. I knew my mother worried
about me
but I thought I could take care of
myself.
One night when I went to a friend
's house,
one night, he showed me a small
pill that looked
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like a painkiller. Curious and
ignorant as I was,
I decided to have my first contact
with drugs.
After that, I became addicted to
drugs and had
to steal money in order to buy
them daily. At
last, I became the drug dealer
myself. At that
time, I had no choice.
However, I was caught by police
and was sent
to a juvenile court. My mother
then bailed me
out from the juvenile prison. The
first thing I
EFTA01160244
asked her was, "Why did you help
me, Mom?"
My mother did not say much. Just
the sight of
tears in her eyes had already killed
me. All she
said was, "I love you. I can forgive
and will
always do so, son." After that day,
I decided to
stop doing all the bad things and
avoided
getting back into the vicious circle
again.
I decided to go back to school in
order to
avoid probation. Though I knew
EFTA01160245
that I didn't
want to hurt my mother's feelings
any more,
my subconscious still tempted me
to sell drugs
to my classmates. There was a big
fight in my
mind between the good and bad
sides. I did
not know what to do.
Fortunately, when I was at the
point of
relapse, my teacher persuaded me
to join ethics
quiz contest called `The Path of
Progress'. At
first, I saw no point in participating
EFTA01160246
in such a
program. Then she gave me a
reference book
Student `Path of Progress'
Examinations take place
throughout Thailand. Each year
more than four million students
throughout Thailand participate in
the qualifying round of the `Path of
Progress' Ethics Quiz Contest at
countless provincial
centres supervised by IBS
volunteers.
The Manual of Peace in Action 15
called A Manual of Peace to
prepare myself for a
contest. I did not know why I went
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through it.
Surprisingly, I was very touched
by the
content the book offered. This
book was the
turning point of my life. I learned
to love myself,
my parents, my teachers, my
friends and others
in a more productive way. I was
taught to think
wisely before acting, to choose
eloquent and
useful words to express myself in
and to do
good deeds towards myself and
other people.
EFTA01160248
From then on, I avoided people
who
attempted to poison me with drugs
or any other
bad things. I stopped coming home
late. I tried
to help my mother in every way I
could. Right
now, my mother and I understand
each other
more. I do well at school and my
friends now
welcome me to join class activities
with them.
All I would like to say is a big
`thank you' to
the Path of Progress. They have
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changed my
life. They helped me find the way
out of the
dark. I will try to help spread the
project to more
people in my community. There
are many
young people who are still stuck in
vicious
circles. They do not know how to
go out of
them. Please show them the light
at the end of
the tunnel. And please try to reach
us before
the mistakes we make in our lives
are too grave.
EFTA01160250
Mr. Visarut Komkaew
Bang Luang Vithaya High School
Nakorn Pathom, Thailand
This is the true testimony written
by one participant
of the Path of Progress Ethics Quiz
Contest. After
receiving this letter in 2000, the
IBS interviewed him
when he was in Grade 12 and had
been elected as
president of the student committee.
THE INTERNATIONAL
BUDDHIST SOCIETY
The main coordinator of IPE in
Thailand is the
International Buddhist Society
EFTA01160251
(IBS). IBS was
established by a 1960 Alumni of
Kasetsart
University, Bangkok. After
graduation, he took
ordination as a Buddhist monk. At
present, he is
the Most Venerable
Phrarajabhavanavisudh
(Chaiboon Dhammajayo),
President of the
Dhammakaya Foundation — a
United Nationsaccredited
Non-Governmental Organization
(NGO) associated with the
Department of Public
Information (DPI). The founder's
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compassionate
mission in setting up the IBS was
to further public
awareness of ethical issues,
particularly in the
youth.
In the present day, the IBS is an
umbrella
organization of university students
all over
Thailand who sacrifice their time
to organize ethical
activities primarily for youth.
Their success is a
result of the dedication, hard work
and devotion
of an all-volunteer staff, many of
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whom are former
participants in IBS activities. This
is a new wave of
student activity boasting nearly
5,000 active
members in 2003. Most IBS
activities are based on
the concept of promoting peace
through education.
Interreligious participation in the
`Path of Progress'.
Christians, Buddhists & Moslems
take the teachers' round of
the `Path of Progress' so that they
can accurately pass on the
IPE concepts to their
schoolchildren.
EFTA01160254
16 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
IBS has become a major player in
Thai youth
development an active role in
promoting peace
through a variety of peace
education programs in
Thai society.
IBS ACTIVITIES
IBS activities are divided into two
major levels —
the elementary and the advanced.
On the elementary level, it aims to
instill the
normal inner peace core values in a
child's mind.
EFTA01160255
In order to prepare them for more
advanced levels
of study when they grow up. Such
standards will
translate into a child's behaviours
and become his
own second nature. It's a self-
generated rather than
an imposed discipline. That's why
IPE has long
term beneficial effects on its
students. On the
advanced level, meditation by
students
consolidates the process of IPE in
the long run.
Meditation is a good catalyst,
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because it helps youth
see and understand themselves
better, know their
own needs and serve those needs
in a more
productive way. The IBS see IPE
as lifelong
education.
The main learning activities at the
elementary
level, used by the IBS is the `Path
of Progress' Ethics
Quiz Contest' and `the Home of
Peace' (HOP).
These two projects have about 4
million students
participating annually throughout
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Thailand and
receive cooperation from 13,000
schools and
educational institutions.
The `Path of Progress' provides
students with a
peace manual for students to study
as an extracurricular
activity and an annual contest to
compete in. Winners in each
category receive
honorific plaques, certificates and
scholarships to
motivate and stimulate their
interest. By reading
the Manual of Peace different
topics will capture
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each student's imagination
according to their
disposition. It will guide them to
see the good and
bad sides of their own character
and motivate
them to want to improve
themselves become more
productive. They transform by
means of internally
derived discipline, rather than
discipline needing
to be imposed from outside. They
change by their
own willingness to become a more
responsible
person.
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The `Path of Progress' is
complemented by a
second project called the `Home of
Peace' —
especially to supplement younger
childrens'
understanding of peace — to see if
they
differentiate peace and non-peace
in their daily
lives. The project provides a `diary
of peace' for
the children to write down their
own good deeds
and good deeds done toward their
parents,
teachers and extended family.
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Since any deeds
done every day can become habits,
the IBS seeks
to value to overlook a child's
seemingly
insignificant good deeds because
these might be
the root cause of their success in
the future. Every
child tends to have his or her own
hero. If their
hero is a worthy role model, it will
inspire them to
become a virtuous global citizen.
On the contrary,
with a negative role model, they
can become public
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enemy no.1. In this respect, adults
play an
important role in presenting a
model of peace to
the young people around them. By
reading,
writing and practising peace every
day, with the
co-operation of parents and school,
IPE will
eventually become a child's
second nature
allowing them to respond to every
situation by
peaceful means.
For young people who show their
readiness to
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Thai royalty & international
organizations award
plaques. Winners of `Path of
Progress' championships in
the various categories receive
plaques and scholarships from
H.M. the King of Thailand and
numerous international
organizations.
The Manual of Peace in Action 17
learn at the advanced level, there
are a futher three
projects:
• Leadership Training Program:
this scheme
attracts young people by providing
advanced
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IPE training in personality
enhancement,
public speaking, meditation and
social
affirmation — and it is these
young people
who go on to become `supervisor'
volunteers
who organize the `Path of
Progress'
throughout Thailand annually.
• Dhammadayada Ordination
Scheme: During
the Ordination Scheme, the IPE
used includes
Buddhist teachings made relevant
to the
EFTA01160264
needs of young men in Thai
society. This
activity is rooted in the Thai
tradition that
when a man reaches the age of
twenty he
should take temporary ordination
as a
Buddhist monk for a period to
learn spiritual
values first hand. This course
comprises two
months of intense study of IPE.
Participants
study and practice spiritual values
incorporated into their daily
routine to make
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sure that improved habits are
properly
instilled and that those habits will
survive the
transfer back to daily life when
they return to
their everyday life.
• Ladies' Dhammadayada
Training Scheme: the
Ladies version of the
Dhammadayada
training is as intensive in IPE
concepts as that
of the gentlement, but participants
are not
required to ordain as nuns.
At the advanced level, IPE projects
EFTA01160266
seek to train
university students who can act as
organizers
of IPE project managers
themselves. It is because
of the trainees of these sort of
courses that the
IBS has managed to run activities
such as the
`Path of Progress' continuously
now for more
than twenty years. The unifying
feature of the
advanced projects for IPE is an
increased
emphasis on meditation.
18 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
EFTA01160267
towards Enlightened Living
A. Aiguttara NikAya (PTS
Edition)
AA. ManorathapEraAE - AIguttara
NikAya Commentary (PTS
Edition)
Ap. ApadAna (PTS Edition)
D. DEgha NikAya (PTS Edition)
DA. SumaIgala VilAsinE - DEgha
NikAya Commentary (PTS
Edition)
Dh. Dhammapada (PTS Edition)
DhA. Dhammapada Commentary
(PTS Edition)
DhSA. AtthasAlinE -
DhammasaigaAE Commentary
(PTS Edition)
EFTA01160268
It. Itivuttaka (PTS Edition)
J. JAtaka (PTS Edition)
KhpA. KhuddakapAEha
Commentary (PTS Edition)
M. Majjhima NikAya (PTS
Edition)
MA. Paparica SEdanE - Majjhima
NikAya Commentary (PTS
Edition)
MT. MahAvaOsa-TEkA
Mil. Milindapariha (PTS Edition)
MNidA. MahA Niddesa
Commentary (PTS Edition)
Ndl MahA Niddesa (PTS Edition)
Nd2 CEla Niddesa (PTS Edition)
Nd2A. CEla Niddesa Commentary
(PTS Edition)
EFTA01160269
PsA. PaEisambhidAmagga
Commentary (PTS Edition)
PTS Pali Text Society of London
S. SaOyutta NikAya (PTS Edition)
SA. SAratthappakAsinE -
SaOyutta NikAya Commentary
(PTS Edition)
SadS. SaddhammasaIgaha (P.T.S.
Journal 1890)
SN. Sutta NipAta (PTS Edition)
SNA. Sutta NipAta Commentary
(PTS Edition)
ThagA. TherAgathA Commentary
(PTS Edition)
Ud. UdAna (PTS Edition)
Vbh. Vibhanga (PTS Edition)
Vin. Vinaya (PTS Edition)
EFTA01160270
Vism. Visuddhimagga (PTS
Edition)
Vv. VimAnavatthu (PTS Edition)
VvA. VimAriavatthu Commentary
(PTS Edition)
Abbreviations
Orientation 19
A. INTRODUCTION
Welcome to the Manual of Peace.
This orientation
deals with the principles of ethical
study and the
value of the Thirty-Eight Blessings
contained in this
manual. The Manual of Peace
EFTA01160271
contains subject matter
which is not difficult indeed it
is very popular
in Thailand especially amongst
school children
where over 4,000,000 annually
take examinations
in it. In schools where vocational
subjects rob the
curriculum of more and more time
previously dedicated
for spiritual studies, the
Thirty-Eight Blessings
have been forming an
extra-curricular recompense
in spiritual studies for children in
Thailand
EFTA01160272
since 1982.
A.1 Why study spiritual
knowledge ?
The first question that comes to
mind for many people
studying this book is to ask why
academic or
material knowledge is not
sufficient to get by in the
world. If a full stomach and a place
to sleep were
enough to keep the human happy
then we wouldn't
have to go to the trouble of
studying about ethics
or about spirituality. However, for
every human
EFTA01160273
being, there is something deeper
inside us which is
always searching for the answers
to questions on a
deeper level — something which
seeks for purpose
and meaning in the life we live and
the world
around us. If supporting yourself
were all there was
to life then certainly millionnaires
would be the happiest
people on earth. Unfortunately
wealth can
only buy physical comfort —
money cannot buy
the means to nurtur e or nourish
EFTA01160274
the mind. For all
our qualifications and diplomas we
might have,
none of them can guarantee us
against hunger of
the mind. On the contrary, the
irresponsible people
may use their cunning to do more
heinous crimes
than they would do if they weren't
educated. Thus
worldly education cannot
guarantee us a happy life
or guarantee that we will not end
up in jail. This is
why we make the distinction
between worldly and
EFTA01160275
spiritual knowledge because
spiritual knowledge
properly studied can guarantee that
we will
not be put in jail — it is not only
something to fill
up our brains — it has
transformative power to
upgrade the way we think, speak
and act.
In the ideal world, our system of
education would
give us the answers we need to the
questions inside
ourselves, but in practice, the
secular education
doesn't manage to fill this gap —
EFTA01160276
and maybe,
even if it were to try, it could not
— because in some
way the personal quest is part of
the process of acquiring
knowledge.Thus we are forced to
look for
the answers from alternative
sources.
A.2 Fashion and Universal
Values
Many things can affect our
spiritual progress. Sometimes
it can be people, objects, attitudes,
situations
or experiences we come across in
the world. However,
EFTA01160277
for most things, the worth or
uselessness of
an experience is just a matter of
opinion. Are there
things then that have a universally
uplifting effect
on people's lives that are more
than just a mat-
Orientation
20 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
ter of opinion?
Take present day trademarks
which are accepted
as status symbols by everyone as
an example —
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Mercedes, Adidas — really such
companies should
pay us to advertise their products,
but on the contrary
we pay more for a T-shirt with the
trademark
for the privilege of associating
ourselves with the
trademark. Why should this be?
We feel that associating
ourselves with such a symbol
somehow
improves our own worth.
Sometimes we feel that
the worth of these things is
unchanging, but in fact
from age to age these values
EFTA01160279
change according to
fashion. In times gone by, people
thought in the
same way, but they didn't call
these things `brand
marketing', or `trademarks', they
called them `lucky
charms' — but again they liked to
associate with
them as a way of improving their
worth or fostering
progress in their lives. We still
have lucky
charms in the present day — things
like lucky horseshoes
or four-leaf clovers, but their role
is diminished
EFTA01160280
if compared to olden times. In
olden times
the role of charms was much more
significant.
Systems of spiritual knowledge are
attempts by
men to model the values of the
world in a way according
to unchanging universal values —
ways to
recognize the things that improve
our worth in
ways that are eternal and don't
differ from person
to person. Many bodies of
knowledge exist in the
world to help us in this respect.
EFTA01160281
They differ in their
degree of comprehensiveness. The
ideal body of
knowledge for us to learn from
would perhaps be
one with the following
characteristics:
• Progressive & Sequential
something which leads
you step by step from simple to
more complex;
• Self-Catalysing creating its own
motivation and
enthusiasm to pursue it as you go
along;
• Exhaustive being applicable to
all aspects of life;
EFTA01160282
• Holistic perhaps dealing with
problems not just
by symptoms but in their entirety;
• Multi-level working on personal,
interpersonal,
family, social and global levels
equally well;
• Non-discriminatory being
equally applicable to
those of all cultures;
• Multi-Factorial being able to
deal not just with
simple problems but with those
with many contributing
factors;
• Facilitating Practical Outlook
giving a clear
EFTA01160283
EFTA01160284
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JO 0SOLp
1SUIU8e &IBM LI0AO puB XlIATSttpX0
fen1Inds 1 pi o1 stualsics
01nos .epa1!JD oSo1.11 JO VOITS
palm s0np A tempIds
jo stuoisXs Xu1 0 010qI
.JOJ 1111U 01
SaLIT141 aAT)-Nod su II0A箋 SB moke
" s0sino„ II 0p sn
&TEA8 safisoddo 胃uyti砌tp)H •
tsanp A 0d pue out puntu
0AOCIU OSIJ 0. sn
8tumoTiu sanivA .gugmadsumi •
伏qdosoI
JO X.10otpu
1ou stuomaid tium 1S 01 o01 id
longer suitable
for an age of globalization and
tolerance. Some systems
lead their practitioner to shut
themselves away
from the world and to ignore social
problems. Some
systems confine themselves to
their own culture or
language.
B. THE MANUAL OF PEACE
B.1 Historical Origins of the
Manual of Peace
The Blessings of Life which make
up the Manual of
Peace are interesting because they
seem to answer
EFTA01160285
to all the characteristics specified
above. They grew
up in response to just the same
type of debate over
universal values mentioned in the
introduction. In
fact, even from ancient times, men
had values —
but at a certain time in the past
2,500 years ago in
India a group of people started to
wonder whether
there was anything deeper behind
the fashions —
were there symbols of worth that
transcended fashion?
What sort of charms could
EFTA01160286
possibly allow one
to live without obstacles'.
Supposing one wanted
wealth, honour, praise and
happiness, how could
one ensure that one received just
that? There was
such a debate ensuing from this
question, over
which everybody seemed to have a
different point
of view. To generalize the debators
divided themselves
into three main camps:
1. The first group believed that the
thing to make
one's life a blessing was to see
EFTA01160287
something that
was `pleasing'.
2. The second group believed that
the thing to make
one's life a blessing was to hear
something that
was `pleasing'.
3. The third group believed that the
thing to make
one's life a blessing was the mood
in the mind
Orientation 21
which arose whenever you saw or
heard something
that was `pleasing'.
Each group disagreed with the
others because it
EFTA01160288
was obvious that an image pleasant
to one person
may not be pleasant to another. A
sound pleasant
to one person might not be
pleasant to another.
Something that creates a pleasant
mood today
might cause an unpleasant mood
tomorrow. Thus
there is nothing to make anything
discussed a
`blessing' without doubt. The
debate went on and
on without any sign of coming to
an end. It is just
like people in the present day can
EFTA01160289
still not agree
as to what is truly a `lucky charm'.
Eventually the problem was only
resolved by
taking audience with the Buddha.
A representative
asked the Buddha the nature of
blessings and
his reply is what is now know as
the Mangala Sutta
— thirty-eight blessings divided
into ten groupings.
B.2 Definitions: The Word
`Blessings'
Some may still wonder about the
meaning of the
word `blessing' [maIgala]. Some
EFTA01160290
people think a
blessing must be an object or an
action — but
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