Buddhist Defence of Human Rights
By
Buddhist Master Maitreya
The Buddhist Spirituality is the metapolitical
movement which most has worked for Ethics and Human Rights in world history,
being precisely the utopian quest for a Global Republic ruled by the Law or
Purpose (Dharma). The full ascent of the dharmic socialist civilization is a
challenge to the imperialistic superpowers, by visualizing a better world
governed by ethical norms which prevent war, injustice, illiteracy and
pollution. These norms that promote peace, justice, education and ecology are
based on mutual support rather than
the use of violent force. Thus, the compassionate wisdom (karuna-prajna) of the
spiritual master is a foretaste of the future world.
But for advancing the implementation of a global
juridical system they should be vanished the asymmetries and inequalities of
capitalist civilization, by questioning the very foundations of economics,
politics and mainstream culture. In order to undertake this difficult task it
is necessary that the Buddhist Spirituality becomes detached from
multiculturalism of globalization, simultaneously transmitting perennial and
universalist ideas of Justice which pose a human
rights socialism capable of coping with the powerful countries from both
wild capitalism and authoritarian communism. This scenario positions the
Buddhist Spirituality as the antidote to the hegemonic movements which have
always bring conflict, violence and oppression to society. Furthermore, the
Free and Enlightened Being (Arhat-Bodhisattva) provides the only frame of
international ordering that respects the intrinsic condition of Awakening
(Bodhi) of humanity, criticizing the major terrorist acts and imperialist
invasions as phenomena produced by the poisons of State, religion and family.
These questions towards the capitalist civilization
arise from the Buddhist Spirituality, which is a stream of thought and practice
which has a critical orientation towards the traditional world politics, while
holding that the universal legal values must arise from the perennial impulse
of compassionate wisdom (karuna-prajna) and never from the force of imperialist
domination of the dominant countries. In this way, the spiritual master puts
the capitalist civilization into question but without incurring the huge
mistake of considering that the Asian culture has better values than the
Western culture, claiming for an understanding of Human Rights adapted to the
values that are intrinsic to the spiritual nature of human being, as Liberty,
Equality and Fraternity. Therefore, the Analytical-Existential-Libertarian
Discourse (Buddha-Dharma-Sangha) of the Buddhist Spirituality teaches a model
of economic, political and cultural development based on the primacy of
transcendental values that do not belong to East or West but they are the
legacy of the great Awakened Ones (Buddhas) of history.
Consequently, the Buddhist Spirituality considers
Liberty of expression as a core value of social life, although this may be
controversial in the face of feudal and authoritarian regimes which
systematically violate the Universal Human Rights. Those who resort to
repression and murder to silence Liberty of expression are actually living in
the past of the world, because the vindication of fundamental Rights of human
beings will still be standing for building a better world. The transition
towards a more integrated and less Eurocentric
or Asiacentric world is a fact
that notably favours the possibility of a True Global Justice, allowing the
emergence of universal values which do not serve the most powerful countries of
the international capitalist system. In this sense, a genuine Global Justice
must not only include the support of the majority of the world peoples, but it
must also be an international legal framework that incorporates the spiritual
traditions. Buddhist Spirituality is a Middle Way, so that its universal
struggle for the Human Rights and the Earth Rights transcends the opposite
poles of religious fundamentalism and the colonialist capitalism, because while
the former seeks to murder and destroy the spiritual values of Human Rights, by
perpetrating terrorist acts and massacres of innocent people, the second one
kills and destroy in the name of
Human Rights by bombarding or invading poor nations, like the Empires of North
America and Europe have done.
Therefore, it is essential the contribution of
Buddhist Spirituality in the construction of a global legal system for the
contemporary world, by being at the forefront of the vindication of the ideals
of non-violence, social non-segregation, interreligious dialogue, popular
self-determination, global direct democracy and respect for ecosystems. The
heyday of the geopolitical perspective of Buddhist Spirituality erodes
contemporary legal negativism, showing the possibility of building an advanced
jurisprudence regarding Human Rights that undertakes a revolution throughout
the world.
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