Saturday, October 25, 1997
"Seven Years in Tibet" feeds a growing
interest in Buddhism
By STEVE RABEY
Religion News Service
With "Seven Years in Tibet" showing in theaters nationwide,
including the Park Central 6 in Abilene, Buddhism has become big
business at the box office.
Millions of moviegoers have taken a break from murder, mayhem,
sex and big explosions to see a moving film about one man's redemption.
In addition to oodles of pre-release publicity, "Seven
Years" has this unlikely but unbeatable story line: hunk
hikes the Himalayas and finds holiness.
The hunk is Brad Pitt, who delivers an understated but powerful
performance as Heinrich Harrer, a world-class Austrian mountain
climber, who was also a third-rate husband, father, friend and
human being - at least until his transformation.
The Himalayas, the fabled "Roof of the World," have
long been a mountainous magnet for those seeking the ultimate
climb, including Harrer, who in a letter to the son he had never
seen, described the region as "a place rich with all the
strange beauty of your nighttime dreams."
Those heavenly heights are also home to Lhasa, the holy city
of Tibetan Buddhism. Under the thumb of the Chinese since 1950,
Tibet was off-limits to film crews, who painstakingly recreated
Lhasa's exotic grandeur in the Andes of Argentina.
The redemption Harrer finds in Lhasa is a painful kind of emotional
purification that springs from two sources: deep regret over a
life full of selfishness and "bad deeds," and a touching
friendship with the teen-age Dalai Lama, the spiritual and political
leader of Tibetan Buddhism.
Anyone interested in learning more about
Buddhism is invited to two lectures which will conclude an Interfaith
Journey series at Heavenly Rest Episcopal Church on Nov. 12 and
19.
The church, 602 Meander, is hosting a series
of discussions on five major religions, with two sessions devoted
to each. The series began Sept. 17 and concludes Nov. 19. Religions
covered include Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism and Buddhism.
Next Wednesday's presentation will be on Hinduism.
Discussions begin at 6:45 p.m. in the parish
hall.
This may not sound particularly "religious" in the
conventional sense, but that's not unusual. Many of America's
about 1 million Buddhists see Buddhism as a philosophy, or even
a psychological approach toward life, but not a religion.
In fact, part of why Buddhism is enjoying a tremendous growth
in the West is because millions of people seem to be looking for
a spiritual path that's Eastern, slightly exotic, compassionate,
provocative, inclusive, ancient and hip - in short, just about
everything they believe is lacking in the more familiar faiths
of their upbringing.
For the last century and a half, it's been cultural leaders
and celebrities who have promoted the message of the Buddha, Buddhism's
founder. He was born more than 2,500 years ago, found enlightenment
while meditating under a bodhi tree, and taught that lasting inner
peace could only be found by transcending all worldly desires
and passions. Today there are around 300 million Buddhists in
the world, most of them in southeast Asia.
In the 1840s, it was "transcendentalist" writers
such as Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau who first
introduced the American masses to Eastern concepts.
"They were the first American literary figures to take
the East seriously," said Rick Fields, author of "How
the Swans Came to the Lake," a 400-page history of Buddhism
in America. "In doing that, they kind of broke the ice."
During the 1990s, a variety of celebrities from the worlds
of film, sports and music have exhibited various levels of dedication
to assorted branches of the varied Buddhist tradition.
Actors Steven Segal and Richard Gere, Chicago Bulls coach Phil
Jackson, and musicians John Cage, Tina Turner and Adam Yauch have
all claimed some level of commitment to Buddhist thought.
Yauch has been among the most explicit about his beliefs. In
the process, he's helped transform his rock/rap trio The Beastie
Boys - formerly a testosterone-driven band most famous for the
1986 hit "(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (to Party)"
- into a more spiritually mature outfit that condemns sexism and
lust and promotes universal harmony and "listening to the
elders."
But "Seven Years" may do more to promote Buddhism
to the masses than anything in recent history - excepting the
tireless work of the Dalai Lama, a human cyclone who has the spiritual
allure of the late Mother Teresa and the travel schedule of Pope
John Paul II.
Moreover, "Seven Years" is just the first of two
films focusing on the Dalai Lama and Tibetan Buddhism being released
this year. Scheduled for release this Christmas season is "Kundun,"
a film by director Martin Scorsese, which will explore the Dalai
Lama's early life.
Advocates of both the Tibetan political cause and Buddhism
in general have seized upon these movies as prime opportunities
to take their messages to the American heartland.
"Seven Years" had one scrape with scandal on its
way to the screen. After filming was completed, Germany's Stern
magazine revealed that Harrer had been a member of the Nazi SS,
a problem that was addressed by having Pitt add new voice-overs.
But one of the movie's most reassuring messages is that anyone
can journey toward redemption. That includes those who hob-nobbed
with Nazis, as well as the rest of us, whose bad deeds are much
more mundane.
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Abilene Reporter-News / Texnews / E.W. Scripps. Publications
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