2021/04/06

The Wisdom of Sustainability: Buddist Economics for the 21st Century by Sulak Sivaraksa | Goodreads

The Wisdom of Sustainability: Buddist Economics for the 21st Century by Sulak Sivaraksa | Goodreads

The Wisdom of Sustainability: Buddist Economics for the 21st Century

 3.74  ·   Rating details ·  66 ratings  ·  9 reviews
Sulak Sivaraksa, nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize and winner of the Right Livelihood Award (called the alternative Nobel Peace Prize), is one of Asia's leading intellectuals and social critics. This book is his evaluation of the global economy, structural violence, the war on terror, and the power of corporations from a Buddhist perspective. Sivaraksa is founder of the International Network of Engaged Buddhists and many other prominent organizations. This is his magnum opus. Sulak sees Buddhism as a questioning process. Question everything, including oneself, look deeply, and then act from that insight. He is among a handful of leaders worldwide working to a revive the socially engaged aspects of spirituality. Born in 1933, Sulak Sivaraksa is a prominent and outspoken Thai intellectual and social critic. He is a teacher, scholar, publisher, activist, founder of many organizations, and author of 100 books in Thai and English. Educated in England, Sulak returned to Thailand at the age of 28 and founded his country's foremost intellectual magazine, In 1984 he was arrested on charges of criticizing the King, but international protest led to his release. In 1991 another warrant was issued for his arrest and Sulak was forced into exile. He came back to fight the case in the court and won. His life has been a series of confrontations with authority, always coming back to the basic belief in inner peace as the way to bring about world peace. (less)

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Paperback101 pages
Published May 15th 2009 by Koa Books

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Justin Douglas
Dec 16, 2010rated it liked it
I've been infatuated with the idea of "Buddhist economics" ever since I stumbled upon "Small Is Beautiful" a few years ago. In this short treatise, Sivaraksa talks about how "development" has played out in poor countries like his homeland, Thailand, and how it could play out if the puppet masters weren't so focused on GDP and material standards of living. The sections on Buddhist government and social-change-as-individual-change are thoughtful and inspiring.

Now, I understand that Sivaraksa's focus is poor countries, and I certainly agree that "development," as it is currently understood and implemented, destroys traditional cultures, harmonious societies and dignified, self-reliant ways of life. But I wonder what he thinks us Westerners ought to do about our own countries, beset by social problems, which "developed" long enough ago that we have no collective memory of any "traditional" way of life to return to. And though many Americans may not be materially deprived to the same extent as rural Southeast Asian families, I think that American consumer/college debt slavery is not that much different than the debt slavery of farmers who need to lease equipment.

My biggest gripe about this book is that it's not exactly clear who he's writing to. There are a lot of "We need to..."-type declarations that are typical of left-leaning political writing. His English is clear and plain enough that anyone could read it, but as a Westerner with no special political power, I got the feeling that there was nothing I could really do about the situation. ...except meditate and cultivate loving-kindness for all sentient beings (sigh).
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Chris
Mar 18, 2017rated it really liked it
Coming of age by thinking global and acting local

As a young boy of ten, perhaps eleven years old, while visiting primary school I saw a film about India. The film made a huge impression, the colourful elephants, the castles, the overwhelming nature, the yogi’s a real fairy tale version of India. But the interest in the country and its culture never left me and some ten years later I visited India and Nepal for the first time.

By then the ideas of Mahatma Gandhi had become important for me. Not only his ideas about nonviolent civil disobedience that led to an independence India interested me. A free India for Gandhi meant the flourishing of thousands of self-sufficient small communities who rule themselves without hindering others. Gandhian economics focused on the need for economic self-sufficiency at the village level. His policy of called for ending poverty through improved agriculture and small-scale cottage industries in every village. Gandhi challenged Nehru and the modernizers in the late 1930s who called for rapid industrialisation on the Soviet model; Gandhi denounced that as dehumanising and contrary to the needs of the villages where the great majority of the people lived. According to Gandhi, "Poverty is the worst form of violence."

Some years later I read ‘Small is beautiful by the German economist E.F. (Frits) Schumacher. In my opinion Schumacher’s main focus is also to act on a small/ human scale. Later translated in the slogan ‘think global, act local’. Together with the report ‘The Limits to Growth’ by the global think tank The Club of Rome, these became my most important nonfiction reads of the 1970’s. (for fiction it was of course Hermann Hesse 
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Shannon Stewart
Oct 16, 2010rated it it was amazing
Shelves: philosophy
possibly one of the most important messages of this decade.

Sivarasa's explanation of Structural Violence, his candid observations of the impact of Globalization and Agribusiness on "developing" countries, and his summation of Nonviolent Practice are succinct, courageous, and skillfully written.

The reader could have no prior knowledge of Buddhist philosophy; Sivarasa introduces the key principles (wisdom, compassion, nonviolence, the 4 Noble Truths, and the 8 Fold Path) and sensibly applies them to our current world situation. Anyone interested in True Sustainability will benefit from reading this book.
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Yngve Skogstad
Jun 22, 2018rated it liked it
As I have grown increasingly tired with the materialistic growth ideology that permeates nearly all contemporary Western political thought, I picked up this book in hopes of getting an alternative perspective. What emerges is a critique of globalized capitalism that is quite reminiscent of what you get from several indigenous movements, de-growthers, localists, eco-socialists, etc., fused with a sort of cultural conservativism that I must admit I take issue with. In that sense Sivaraksa’s contribution isn’t unique, but it adds another layer to the critique of global capitalism through its greater emphasis on the social and spiritual dimensions.

In terms of proposed solutions, I find this book quite weak. Though not explicitly, it seems he speaks mostly to “the global South”, at least that’s the context where the author’s proposals seem the most relevant. All the while criticising Westerners for being individualistic, I find it ironic that it is Sivaraksa who ends up proposing individual solutions to structural problems, like looking inside oneself to understand the other, realizing that we all carry both good and bad within ourselves. I find the belief that any problem can be solved if we just understand each other really naïve. Oppressing structures are maintained because groups of people benefit from them, not because these people haven’t meditated properly.
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Tom Peek
Dec 08, 2018rated it it was amazing
Anyone interested in economic and environmental sustainability will gain much from The Wisdom of Sustainability by Sulak Sivaraksa, one of Asia’s leading social thinkers and activists. Having just reread it for a second time, I think it’s the best guide to sustainability since E.F. Schumacher’s 1973 international bestseller, Small is Beautiful: A Study of Economics as if People Mattered.

Sivaraksa offers a clear, concise enunciation of the guiding principles that underlie any real solution to our economic and environmental problems. The book also illuminates the reasons why Westerners, neoliberals and the World Bank find it so difficult to approach these problems in any effective way.

And Sivaraksa does all this—fine writer and thinker that he is—in a scant 100 pages. Sivaraksa’s tough, no-nonsense analysis—and his enunciation of a clear vision for action—actually made me feel somewhat optimistic.
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Chris Carlisle
Jul 26, 2016rated it really liked it
I would highly recommend this book for its advanced humanistic and ecological perspectives. The ideals expressed by the author should not be prejudiced by any ideas about Buddhism in comparison with other true religions or spiritual teachings; for the ideals are simply based on the common sense that one should also allow unto others what one wants for oneself, and that greed will only destroy everything for everyone, even for those who claim most of the wealth of the planet for themselves.

E F Schumacher ('Small is Beautiful'), who was a Catholic, expressed similar recommendations in the previous century after having seen the benevolence of Buddhist economic practices.

The chapters in this book are:
1. Heavenly Messengers
2. Creating a Culture of Peace
3. Development from the Bottom Up
4. Re-envisioning Education
5. Moral Governance
6. Real Security
7. Buddhism in a World of Change
8. The Breath of Peace

I gave it only a 4-star rating for the following reason: There are some serious flaws in the author's understanding and reasoning, which is astonishing in light of the author's clarity of thinking. Two of the flaws are -
(a) The author does not appear to understand the true purpose of money (tokens for exchange of goods and services) and how it should be created and used. This lack of understanding can be seen from his belief that the World Bank could still perform a worthwhile function (as described at the end of chapter 3), not realizing that the World Bank applies the principles of neoliberal banking that force nations to accept extortionate loans created by the fraudulent fractional reserve system. The Euro crisis is proof of the failure of neoliberal banking. The World Bank is a global arm of the world's private banking plutocracy, so the people it employs maintain its system of money creation and utilisation. Reformation of its corrupt banking system would require a radical revolution in attitude and behavior of its employees. Moreover, democratically elected governments, not private banks, can and should create money for local use.
(b) He writes about the (practical) wisdom of sustainability, yet he says (to quote from chapter 4): 'One type of knowledge is to get men to the moon, another to foster environmental sustainability. Certain forms of knowledge are needed to build super-bombs; other forms are needed to make peace.'
I ask: What need is there for going to the moon or having super-bombs if we create and maintain sustainable and spiritual economics?

What redeems the book from losing yet another star is the highly useful vocabulary created and used by the author throughout the book. For example, with regards to our industrialized Western education system in Universities, he says (to quote from chapter 4): 'Language (of education) becomes so perfectly attuned to the agendas of the powerful (industrial elite) that the concepts and connotations with which resistance could be formulated are eliminated, making protest appear irrational and naïve.'
 (less)
Paula Margulies
Jan 11, 2011rated it it was amazing
A great treatise on the benefits of a small-scale, self-sufficient economy as an alternative to globalization. The author, Sulak Sivaraksa, describes the changes in Thailand's culture after the country's shift from an agrarian to an urban business model and how the Buddhist principles of inner strength, compassion, and mindfulness, when applied to economics, offer the potential for a more just and peaceful world. (less)
Farida El-gueretly
Oct 10, 2011rated it liked it
Shelves: pop-science
This was well-written however I don't feel like it added much academic content to the discourse on sustainability. In other words, it states the obvious in a way. It's an okay read if you ask me. But I do recommend his other book: Conflict, Culture, Change: Engaged Buddhism in a Globalizing World (less)

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Muse
4.0 out of 5 stars Benevolent Economics
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 27 June 2012
Verified Purchase
I would highly recommend this book for its advanced humanistic and ecological perspectives. The ideals expressed by the author should not be prejudiced by any ideas about Buddhism in comparison with other true religions or spiritual teachings, for the ideals are simply based on the common sense that one should also allow unto others what one wants for oneself, and that greed will only destroy everything for everyone, even for those who claim most of the wealth of the planet for themselves.

E F Schumacher ("Small is Beautiful"), who was a Catholic, expressed similar recommendations in the previous century after having seen the benevolence of Buddhist economic practices.

The chapters in this book are:
1. Heavenly Messengers
2. Creating a Culture of Peace
3. Development from the Bottom Up
4. Re-envisioning Education
5. Moral Governance
6. Real Security
7. Buddhism in a World of Change
8. The Breath of Peace

I gave it only a 4-star rating for the following reason: There are some serious flaws in the author's understanding and reasoning, which is astonishing in light of the author's clarity of thinking. Two of the flaws are -
(a) The author does not appear to understand the true purpose of money (tokens for exchange of goods and services) and how it should be created and used. This lack of understanding can be seen from his belief that the World Bank could still perform a worthwhile function (as described at the end of chapter 3), not realising that the World Bank applies the principles of neoliberal banking that force nations to accept extortionate loans created by the fraudulent fractional reserve system. The Euro crisis is proof of the failure of neoliberal banking. The World Bank is a global arm of the world's private banking plutocracy, so the people it employs maintain its system of money creation and utilisation. Reformation of its corrupt banking system would require a radical revolution in attitude and behaviour of its employees. Moreover, democratically elected governments, not private banks, can and should create money for local use.
(b) He writes about the (practical) wisdom of sustainability, yet he says (to quote from chapter 4): "One type of knowledge is to get men to the moon, another to foster environmental sustainability. Certain forms of knowledge are needed to build super-bombs; other forms are needed to make peace."
I ask: What need is there for going to the moon or having super-bombs if we create and maintain sustainable and spiritual economics?

What redeems the book from losing yet another star is the highly useful vocabulary created and used by the author throughout the book. For example, with regards to our industrialised Western education system in Universities, he says (to quote from chapter 4): "Language (of education) becomes so perfectly attuned to the agendas of the powerful (industrial elite) that the concepts and connotations with which resistance could be formulated are eliminated, making protest appear irrational and naïve."

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Derek Stephen McPhail
5.0 out of 5 stars Thai peace activist, Sulak Sivaraksa
Reviewed in Canada on 6 March 2014
Verified Purchase
Focusing on small-scale, indigenous and sustainable alternatives to globalization, Ajarn Sulak offers practical and constructive suggestions for restructuring our economies, based on Buddhist principles, in a way that promotes personal development. Not only a critique of consumerism and the current economic model, this book is an urgent and essential outline of the viable options that can begin to heal our planet on both the individual and global levels. In the wake of the economic crash no author is as topical, challenging and far-sighted in offering a way towards a sane and just society.
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bizint
5.0 out of 5 stars Top
Reviewed in Germany on 25 December 2017
Verified Purchase
Sehr gut, intelligente Weltsicht. Lesenswert. Nicht in sein Heimatland mitnehmen und dort am Strand lesen, ist dort angeblich verboten. Schade.
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william paul holt
4.0 out of 5 stars Titillating
Reviewed in the United States on 19 January 2017
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This is a good beginning to diving into activism with Buddhist thoughts in mind. I really liked it and read it for a class
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16 Sulak Sivaraksa Spiritual Friendship in Buddhist Activism

16 Sulak Sivaraksa Spiritual Friendship in Buddhist Activism





ON THE COVER FLAP OF HIS BOOK GLOBAL HEALING: Essays on Structural Violence, Social Development and Spiritual Transformation

Sulak Sivaraksa is standing with a group of supporters, his arms outstretched, his face firm and concentrated. People are bowing to him and taking their turn tying white blessing strings on his wrists to show their respect. Sulak, who won the Right Livelihood Award in 1995, is known and honored across the globe for his bold critiques of con­sumerism and development! Among socially engaged Buddhists, he is a courageous voice, a critical thinker, and a dedicated advocate for peace and justice. I first met Sulak in 1990 when I traveled to Siam (Sulak's preferred name in historical recognition of his homeland) to represent the Buddhist Peace Fellowship at the International Network of Engaged Buddhists (INEB) conference. During our four-day preconference work­shop, he was a most cordial and personable host, looking after our needs and helping us feel comfortable in a new place.

At the opening ceremony for the conference, Sulak explained that the purpose of the conference was "to make spiritual friends." I had never heard such a goal mentioned at any other conference I'd attended. Con­sidering the large number of social, political, economic, and ecological problems facing the group, I wondered how friendship could possibly be up to the task. Sulak seemed to be saying that these precious moments together held great practice opportunities if we took seriously the idea of spiritual friendship. At the time, I was part of an unfolding conversation on engaged Buddhist practice, but I had little idea what spiritual friend­ship might mean. I barely grasped how important Sulak was to so many activists in Siam and how far his networks of spiritual friends extended. Across the years, as I have become part of a few of those networks, I have gained a glimpse of his vast social world and all he has supported.

Soon after the INEB conference, Sulak spoke at the University of Hawaii about spiritual friendship in the context of human rights work. "Human rights means not only rights for you or rights for me, but human rights for all."' He urged listeners to understand how we are inter­related, that "we need friends who will help us, because we alone cannot do it. The Buddha said that it is most important for each individual to have good supportive friends. The First World must work with the Third World; the Thai must work with the Burmese; and so on. . . . We all have our small part to play."' In a 1998 talk in New Delhi, he returned to this topic while addressing Buddhist perspectives on sustainable com­munity. "As 'interbeings' we need good friends—kalayanamittas—because we cannot exist alone. . . . From others one can learn to develop oneself and help society to be peaceful and just.994 He used the example of Sekhi-yadhama, the group of Thai activist monks who apply Buddhist teachings to modern challenges of forest clearing, chemical agriculture, and West­ernization.' Kalayanamitta, spiritual friendship, is very important to these monks as they confront criticism from the Thai government and Bud­dhist religious establishment. They build their friendships by drawing on each other's experience, insight, and activist strategies. Through INEB conferences and other networks, they gain support from other Buddhist friends around the world, following Sulak's teachings.

In 2003, one of Sulak's close spiritual friends, David Chappell, in­vited friends and colleagues to contribute to a collection of essays in honor of Sulak's seventieth birthday.6

The opening page quote from the Dhammapada seems to describe Sulak himself:

Regard him as one who points out treasure, The wise one who rebukes you.

Stay with this sort of sage.

For the one who stays with a sage of this sort,

Things get better, not worse.   (verse 76) 


I recognized many of the names in the volume—people from the INEB conference, people from the Buddhist Peace Fellowship, peo­ple I'd met from Buddhist-Christian Dialogue circles. But there were more— so many names from around the world and so many realms of spiritual friendship. In one tribute, Sulak said to a colleague, "Friends, you see, are very important. In Buddhism the best thing for each of us is not fame, not money, but friends. And the Buddha said good friends are the best help for you to have externally. Internally it's criti­cal self-awareness. Externally it's good friends, kalyanamitta."7 Sulak re­ferred to the famous story where Ananda, one of the Buddha's students, remarked that it seemed to him that having good friends was half of the holy life. "Not so," the Buddha replied. "Having friends is the whole of spiritual life."

For Sulak, spiritual friendship is valuable in two fundamental ways. Spiritual friends are essential for their role as critics, the ones who will tell us where we fall short. At the same time, spiritual friends are im­portant sources of mutual inspiration. In Sulak's Buddhist worldview, "kalyanamittas, or virtuous companions, are crucial to spiritual growth. Friends are the only people who can give us the criticism and the sup­port that we need to transcend our own limitations and can comfort us if we fail. If we become so self-absorbed that we do not have kalyana-mittas in our lives, we stagnate in complacency and self-righteousness."' Sulak believes that only with the help of spiritual friends can we develop a peaceful society. He feels sure that addressing the challenges of social stability and global peace have much greater odds if we are supported by spiritual friends.

What do Buddhist texts say about spiritual friendship? 

The Flower Ornament Sutra explains the purpose for seeking spiritual friends. "It is from spiritual friends that bodhisattvas learn the practice of bodhi-sattvas; it is through spiritual friends that all bodhisattvas' virtues are perfected; spiritual friends are the source of the stream of all bodhi-sattva vows; the roots of goodness of all bodhisattvas are produced by spiritual friends;, the provisions for enlightenment are produced by spiritual friends."9 Here the Buddha is encouraging his followers to develop spiritual friendships as an aid to enlightenment and service to others. Further on in the sutra he speaks to the great powers of spiritual friends:

Think of yourself as sick, and think of spiritual friends as physicians; think of their instructions as medicines, and think of the practices as getting rid of disease. Think of yourself as a traveler, and think of spiritual friends as guides; think of their instructions as the road, and think of the practices as going to the land of your destination. Think of yourself as crossing to the other shore, and think of the spiritual friend as a boatman; think of the instruction as a ford, and think of the practices as a boat. Think of yourself as a farmeq and think of spiritual friends as water spirits; think of the instructions as rain, and think of the practices as the ripening of the crops. Think of yourself as a pauper, and think of spiritual friends as the givers of wealth; think of their instructions as wealth, and think of the practices as getting rid of poverty. Think of yourself as an apprentice, and think of spiritual friends as mentors; think of their instructions as arts, and think of the practices as accomplishments. Think of yourself as fearless, and think of spiritual friends as heroic warriors; think of their instructions as attack, and think of the practices as vanquishing enemies. 10

The twelfth-century Kagyu Tibetan Buddhist text by Gampopa, An Ornament of Precious Liberation, describes four types of spiritual friends. The type of spiritual friend one takes as a wisdom teacher depends on the student's level of development. For a bodhisattva in the most ad­vanced stages, the appropriate wisdom teacher is a sambhogakaya form of the Buddha. At the next lower stage, the appropriate spiritual friend is a nirmanakaya form of the Buddha. Most people fall into the "beginner" category, unable to recognize a highly awakened being. Thus, Jamgon Kongtrul Rinpoche, a nineteenth-century Tibetan Buddhist master, suggests a beginner should take a wisdom teacher who has the form of an ordinary person.11 In this commentary on Gampopa's text, "ordinary person" is understood to mean someone who knows something about Mahayana Buddhism and has taken the bodhisattva vow. "Ordinary per­son" implies someone who is on the path but trying to make an effort, just like everyone else. This certainly describes Sulak Sivaraksa as he has inspired me. Always he is asking, "How can we water seeds of peace in ourselves? How can we transform society?""

Buddhist writer Stephen Batchelor makes the case for spiritual friend­ship as a practice field for acting from true understanding of relationality.

Self-absorbed concern generating from the Three Poisons—greed, hate, and delusion—inevitably blocks authentic relations. We are distracted by projections and assumptions about others that mislead and confuse us. Batchelor suggests that a more meaningful pattern of relationship re­quires "sustained contemplation of the equality of self and other." 13 Med­itating on this point, we see we are completely entwined with others, that this defines who we actually are. Self-concern is a false distortion of reality to be actively taken apart and replaced with concern for others. Realizing that our existence is fundamentally "being-with-others," we transform this insight through compassion to "being-for-others." 14 Spiritual friends, then, act as wisdom teachers by practicing deeply "being-with-others," in whatever form that may take, including activist work.

In considering the importance of spiritual friendship for Sulak, it seems to me that this was a radical concept, a fresh idea in the Buddha's time and one that is still fresh now. Spiritual friendships strengthened the monastic community by reinforcing practice commitment across many relationships, not just between teacher and student. This mitigated the concentration of power in a priest/teacher class and, in contrast to the ascendant Brahmanism of the time, supported a radical equality among practitioners. By drawing on each other's experience, spiritual friends ex­amined the Buddha's suggestions in real-life settings, testing their merits for themselves. Spiritual friends could turn to each other, finding wisdom in "ordinary persons," free from competing for the teacher's attention.

Given this understanding, it is no surprise that Sulak placed so much attention on cultivating friendships at the INEB gathering. He clearly sees spiritual friendship as key to spiritually based activism. Spiritual ac­tivist friends can lean on each other to share their learning and strengthen their knowledge base. Together, they can support a path of practice in the midst of activist work through ritual, meditation, and ethical reflection. Understanding themselves as "interbeings" in the great causal net, they can take up the work of promoting peace and nonharming. In a world where there are more problems than priests, cultivating spiritual friend­ships increases the activist presence where there is suffering.

Sulak himself has been a great model for spiritual friendship in activ­ist work with his support for religious engagement with non-Buddhist. traditions. In his book Conflict, Culture, Change: Engaged Buddhism in a Globalizing World, he describes his close friendships with Quakers as a "constant source of inspiration and support in my life and my work as an engaged Buddhist. . . especially their honesty, simplicity; and commit­ment to nonviolence."" I saw firsthand in academic Buddhist-Christian theological encounters how moved he was by Christian participants whose religious faith was so intertwined with their commitment to social justice. Sulak was especially inspired by liberation theologians of South and Central America and their passionate commitment to the needs of the poor and oppressed.

Across his lifetime of activism, Sulak built friendships with Burmese refugees fleeing the border, with drug users, AIDS patients, advocates against sex trafficking, and forest monks protecting trees. During a critical period in Thai history, when Sulak challenged the government and was charged with lèse-majesté (insulting the king), he was forced into exile. In his book Seeds of Peace: A Buddhist Vision for Renewing Society (1992), he wrote, "In times of crisis like this, when I have to be away from home, I experience so much kindness and attention from everyone I come across. To all these friends who have been so kind to me and my family during my sojourn abroad, I wish to express sincere gratitude." 16

Nicholas Bennett, coeditor of another of Sulak's books, testified that Sulak "helped many young people take their first steps toward a spiritu­ally based social activism, and continues to provide them with moral sup­port as they branch off in their own directions. There is hardly a [Thai] non-governmental organization that does not have someone on its staff whom Sulak has helped."" This includes, among others, the Thai Inter-Religious Commission for Development, the Santi Pracha Dhamma Institute, the Asian Cultural Forum on Development, the International Network of Engaged Buddhists, the Spirit in Education Movement, and many other manifestations of spiritual friendship in action." Sulak takes very seriously the importance of paying public tribute to spiritual friends and mentors who have meant so much to him—Thich Nhat Hanh, His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Bhikkhu Payutto, and Puey Ungphakorn, among others.'9

As I write this reflection, again and again I find myself bowing to Ajahn Sulak in gratitude for the gift of this teaching. The kind of bow I'm speak­ing of is not deferential or subservient, but rather, as Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche says, "a complementary exchange of energy" that confirms both people.2° A bow acknowledges worth of the other as well as the self. In the act of bowing you share some understanding that you are joined together in serving others. So I offer my grateful thanks for this particular spiritual friend, Sulak Sivaraksa, respected elder, colleague in green Buddhist dia­logue and action. May we continue to carry on this work together, side by side, though we are thousands of miles apart.