Every year
around this time I get asked by neighbours and colleagues: "Do you
celebrate Christmas?" And every year my answer is: "Yes, yes, we
celebrate!" We bake cookies, decorate the tree together with the children,
secretly put wrapped gifts underneath, and enjoy a home-cooked meal with family
and friends on Christmas Eve. We do the whole hoo-ha including advent carols because
we've been around for a while and can totally identify with this joyous
occasion.
Looking at the
homes in the neighbourhood during the Christmas season with their windows
decorated and brimming with warm lights my grandma used to say: "Isn't it
wonderful, even they know kunchog."
She also
loved the wood-carved representations of the birth of the Christ Child in the
stable of Bethlehem with the various crib figurines. To her that was the
equivalent of the altar she had at home containing images of the Buddha.
Symbols of religiosity created something like a common bond between her and the
inhabitants of her newly found home in the West.
She lit
candles too and placed them on the window sill of her home because time-wise
Christmas collides with the Buddhist festival Gaden Ngamchoe when Tibetans
commemorate Lama Tsongkhapa's entrance into Parinirvana with light offerings
and prayers. My Mola's offerings were always meant as much for this important
Tibetan Lama as for Jesus Christ. For her the two embodied the same spiritual nature.
Orthodox
views on either side were alien to my granny. She would consistently refer to
Christ as "Buddha". Every Easter when the ancient black-and-white
films about Christ's life and work were on show culminating in his crucifixion, she would relate
them to me the next day exclaiming: "Did you see what they did to the
Buddha? Wodzi-la! How can they mistreat him like that? He is a
Buddha!"
She seemed
to forget that according to the transmission it was the Buddha's own cousin,
Devadatta, who tried to kill him because for people like Devadatta the Buddha
was an impostor just as Jesus was in the eyes of the Roman rulers of his time.
For my
granny there was Buddha Shakyamuni, Buddha Maitreya, Buddha Amithaba, Buddha
Tara and there was also "Buddha Jesus" - Yishu Sangye in her
words. Jesus taught people how to find peace through brotherly love and
forgiveness and he worked selflessly for the wellbeing of others. Who could
contradict my sweet Mola? These are undisputedly also the core precepts of Buddhas
and Bodhisattvas.
Of course there
are fundamental differences between Buddhism and Christianity and there is a
limit to what one can have in common. Even though we wholeheartedly embrace the
spirit of Christmas no member of the family converted in four generations. But
then Christmas is not the time to dwell on what sets people aside. My dad used
to be very clear about it. When in Rome do as the Romans - but don't forget who
you are and where you are from.
Extract of from our traditional three-generational Christmas cookie-baking afternoon. |
Still I
catch myself wondering how much of external influences my Tibetan heritage can
stomach without losing its individual core over time. Have Tibetans not by
default looked upon the outside world as more or less "hostile"? If you
look at the history there has always been a subliminal fear that Tibetan culture
degenerates under the influence of the external world. Why else would a
government reject all interactions and categorically shut the door to the world
if they weren't afraid that engaging with it would "ruin" its
culture?
The Chinese attack came suddenly for a self-absorbed people. The ensuing destruction and killings
followed by large-scale immigration only intensified the subliminal fear. The
worst nightmare was to come true. The current political stalemate further exacerbates the situation and the lingering fears now turn into paranoia that Tibetans as a group are doomed.
A frequent
response has been to seek refuge in increased cultural isolation, preserve,
protect and keep all external influences out as much as possible even though it
is precisely this defensive mindset that is responsible for putting us in the
situation we are in now.
The only way to stop the spiral is to change our mentality by turning the misfortune into opportunities for renewal.
No clash of the cultures, no assimilation, no fear but mutual enrichment from one culture to the other, from equal to equal. When firmly in the saddle there is no need to shy away from contact and exchange. A crucial lesson I have learned from our history is deciding with self-confidence which external aspects I want to adopt to move on.
No clash of the cultures, no assimilation, no fear but mutual enrichment from one culture to the other, from equal to equal. When firmly in the saddle there is no need to shy away from contact and exchange. A crucial lesson I have learned from our history is deciding with self-confidence which external aspects I want to adopt to move on.
Ensuring a
future for Tibetan culture then becomes a continuous balancing act. The more I practice
this skill, the better I become allowing me to share and pass it on so it can
serve the needs of my children. Hopefully that's what it means to do as the Romans and still remember who you are.
Merry Christmas, merry Gaden Ngamchoe and happy
holidays!
Mountain Phoenix
2 comments:
truly enlightened mola!
Good article and well said Mountain Phoenix.
Walking home at nights, it really feels magical to see all the inji houses lit up like, er, Christmas, cocooned within a white winter wonderlandscape.
For myself, such a scene elicits in me an atmosphere of fun and cheerfulness, so much so that when I get home, I don't feel quite so guilty when I crack open another jug of chung. lol
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