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As
I am still unable to read to you this evening:
I
am going to tell you a story. It is a Buddhist story which
perhaps you know, it is modern but has the merit
of being authentic. I heard it from Alexandra! David-Neel
who as you probably know, is a well-known
Buddhist, especially as she was the first! European
woman to enter Lhasa. Her journey to Tibet
was very perilous and thrilling and she narrated! one
of the incidents of this journey to me, which I am going
to tell you this evening.
She
was with a certain number of fellow travellers forming a sort
of caravan, and as the approach to Tibet
was relatively easier through Indo-China, they were
going from that side. Indo-China is covered with large forests,
and these forests are infested with tigers, some of which
become man-eaters... and when that happens they are called:
"Mr. Tiger."
Late
one evening, when they were in the thick of the forest — a
forest they had to cross in order to be able to camp safely
— she realised that it was her meditation hour. Now, she used
to meditate at fixed times, very regularly, without ever
missing one and as it was time
for her meditation she told her companions, "Carry on,
I shall sit here and do my meditation, and when I have finished
I shall join you; meanwhile, go to
the next stop and prepare the camp." One of the coolies
told her, "Oh! no. Madam, this is impossible, quite impossible" — he
spoke in his own language, naturally, but I must tell you
Madame David-Neel knew Tibetan like a Tibetan — "It is
quite impossible. Mr. Tiger is in the forest and now is just
the time for him to come and look for his dinner. We can't
leave you and you can't stop here!" She answered that
it did not bother her at all, that the meditation was much
more important than safety, that they could all withdraw
and that she would stay there alone.
Very
reluctantly they started off, for it was impossible to reason
with her — when she had decided to do something, nothing could
prevent her from doing it. They went away and she sat down
comfortably at the foot of a tree and entered into meditation.
After a while she felt a rather unpleasant presence. She opened
her eyes to see what it was... and three or four steps away,
right in front of her was Mr. Tiger! — with
eyes full of greed. So, like a good Buddhist, she said to
herself, "Well, if this is the way by which I shall attain
Nirvana, very good. I have only to prepare to leave my body
in a suitable way, in the proper spirit." And without
moving, without even the least quiver, she closed her eyes
again and entered once more into meditation; a somewhat deeper,
more intense meditation, detaching herself completely from
the illusion of the world, ready to pass into Nirvana... Five
minutes went by, ten minutes, half an hour — nothing happened.
Then as it was time for the meditation to be over, she opened
her eyes... and there was no tiger! Undoubtedly, seeing such
a motionless body i must
have thought it was not fit for eating! For tiger like all
wild animals except the hyena, do not attack and eat a dead
body. Impressed probably by this in mobility — I dare not
say by the intensity of the meditation! — it
had withdrawn and she found herself quit alone and out of
danger. She calmly went her way and on reaching
camp said, "Here I am."
That's
my story. Now we are going to meditate like her,
not to prepare ourselves for Nirvana (laughter but to heighten
our consciousness!
The Mother
8
March 1957
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