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What Buddhism Can Teach in Moments of Deep Divisions: No Person is ‘Evil,’ Only ‘Mistaken’

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/The Conversation

Democracy depends upon using words wisely. With the right words, citizens can live and work together, even in disagreement – and resolve conflicts peacefully.

Today, politicians routinely describe their opponents as “enemies,” disparaging them as “evil,” “monsters,” “demonic” and “garbage. By creating the impression that people “on the other side” are irredeemable monsters, such talk undercuts the potential for civic cooperation – for what’s the point of trying to understand, and to work with, someone who is “evil”?

More fundamentally, this “us vs. them” rhetoric of “

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” – as I call it – undermines the chances for peaceful coexistence between people who see the world differently.

I am a 

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 who studies the power of words to build – and ******** – the world we share. I am also a longtime scholar, teacher and practitioner of mindfulness. 
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 draws on the wisdom of mindfulness and other spiritual practices to reimagine how we teach the basic habits of democratic citizenship.

A lesson from Buddhism seems particularly apt in this moment of enemyship: Treat the people you disagree with as mistaken rather than evil.

Everyone has a ‘Buddha Nature’

There is a profound optimism at the heart of most Buddhist traditions, rooted in the foundational belief that everyone is blessed with the capacity to practice mindfulness.

Mindfulness is one of 

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 along the noble path the Buddha described to reach enlightenment. To practice mindfulness is 
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, way of living life.

Practicing mindfulness, it is possible for a person to observe themselves having an experience – a craving, a happy thought, a doubt, a scary emotion – and not to immediately react to that experience. Nor is it necessary to layer story after story on top of the emotion in a way that amplifies the craving, the joy, the doubt or the fright until they are overwhelmed by it.

Watching thoughts and emotions come and go without immediately reacting to them, it becomes possible to make choices about how we want to respond – and to decide more deliberately how we want to live our lives.

Mindfulness is the way to recover our inner freedom as human beings.

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 said that everyone has a “
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.” Everyone is capable of becoming a Buddha by mindfully paying attention to their habitual reactions to experiences, and choosing to cultivate habits of compassion, understanding and peacefulness – just as the Buddha did.

The Story of Angulimala

To illustrate this point, Nhat Hanh told 

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, a notorious ********* who lived during the Buddha’s time.

‘The Defeat of Angulimala’ painting at the Thai Buddhist temple in Wat Olak Madu, Malaysia. (Anandajoti Bhikkhu/CC BY 2.0)

Upon entering the town of Shravasti one morning, the Buddha finds the streets empty, the doors locked and the windows closed. Angulimala is in town! Though the residents beg him to hide, without ***** the Buddha continues his walk.

Angulimala spots him and shouts for him to stop, but the Buddha does not stop. “I told you to stop, monk. Why don’t you stop?” Angulimala demands, to which the Buddha responds, “I stopped a long time ago. It is you who have not stopped.”

This puzzles Angulimala. He asks for an explanation. The Buddha replies, “Angulimala, I stopped committing acts that cause suffering to other living beings a long time ago. I have learned to protect life, the lives of all beings, not just humans. Angulimala, all living beings want to live. All ***** ******. We must nurture a heart of compassion and protect the lives of all beings.”

Angulimala is struck by how the Buddha speaks to him: not as a monster, but with patience and a genuine ******* to understand. The Buddha insists that Angulimala, too, can change, if he will only commit to developing his capacity for mindfulness – and he offers Angulimala a model for how, and why, to change.

The two men continue their dialogue, and soon Angulimala reveals his deepest *****. He wants to change his ways because he is deeply unhappy. However, he is afraid that society will never forgive him for what he has done, and this ***** prevents him from stopping long enough to try to reform.

So the Buddha promises that his community will protect him if he commits to living mindfully, without *********, in harmony with others – and if he agrees to make amends with the families and communities he wronged through compassionate acts. Angulimala does. Eventually he gets a new name: Ahimsaka, the “Nonviolent One.”

This parable reflects a 

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: No person is truly “evil,” in the sense of being an irredeemable monster, because everyone can learn to practice mindfulness.

At times humans commit acts worthy of being deemed “evil.” This is not because they are demons; it is because they are acting out of greed and ignorance and giving into *****. Greed can be overcome; ignorance can be enlightened; ***** can be tamed. 

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.

Mistaken, Not Evil

Consider the consequences of calling fellow citizens “evil,” “monsters” or “demons”: If the person you disagree with is “evil,” it would appear to make no sense to talk to them, and there seems to be no need to understand them.

Some may think that evil people can only be defeated, through ********* if necessary. 

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, for it undermines cooperation and promotes distrust between people who must learn to live, work and thrive together.

In June 2024, I participated in a two-week retreat on “Engaged Buddhism” at Nhat Hanh’s 

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 monastery in France. There I heard a very different vocabulary – people on the other side of a disagreement were not “evil,” they were “mistaken,” “ill-informed,” “heedless,” “unskilled,” “unaware” or “unmindful.”

Making this small rhetorical change is not easy, especially in times of ***** and uncertainty.

However, it makes a big practical difference. If someone is mistaken, it makes sense to talk with them, to attempt to understand them, and then, if the situation is right, to try to persuade them to see things differently.

Top image: A Buddhist monk meditates atop a mountain peak, one with the universe and the divine energy that flows through it.      Source: 

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/
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Stock

The article ‘

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’ by 
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 was originally published on
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and has been republished under a Creative Commons license.




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#Buddhism #Teach #Moments #Deep #Divisions #Person #Evil #Mistaken

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