Let's begin with what "White Privilege" means: https://www.learningforjustice.org/magazine/fall-2018/what-is-white-privilege-really
How does this apply to Buddhists and their constant drone of "what we believe matters more than what Zen Masters say about Zen"?
In other words, [Buddhists] are more often humanized and granted the benefit of the doubt. [Buddhists] are more likely to receive compassion, to be granted individual potential, to survive mistakes.
We see this endlessly in r/zen:
- "I go to a church, and that matters more than what some old books say"
- "My family is Buddhist from Asia, so we're more authentic than some mythological Chinese Master".
- "Who should we believe? Some high school book report about a 1,000 year old text you can't read without a translator or somebody who actually got ordained in a modern Buddhist church?"
So, what can I do once I recognize my Buddhist privilege?
- Don’t take it personally or use discomfort as an excuse to disengage.
- Learn when to listen, when to amplify and when to speak up.
- Educate yourself.
- Educate fellow Buddhists
- Risk your unearned benefits to benefit others.
And please, before anybody says "hey, White Privilege is so much more of a social problem than Buddhist privilege", just don't. Two wrongs don't make a right, and anti-vaxxers killing hundreds of thousands of people doesn't make gun violence less of a problem.
Submitted September 09, 2021 at 07:00AM by ewk https://ift.tt/3E1RXuU
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