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    Zen to the rescue of modern society(2)

    1
    2015-07-08 11:24China Daily Editor: Wang Fan
    (Photo provided to China Daily)

    (Photo provided to China Daily)

    During an interview with China Daily through e-mail, he recalls his younger days on the mountains, saying that his main activity back then was to take yaks to graze on the grass. The setting, he adds, was of blue skies and white clouds.

    "All my worries would go away, ... I remember the delight nature and a peaceful mind always brought me."

    At the age of 23, Sodargye went to study Buddhism at Larung Buddhist Institute in a nearby county and became a student of its founder Jigme Phuntsok, who is considered an influential Tibetan Buddhist master in the country.

    Through learning, debating and writing, Sodargye soon became a khenpo, the title for a senior Buddhist monk with high discipline.

    During the 1990s, Sodargye followed Jigme Phuntsok on lecture tours to other countries in Asia, the United States and Europe.

    He also translated many Tibetan Buddhist works into Chinese.

    In the past few years, Sodargye has devoted much of his time to popularizing Buddhism by himself talking to students and faculty members at universities at home and abroad.

    "I don't know how long I will live. But even if there was just a listener, I would exert myself to benefit him with dharma until my last breath," Sodargye was quoted by media as saying earlier.

    The book is an edited version of his various teachings and lectures at universities, including Peking University, Shanghai Jiaotong University and Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

    In the book, he talks about Zen and fortune, suggesting that people use their money to help others through charitable work rather than just accumulating for themselves.

    He says, stress can be reduced by cutting down on material desire and pursuing love.

    Sodargye says people in modern society have become busier with each passing day, but he himself doesn't deny the usefulness of technology.

    Since 2004, he has been learning how to spread Buddhism through the Internet and established a website to give classes online.

    "I'm embarrassed when people call me teacher or khenpo because I'm still far from qualified as a good student (of Buddhism)," Sodargye writes in the book.

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