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Many of Ordinary
Mind readers have not doubt seen the film Chasing Buddha
and been impressed and inspired by Robina Courtin and the work she
is doing with the Liberation Prison Project. Robina is a fully-ordained
nun within the Gelugpa tradition. While Robina was visiting from
America for a school reunion in Melbourne recently, I had the good
fortune to catch up with her.
Kathleen Gregory: Robina, I would like to start by asking
you about your life story. Where were you born and can you say something
about your early life?
Robina Courtin:
I was born in Melbourne, December 20th 1944, the Year of the Monkey;
a Sagittarian and one of seven children. I was educated at Sacre
Couer, a Catholic Convent in Glen Iris. I vividly remember was that
I always had a strong connection with spiritual things. Since I
was very little, I wanted to be a priest. When I went go to Mass,
it was clear to me that that was my job. I remember telling my mother
and she laughed and explained why I could not - because I was a
girl. I must have been quite young because I did not understand
at all. Anyway, I figured, I would be a nun instead.
I remember when
I was about twelve, I went down on my bended knees and begged my
mother to let me be a nun like St Therese of Lisieux - and she would
not let me. I boarded for my last two years and I loved it very
much. I think it was the beginning of my monastic karma - I had
my own space, I could go to Mass every morning and it was the first
time I developed my own intellectual potential. I felt I had discovered
myself - I loved it.
I gave up God
when I was nineteen and for about ten years was very active politically
- I was radical left and feminist. When I was thirty I started wanting
something spiritual again. I started doing martial arts and liked
that very much. Then in 1976, when I was in Australia briefly (I
had been living in London for years), I heard about some teachings
by Lama Yeshe and Lama Zopa Rinpoche at Chenrezig Institute, in
Queensland. That was my introduction to Buddhism - twenty-five years
ago last month. I did a one month intensive course with Rinpoche
and a month retreat with Lama Yeshe. At that stage, I had no idea
about the differences between Tibetan Buddhism and Zen, Kagyu and
Gelugpa, all I knew was that these were my lamas and this was my
home.
KG: What
do you mean by home? How did you experience that?
RC: Even
though I knew I did not understand Lama Zopa's teachings very well,
I felt incredibly comfortable to be there. That was very surprising
to me. I had been a radical lesbian feminist for a while and did
not like even being around men. Yet here I was surrounded by men,
all these hippies - and these lamas were men! It was difficult for
me, but nothing made me go away. I did not want to leave. I just
felt extraordinarily happy to be there. Saying 'coming home' sounds
very corny, but it was actually very true. It was like I had a found
what I had been looking for and I felt I really connected to Lama
Yeshe straight away.
KG: How
did your ordination come about?
RC: I
gave up being a Catholic when I was nineteen and became completely
into sex and pleasure, but never into romance - whether I was into
men or women. I never wanted to have a house, I never wanted to
get married and I never wanted a baby. These were not things I rejected,
it was just something that never occurred to me. However, I did
not quite know what the alternative was, although I was constantly
looking. I used to think to myself, 'One day I'll end up on a mountain',
but I never knew what I meant by that. By the time I met these lamas,
I had completely got fed up with sex, fed up with drugs, fed up
with alcohol and cigarettes. I had given them all up. Finally, here
it was: what I had been looking for. It was very clear, not even
a doubt in my mind. After my first courses, I came back to Melbourne
and practised every day and helped at Tara Institute. A year later,
I announced to Lama Yeshe that he was my guru. He said, 'Yes, dear,
I know'. I learnt later that you ask, not announce!
Six months later
I went to Kopan and became a nun. For the next ten years I worked
for Wisdom Publications in England. I left in 1987. Then, during
a retreat in New Zealand with Lama Zopa Rinpoche, he said, 'Go to
Sydney and teach'. Since then I have been teaching. For the past
seven years I have been in America. The first six years I was editor
of Mandala magazine - I gave that up last year.
The job that
I am doing now came out of the work at Mandala. That is as director
of the Liberation Prison Project. We would get letters from prisoners
wanting the magazine. I got my first letter in 1996, from a young
Mexican man who was an ex-gangster and who was interested in the
Dharma and wanted to practise. So, I started writing, sending some
books and then visiting to give Refuge. Then his friend wrote, then
another. Now there are a thousand people on the mailing list and
we get one hundred letters a month. We have also started in Australia
and have started a fund to support prisoners in Mongolia.
One of the most
precious things we can give prisoners is books. We also visit when
we can. In America, I have other monks and nuns in different states
who visit and write as well. The prisoners who have been studying
are now starting groups. Our main wish is to get more funding and
to get a network of people to give advice about practice. We have
two people working full-time and a budget of up to Aus $10,000 a
month. Most of this money comes from individuals and any offerings
that I have been given.
KG:
In the film Chasing Buddha, your visits to the men - including some
on Death Row - make very powerful viewing.
RC: Yes.
Teaching the groups in prison is very strong. They are very hungry
and really practice well. They do not need to be convinced that
they are suffering.
KG: It
also appears to bring together spirituality and social action.
RC: Absolutely,
That is something very appealing to the west. There are people completely
delighted by this project because it appeals to their social action
side; most people cannot always appreciate the benefit of just giving
something spiritual. People in prison, especially in America but
I think everywhere, are seen as the scum of the earth. To take care
of them is something worthwhile.
KG:
In terms of Buddhism in the west generally, and during the time
you have been involved, there must have been many changes. Would
you make some comment on this?
RC: There
is a lot of talk about 'western Buddhism' isn't there? What seems
more and more clear to me is the necessity for keeping the lineages
alive and pure. There is no need to hurry to 'create' our own Buddhism.
We need to receive the teachings and all the practices from the
actual knowledge holders, those who possess the experiences of the
Dharma within their minds. Then we need to practise them until we
get realisations. Until we actually have knowledge holders in this
country and in the west, we cannot say that the Dharma is really
here. Creating the Dharma actually comes from one mind to another.
So, we just need to be patient, receive the teachings and practise
and then slowly, slowly - generation to generation - it will develop
in a natural and organic way.
One of the dangers
is to throw the baby out with the bathwater. I know when I first
heard the teachings on lam rim from Lama Zopa, I did not understand
where he was coming from or what he was saying. I could not find
any handles or reference points; it was just impossible for me.
It took me a long time to even begin to understand the Tibetan packaging
of the Dharma, let alone the specific teachings. However, we cannot
expect the current teachers to repackage the Dharma for us - that
is our job when we have really got the Dharma deep in our hearts.
But out of their kindness, so many of our lamas have done that for
us. For example, Traleg Rinpoche, Lama Zopa Rinpoche and Lama Yeshe
all speak English. Out of their incredible kindness they have explained
the Dharma in ways that we can comprehend.
KG: Could
you speak about the importance of the relationship with the guru,
especially from the perspective of your own experience?
RC: First,
it is clear to me that I cannot imagine being a Buddhist without
having a teacher. However, I also think that guru devotion is such
a hard one for our minds to understand. As one of our lamas said,
that is because guru devotion is the most difficult practice, not
just for westerners, but for everybody. I suppose too, there are
different levels of guru devotion. However, my lamas certainly always
taught it at the highest level - at the level of seeing the guru
as a Buddha. This is the very heart of the practice.
It seems to
me that to begin to understand what this means, and be able to practise
it, we need to have some understanding of emptiness - how things
do not exist out there in and of themselves. When we have a lot
of attachment to our teacher, we are happy to see the guru as a
Buddha but it is completely emotional; it is not stable, it is conditional.
This means that as soon as they do something wrong - like not giving
us the attention we crave - we start finding fault with them. This
is because of our attachment. This means that to actually practice
Guru Yoga in a sincere way, we have to have already gone past some
level of delusion.
KG:
It seems that you are pointing to something about motivation here
also?
RC: Yes,
when we say these prayers every day, what do we expect? These prayers
are aspirations, aren't they? If you think every day, 'I want to
be a Buddha, I want to be a Buddha, I want to benefit others, may
all sentient beings be happy', you should not be surprised that
when the opportunities come, you are going to take them!
It also seems to me that guru devotion is actually very private
- it is a completely private practice. When it is coming from attachment,
it can be grovelling and pathetic, it is kind of embarrassing to
outsiders. It is like you are in love, but it is inappropriate.
It is actually quite arrogant, it is coming from a very emotional
place with a lot of expectation. Whereas, true devotion should be
truly invisible.
Because we have
been around Tibetans, and we have watched high lamas with other
high lamas and observed the Asian way of showing respect - the bowing
and so on - we have tended to ape these movements. However, they
are often very empty when we do them. We have to first discover
our own authenticity. We have to really understand that and then
show in a behavioural way that is appropriate for our culture. How
we show respect might not be the same as the Tibetan ways.
KG: What
do you mean by authenticity?
RC: It
means to be natural, not phoney; but that is hard to understand
sometimes. All my life my behaviour was terrible - my body and speech
were very uncontrolled. I always thought I had this absolute right
to do what I wanted, to say what I wanted, when I wanted, with no
consideration for others. Lama Yeshe was very kind to me one day,
while I was his attendant. I was having a very hard time - he was
really showing me my mind - I did not know whether I was Arthur
or Martha, I tell you. Then, at one point, he said to me, 'There
is nothing wrong with your heart, it is just your behaviour.' It
was something that really gave me insight. I began to understand
for the first time that there is a difference between 'me' and my
behaviour, and this gave me some space to start realising that I
should start to work on my behaviour.
However, during
my life I can see that there was a good side to this. I was quite
straightforward and open, although erring on the side of being blunt
and arrogant. But, when I started looking for a spiritual path,
I think I became phoney, like wearing a cloak of being peaceful,
being holy. I was not being natural. I notices this and realised
I needed to be authentic; to be who I was, but to make it better.
We need to learn how to control our behaviour while at the same
time be natural. That is being authentic.
We have this
concept of being holy, but when we get enlightened we will not become
clones of each other - all sweet, holy, slow-walking people. If
you are skinny, or short, or fat, or loud, or peaceful, or wrathful
- whatever - you will be who you are. You would become a Buddha
like that. Our job is to hone our personality and make that personality
more beneficial. Of course, it requires a real honesty in relation
to your own mind - to be direct, but to be kind. When Buddhism is
only intellectual for us; we pretend, we pretend to be holy. These
Tibetan lamas are so natural. That is what I love about the Dalai
Lama and Lama Yeshe - but that is what shocked me at first too.
I had this concept of being a Buddhist and Lama Yeshe completely
shattered that concept. He was funny and laughed a lot and spoke
loudly. Look at the Dalai Lama - he walks and talks so fast! So,
it is about being authentic, without being harmful. Does that make
sense?
KG: It
seems, from your film Chasing Buddha, that film is also a
medium for showing in action.
RC: Yes,
absolutely. I think for some reason that is what delights people
about the film. Also, I think people have such a cliched view of
what it is to be a Buddhist nun and I guess I do not fit that mould.
A Tibetan friend of mine said, after seeing the film, that it is
a film for hopeless cases!
KG: In
terms of the projects you are involved with now, do you see yourself
working with them for some time? What future plans do you have?
RC: I
do not really have plans for the future. Since leaving Wisdom, I
have been teaching and editing Mandala and the now I am doing
the Prison Project. Things just come up that you need to do. The
Prison Project was something that I could not say 'No' to. It just
happened to come up in front of me, the work was there. It just
grew and grew. I do not think about what I will be doing next year
or the year after. It is possible that a different person may be
appointed director of the Prison Project; we will just see, it will
evolve.
The other area
I want to be involved in - and my heart is breaking because I cannot
make the time - is to edit Lama Yeshe and Lama Zopa's teachings.
That is what I used to do when I was at Wisdom. Especially Lama
Yeshe's teachings, because there are not many books being published
and there is so much material there. I am now putting some time
aside to devote to editing.
I think that
if I have a life plan it would be to work - to collect merit that
way - then to meditate and then die. I do not have a timeline on
that, because the time of death is uncertain. But that is my wish,
my prayer. I certainly hope to have created enough merit to do some
intensive meditation before I die.
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