The Pak Banker

How a millionair­e changed the world

- Raja Murthy

On December 15-16, the Global Vipassana Pagoda in Mumbai hosted meetings to mark the 50th anniversar­y of Vipassana returning to India - with tributes of gratitude to Satya Narayan Goenka (1924-2013), the principal teacher of Vipassana. The powerful ancient practice of inner change he shared for 44 years is changing lives worldwide.

On June 21, 1969, a 45-year-old millionair­e Burmese businessma­n arrived in Kolkata from Myanmar. Earlier at the Mingaladon Airport in Yangon, he had declared to customs officials that he was carrying to India a priceless gem; to startled officialdo­m expecting a ruby or blue sapphire from Mogok, he smilingly explained that the "gem" was Vipassana, the ancient truth-realizatio­n practice preserved in Myanmar and lost to India, the country of its origin, for 2,500 years.

Fifty years later, that "gem" that the industrial­ist-turned-Vipassana teacher Sayagyi U Goenka brought with him is taught in residentia­l Vipassana courses free of cost to people in more than 100 countries. "For peace in the world," he often said, "there has to be first inner peace and harmony within the individual."

"I am not here to convert people from one organized religion to another organized religion - no. I am here to serve toward conversion from misery to happiness, conversion from cruelty to compassion, conversion from bondage to liberation. This is the conversion needed today." - Sayagyi U Goenka A pattern and threads of life connect people, places, events in the changing tapestry of our impermanen­t existence.

So too with the life of Sayagyi U Goenka,

Vipassana teacher to the world, from Indian president Ram Nath Kovind, business executives, the late Princess Galyani Vadhana of Thailand, prison reformer Kiran Bedi, and author Yuval Noah Harari to inmates in the Donaldson Correction­al Facility in the US state of Alabama. Sayagyi U Goenka revived in India the Vipassana practice that the Buddha rediscover­ed and shared as the universal path to experience real happiness. He taught Vipassana using scientific terms like his teacher U Ba Khin, the first accountant general of independen­t Burma, but unlike his teacher, he avoided using the word "Buddhism," the "ism" turning a practical path to experience truths of nature into another sectarian "religion."

For the world to change for the better, individual­s need to change, but change within does not come easy. It requires hard work. More people working hard to live a more wholesome life brings positive change in the world.

How to quantify positive change? Good news rarely makes the news. Pessimisti­c perspectiv­es of the world miss the normalcy of the good routinely happening in life. An air crash hits headlines as it should, but not the daily average of 102,465 civilian flights taking off and landing safely. A corruption exposé makes headlines, but how to quantify the honest work of many?

Likewise, Vipassana makes a positive impact deep like ocean currents or superficia­l like the churning surf, momentary or lifelong, depending on the individual's right efforts.

Vipassana with the right effort reduces the ego. Less ego, less problems in life. The Vipassana self-surgery of the mind unearths unpleasant truths about oneself - a self-diagnosis of what is wrong within. Pain barriers need to be crossed to correct what is wrong within.

A pattern of destiny linked Satya Narayan Goenka of Myanmar to India, to his ancestors from Churu in Rajasthan, the land of kings, to the royal city of Mandalay in Myanmar, where he was born, to Kolkata in 1969. From Bengal, he went to Mumbai, where he restarted the wheel of Vipassana in the country of its origin. With Mumbai as home, Sayagyi U Goenka selflessly served humanity until he passed away peacefully, aged 89, on the night of September 29, 2013.

"Awake O people of the world … the dark night is over. The light of Dhamma is glowing…. The dawn of happiness."

Those words inspire students as the morning light dawns in another day of a Vipassana course - another day of determined battles to drive out demons of negative habit patterns entrenched in dungeons of the mind.

The Vipassana teacher is only a guide in the self-dependent battle that has to be courageous­ly fought. In Pali, Vipassana means to see reality as it is, not as we imagine or want it to be. As eyes give sight, Vipassana gives insight, insight into what is this mind-matter phenomenon called "I."

What is Vipassana? Sayagyi U Goenka explains. The objective of Vipassana: to purify the mind. The object of Vipassana meditation: objectivel­y observe the impermanen­ce of bodily sensations (any tangible feeling in the body such as pain, pressure, heat, tingling, etc) arising and passing away each moment.

Sensations are not new, but new is the Vipassana-developed faculty to be objectivel­y aware of this inner reality.

Every sensation becomes a Vipassana tool to develop equanimity to changing phenomena - to cope better with changes, the ups and downs of life. At the apparent level, we react to the outside world with craving or aversion. At the actual level, we blindly react to sensations, pleasant or unpleasant. The life-changing realizatio­n: nothing in the outside is the real source of suffering or happiness.

The malady and remedy is within.

The true teacher lives the life he teaches. So did Sayagyi U Goenka, a life of compassion and humility. "If you look for virtue, look for it in others," he said. "If you look for faults, look within." He shunned personal recognitio­n and said he was only a medium, and that if not him, someone else would have done the work of revival of Vipassana in India and the world.

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