W.  Post
Buddhist community ponders  apparent link between their faith and Navy Yard 
shooter

 
By _Michelle Boorstein_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/michelle-boorstein/2011/03/04/AB5a9wN_page.html) 
 and _Elizabeth Tenety_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/elizabeth-tenety/2011/03/16/ABIQauf_page.html) , 
Updated: Wednesday,  September 18, 2013
 
In the aftermath of the _Washington Navy Yard shootings_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/local/navy-yard-shooting/scene-at-building-197/)
 
, gunman Aaron Alexis’s_ interest in Buddhism_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/aaron-alexis-34-is-dead-gunman-in-navy-yard-shooting-authorities-
say/2013/09/16/dcf431ce-1f07-11e3-8459-657e0c72fec8_story.html)  seemed at 
odds with conventional  Western stereotypes of serene, nonviolent 
meditators.  
Buddhism scholars and bloggers were quick to note that Alexis’ spiritual  
profile — he was involved with a temple in Fort Worth, although his 
attendance  there dropped off after about a year — didn’t fit with the image of 
someone _unloading a gun and killing 12 innocents_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/2013/09/17/77ed4446-1fc0-11e3-94a2-6c66b668ea55_story.html)
  in a 
crowded  military office building.
 
Some saw the tragedy as an opportunity to publicly air some difficult 
topics  that Buddhists most often discuss only among themselves. Is the 
peaceful  
Buddhist an illusion? Do Buddhists and Buddhist temples deal directly 
enough  with the topic of mental illness? And, in fact, might Buddhism hold a 
special  attraction for people who are mentally ill? 
“As Buddhism has spread in the West, it has put forth and maintained an 
image  of being a peaceful religion,” Buddhist ethicist Justin Whitaker, author 
of the  _American Buddhist Perspective_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/blogs/americanbuddhist/)  blog, _wrote Tuesday_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/blogs/americanbuddhist/2013/09/the-first-american-buddhist-terrorist.html)
 . “This is a 
myth.”  
Buddhism can seem particularly appealing to “mentally unbalanced people  
seeking to right the ship of their lives, to self-medicate, to curb their  
impulses, or to give them a firmer grip on reality,” Clark Strand, a  
contributing editor to the Buddhist publication _Tricycle magazine_ 
(http://www.tricycle.com/magazine)   and a former Zen monk, said in an 
interview. 
Unanswered questions  
The relationship, if any, between Alexis’s spiritual beliefs and his 
rampage  remains a mystery. Even the basic details about why, when and how 
Alexis 
came to  dabble in Buddhism — at a tiny Fort Worth temple filled primarily 
with Thai  immigrants — were elusive to his roommates and friends.  
Did Alexis’ regular practice of meditation at the temple in 2010, along 
with  the incense and gold Buddha he kept in his room, ease _what he described 
as post-traumatic stress disorder and  hallucinations_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/before-navy-yard-shooting-alleged-gunman-heard-voices-and-sou
ght-help/2013/09/17/874970d8-1fd2-11e3-94a2-6c66b668ea55_story.html) ? Or 
did he feel ultimately disconnected in his adopted  spiritual community, 
where worship and post-meditation evening chats were in  Thai, a language he 
spoke, but not fluently?  
How was he affected, if at all, when his close friend and roommate, a Thai  
Buddhist, converted to Christianity? 
Alexis told his Buddhist landlord he wanted to be a monk, but his 
attendance  at temple services slipped from several times a week in 2010 to 
about 
once a  month in 2011, before largely fading altogether.  
He knew of the temple’s ban on drinking and violence, but he considered  
Heineken beer his drink of choice and carried a gun “at all times,” said Oui  
Suthamtewakul, a friend and roommate from the temple. 
Suthamtewakul and his wife, Kristi, run a Thai restaurant called Happy 
Bowl,  where Alexis helped out regularly for several years. Despite living and 
working  closely with Alexis, the couple said they had few answers about how 
he came to  Buddhism and what it meant to him. Kristi Suthamtewakul, a 
Christian, said she  used to speak often with him about religion, but she was 
unspecific on what. 
“I was trying to understand Buddhism a lot more,” she said Tuesday. “I was 
 trying to reach out to him.” Her husband became a Christian a couple years 
 ago. 
For at least a year, Alexis was a regular member  of the Wat 
Busayadhammavanaram Meditation Center of Fort Worth, where many  evenings he 
was one of 
about five people for the hour-long silent meditation (on  Sundays, the 
service was larger: about 20 people would come). 
At a _service there Tuesday night_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/at-texas-prayer-service-templer-members-recall-the-aaron-alexis-they-knew/2013/0
9/18/4b7458c2-202f-11e3-b7d1-7153ad47b549_story.html) , members chose to 
remember the  peaceful Alexis, the man who once knelt on the oriental rugs and 
aspired to be a  monk. A monk in a deep golden robe shared the lesson that 
no one can prevent  suffering or growing old, according to a member of the 
temple who spoke fluent  Thai. He told the group that they would not live 
forever, so they must do good  for others in this life. Without specifying 
Alexis’ name, the monk offered the  hope that in his death, the community’s 
fallen member would find  peace. 
‘Looking for some way for his life’  
Thai Buddhists are part of the tradition called Theravada, or “the way of 
the  elders.” It’s common across South and Southeast Asia and claims to be 
the oldest  and most authentic form of Buddhism, said Charles Jones, a 
religion and culture  professor at Catholic University. 
A characteristic of Theravada, Jones said, is its huge range of meditation  
techniques for different personality types. “A quotation you find in 
Theravada  literature would be something like . . . ‘The Buddha is the doctor  
who has the 84,000 medicines for the 84,000 illnesses,’” he said. 
Whether Alexis was able to access such teachings is unclear.  
Somsak Srisan, Alexis’ former landlord, who knew him from the temple, said  
Alexis spoke with him a little bit about leaving his job at a local Naval 
base,  but not in depth. They also spoke superficially about Alexis’ interest 
in  becoming a monk. 
“He was looking for some way for his life. Looking for something to be a  
guideline for him,” Srisan said. “I think it was like that. But I didn’t 
deal  with him much, he was just working for the temple. He’d ask: ‘Do you 
need some  help? Do you need me to move something, clean up?’” 
Non-Asian Buddhists in America, Jones said, tend to be Theravada, Zen and  
Tibetan, yet generally they are separate from ethnically Buddhist 
communities.  
“He might have found some real cultural barriers and a lack of 
understanding  if he was trying to practice there,” Jones said of Alexis’ 
experience in 
Fort  Worth.
 
Strand remarked how unusual Alexis’ choice of temple was. While small, the  
American Buddhist community is the most diverse in the world. But it tends 
to  cluster people by ethnicity, groups of Asians in their own temples and 
then  separate worship spaces for what Strand calls “the upper middle way” — 
a  Buddhism that has tended to appeal to Americans with higher incomes and  
educations. 
Buddhism and mental health  
To some experts, the Navy Yard tragedy raises difficult-to-ask questions  
about Buddhism and mental health. Whitaker posed this: Are there particular  
issues for people who delve deeply into meditation but may not have a strong 
or  well-developed connection to Buddhism’s history and theology? 
“Meditation alone may have no effect whatsoever on one’s morals and hence  
overall life,” Whitaker wrote in the blog post. “And it might also, as 
many  people find out early in the process, actually open up deeper layers of 
pain,  anger, and guilt that have been effectively repressed.” 
Others noted the huge overlap in the West between the culture of Buddhism 
and  that of psychotherapy. 
“There are many therapists who are Buddhist or who take materials from  
Buddhism,” said Jones. “Mental illness is largely about suffering, about 
mental  states that cause us to suffer,” he adds. “Buddhism is a religion that 
has made  that a large focus.” 
The possibility that Alexis tried meditation to ease his mental suffering 
in  meditation prompted Strand to wonder whether he may have sought out 
Buddhism “as  a last hope to avert this tragedy.”  
“It may be that he was seeking a meditative discipline that would help him 
to  get a handle on that or to learn to work with those voices to still them 
or to  give his mind something else to do,” Strand said, referring to 
reports that  Alexis was haunted by mysterious voices. “Buddhism tends not to 
be 
a quick fix  for such stuff.”

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