Read the story of Milarepa - what is that about?  Did he not commit mass 
murder, and 
then went on to become a great and revered teacher? If Buddhism is against 
killing in any 
form, how could he have become such a model of spiritual awareness? 

Because both Buddhism and Christianity have stories of killings and other 
wrongdoings, 
does that mean both religions condone such actions? 

Thanks, and enjoy the day,
Diana

--- In [email protected], Anthony Wu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The similarities are superficial. The essential difference is that Buddhism 
> is against 
killing in any form, whereas Judaism: the Old Testament is full of stories of 
'justified' 
killing of captured enenimies and animals (sacrifices).
>  
> Anthony
> 
> amazing63 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> http://tinyurl.com/bcnm4
> What Moses and Buddha share eighth-graders, others will learn
> 
> RONNIE CAPLANE
> Bulletin Correspondent
> 
> What do Moses and Buddha have in common? Quite a bit, Nadav Caine will tell 
> you. 
"Both grew up as members of the royal court," said Caine. "Both had a 
life-changing 
experience that caused them to flee the royal court. Both wandered -- Buddha as 
a yoga 
practitioner, Moses as a shepherd -- not acquiring the skills to lead."
> 
> Both men achieved enlightenment -- Moses through his encounter with the 
> burning 
bush and Buddha under a bodhi tree -- and both became spiritual leaders. And 
the rest, 
as they say, is history.
> 
> On Monday, Feb. 12, Caine, 34, will fill in an audience of eighth-graders and 
> adults on 
what some of that history is when he lectures on "The Heroes of Spiritual 
Enlightenment: 
The Parallel Biographies of Moses and the Buddha" at Or Shalom in San 
Francisco. The talk, 
which he also gave at Congregation Beth Am in Los Altos Hills, is part of the 
annual Feast 
of
> Jewish Learning, sponsored by the S.F.-based Bureau of Jewish Education and 
> other 
Jewish organizations.
> 
> Although the life stories of Moses and Buddha may be similar, the messages 
> they 
emerged with are quite different. "While there are many parallels, the crucial 
differences is 
what caused them to flee and the content of their messages," Caine said. For 
Moses it was 
witnessing an act of social injustice -- a slave master beating a slave--which 
in turn, 
caused him to kill the slave master. For Buddha it was seeing a diseased and 
dying man, a 
reality from which he had been sheltered until
> that time.
> 
> According to Caine, who is on his way to getting a doctorate in advanced 
> Jewish studies 
from Stanford, the catalyst to flee led one man to focus inward, the other 
toward 
community. "Moses' message is one of a radically new society, where everyone 
must obey 
the law, embrace social justice -- even for the stranger -- and there are no 
kings," said 
Caine, adding that the "no kings" concept was a first. "The Buddha's [message] 
has to do 
with escaping mortality by living in the present moment unencumbered by mental 
attachment to either the past or the
> future."
> 
> Although these philosophies are different, Caine says Judaism and Buddhism 
> are not as 
far off from one another as it may appear. Traditional Jewish texts can be 
quite existential. 
> "Martin Buber's 'I and Thou' book is the best explanation of Buddhism," says 
> Caine who 
has taught comparative courses on Judaism and Buddhism using exclusively Jewish 
texts. 
"I lecture on the Buddhist concepts, but we only read Jewish texts. It works 
really well."
> 
> So is that why so many Jews are attracted to Buddhism? Maybe. But Caine 
> thinks the 
answer could, at least partially, lie in the fact that Buddhism addresses 
internal spirituality. 
In some ways it's similar to Kabbalah, but that isn't a big part of mainstream 
Judaism 
today. 
> 
> "Judaism as we practice it is so rationalistic. But that's just a partial 
> view. There used to 
be a very large mystical component," said Caine. The popularity of Buddhism 
among Jews 
could also be a reflection of the times. "People are so cynical about the 
possibilities for 
group progress. People are more interested in their own salvation rather than 
producing a 
just
> society. I'm not so sure Buddhism would have taken off during the civil 
> rights 
movement."
> 
> Not surprisingly it is Zen and the more intellectual branches of Buddhism to 
> which Jews 
are drawn. Then there's the psychological thing. "One thing Buddhism is better 
at than at 
anything else is psychology," said Caine, adding that Jews have a strong 
affinity for 
psychology. "It helps you unlock mental traps you're in. I think that's a big 
part of the 
attraction
> and why Jews get involved with Buddhism."
> 
> Caine, who is both a teacher at and director of Peninsula Havurah High, will 
> be teaching 
a class there on Judaism and Buddhism this spring. Peninsula Havurah High is a 
Jewish 
educational program for high school students sponsored by the BJE. He also will 
be 
teaching a six-week course for the
> Jewish Community Federation's Women's Alliance in the south Peninsula.
> 
> As far as the teens go, Caine finds that they "get this stuff."
> Interestingly, he has also learned that exposing high school students to the 
> texts of 
other religions strengthens their own Jewish identity. "Teens get more Jewish 
by reading 
the New Testament or the Koran. Seeing what other people are doing makes them 
appreciate our culture more."
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> 
> 
> 
> Current Book Discussion: Appreciate Your Life by Taizan Maezumi Roshi 
> 
> 
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