CAI JING’s gallery

July 2, 2005

Blogsome is blocked in China

Filed under: Miscellaneous, FAITH

I dropped my secret sadness into the silence of lonely places, where its very modern quality detached itself and grew objective, so that as I sat in a sun-warmed angle on a summer’s day, I could almost smile at it and think of its unjustness. Unjust it was, in the large Chinese record, and my haunting sense of the continuity of the human lot easily carried me from the less to the greater. Oh! Under this communist flag, I don’t even have a chance to have a free speech! Where are my human rights??

I sat in my corner, so motionless, so passive, simply with the sense of being carried, so detached from hope and freedom…

…Block my website! Block me! But you cannot block my free spirit!!

June 20, 2005

June 19th 2005, Aung San Suu Kyi 60th Birthday

Filed under: Myanmar, FAITH

Aung San Suu Kyi
“The way of democracy is to create mutual trust and understanding through free and open discussion and debate. It is by this way that we can learn to settle our differences without resorting to compulsion or violence and to weld unity out of the diversity that is the wonder of our human world. People may be compelled to act against their inclinations, they may be bribed to set aside their conscience. But they cannot be forced to give their hearts and minds to any cause that they do not truly believe to be worthwhile.

Unity and discipline are closely related and as discipline cannot be compelled genuine unity cannot be enforced. It has to come from the conviction that by our joint efforts we shall be able to overcome the obstacles that dispersed attempts fail to overcome. Gandhiji taught that united action by a people armed merely with the principles of justice and non-violence can achieve far greater results than the vast institutions of a state that is not upheld by the consent of the populace. He holds out across the barriers of time and space a blazing torch of hope and courage to those who struggle against overwhelming odds that their people may live in dignity and security.

May we be able to go forward together in disciplined strength towards international understanding and universal peace compelled only by the dictates of our conscience.”

AungSanSuuKyi2
“As a Buddhist,I can not help thinking that if one really understood the meaning of anicca (impermanence), one wouldn’t chase the power and wealth at the expense of one’s moral being.”

AungSanSuuKyi3
“The intellectual with his(her) questioning mind threatens the totalitarian mind which expects orders to be carried out and decrees to be accepted without question.There will always be clashes between the authoritarian mind and the questioning mind.They just cannot go together.”

Burma
I visited Myanmar last summer. The isolated country has it’s own unique beauty. People there are very friendly, courteous and religious. Most Burmese are Buddhist, looks like they spend most of their limited resources on building temples - there are temples everywhere that make the whole country looks like a big tomb. A strong impression it gives me is that Myanmar is a sleeping land. I think things will change sooner or later in that country, hopefully it’s awaking soon.

June 4, 2005

Life is transient, only art lasts forever?

Filed under: ART, FAITH

performance art

1,2,3 - Construction of the Medicine Buddha sand mandala.
4,5,6 - The dismantling process symbolizes the Buddhist belief in the transience of life and the ideal of nonattachment to the material world.

    Mandala, a Sanskrit word that means “circle,” is a sacred diagram created in sand or paint. It symbolizes the pure, perfected universe, and provides a visual framework for establishing feelings of peace, well-being and wholeness. Composed of millions of grains of dyed sand, the mandala is believed to have a positive effect on all who see it as each particle personifies goodness. Created by Buddhist monks and nuns, the mandala is part of initiation ceremonies — accompanied by other ritual art objects, costumed dancers, music and chanting — that grant the initiate the privilege to study and practice the teachings of a sutra or tantra, sacred texts that are guides to visualizing a particular deity.

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