Dharma Gaia: A Harvest of Essays in Buddhism and Ecology, by Badiner, Allan Hunt
Reviewed by Richard Nilsen
Whole Earth Review No.69 Winter 1990 p.126
COPYRIGHT Point Foundation 1990
The tidal wave of Earth Day books has roared in and receded, leaving this jewel among the pebbles on the beach. The mindfulness and concern for other beings that is central to Buddhist teaching here makes a smooth transition to the environmental realm. The green Buddhism" on display (in Prose, illustrations, and a little POetrY) is bY writers like Joanna Macy, Bill Devall and Robert Aitken. The book's title is a gentle pun on Dharmakaya "the body of truth." There's some of that here too. Far from the nihilism and escapism that is often imputed to the Buddhist path, this liberation, this awakening puts one into the world with a livelier, more caring sense of social engagement. The sense of inter-connectedness that can then arise, is imaged - one of the most beautiful images coming out of the Mahayana - as the jeweled net of Indra. It is a vision of reality structured very much like the holographic view of the universe, so that each being is at each node of the net, each jewel reflects all the others, reflecting back and catching the reflection, just as systems theory sees that the part contains the whole. Dharma Gala (A Harvest of Essays in Buddhism and Ecology) Allan Hunt Badiner, Editor 1990; 265 pp. $15 ($17 postpaid) from Parallax Press, P.O. Box 7355, Berkeley, CA 94707; 415/548-3721 (or Whole Earth Access)