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Home Is Here

Practicing Antiracism with the Engaged Eightfold Path

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A guide to living the Engaged Four Noble Truths: antiracist practices for wholeness, healing, and collective liberation.
For readers of Be the Refuge, The Way of Tenderness, Love and Rage, and Radical Dharma.

Home is Here builds on foundational Buddhist teachings—the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path—offering an intersectional frame to help you embody antiracist practices and tend to your own healing under racism and oppression.
Grounded in practice, memoir, and mindful self-help skill-building, Rev. Liên Shutt’s Engaged Four Noble Truths illuminate a path toward healing and liberation. She shares her own experiences with anti-Asian hate—as a teen riding her bike, meditating in whitewashed monasteries—and asks, what does it mean to attend to our suffering in body, heart, and mind when racism can cause such intense hurt and pain? What does it look like to heal?
While written mainly for Asian American Buddhists and other BIPOC practitioners, Home is Here moves us all from knowing and contemplation to a place of action and wholeness.
In the doing is the realization, and in practicing antiracism, we build a home for all beings. This is reflected in Rev. Shutt’s choice to frame each step of the Engaged Eightfold Path not as “right” but as “skillful”—to convey both the knowing and the practices essential to healing harm. In this way: 
  • Skillful view helps us understand and unpack the layers of our racial conditioning within systemic white supremacy.
  • Skillful motivation allows us to understand our agency and align our actions with wholeness.
  • Skillful effort guides us when working through difficult or triggering situations
  • Skillful speech helps us communicate wholly truthfully, even (and especially) when navigating challenging conversations.

  • An engaged reframing of core Buddhist spiritual principles, Home is Here connects foundational practices to urgent causes—and invites readers on a path home to wholeness.
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      • Library Journal

        July 1, 2023

        Ordained Zen priest and Access to Zen founder Shutt recontextualizes traditional Buddhist insights and practices as tools of antiracism. Using the Indra's net metaphor that the world is a web of connection, the book asks readers to focus on what connects people collectively. The author emphasizes that racism moves its victims into harmful conceptual, emotional, and spiritual locations. Her aim with this book is to equip Buddhist practitioners of color, along with anyone else wanting to heal, with a framework designed to affirm their own wholeness. Shutt advocates for practicing certain Buddhist philosophies that can shift perspectives for the better. This book gives new insight into applying the Four Noble Truths philosophy that suffering exists in life, but it can be stopped. The book also presents the Eightfold Path, Buddha's specific instructions on how to end suffering, in a fresh way. The effect is a much more robust and engaging explication of Buddhism. VERDICT What initially looks like a reworking of Buddhism becomes a recovery of it from the dominant culture. A great and intriguing source for readers to work through, featuring stories, analyses, and proposed exercises.--James Wetherbee

        Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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    Languages

    • English

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