The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (698 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
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Dudjom Rinpoche
(head of Tibetan Buddhist order)
:
Dukhobors
(Russian sect)
:
Dukkha
or du
kha
(P
li, Skt.). The second of the
Three Marks of Existence
in Buddhism and the subject of the
Four Noble Truths
. There is no satisfactory equivalent to the word in English, and it has been variously translated as ‘suffering’, ‘unsatisfactoriness’, ‘frustration’, ‘unhappiness’, ‘anguish’, ‘ill’, ‘dis
-ease
’ (opposite:
sukha
, ‘ease, well-being’): it is essentially transience and all that arises from the experience of transience.
Traditional Buddhism defines ‘dukkha’ in a number of different ways.
1. In the Four Noble Truths, dukkha is represented as ‘birth, old age, sickness and death; grief, sorrow, physical and mental pain, and despair; involvement with what one dislikes and separation from what one likes; not getting what one wants; in summary, the five groups of grasping (
pañc’up
d
nakkhandh
, cf.
SKHANDHA
) are a source of suffering’.
2. Threefold dukkha is ordinary mental and physical pain (
dukkha-dukkhat
), that is, pure or intrinsic suffering; suffering as the result of change (
viparin
ma-dukkhat
), owing to the impermanent and ephemeral nature of things; and suffering due to the formations (
sa
kh
ra-dukkhat
;
sankhara
), that is, the sense of
sa
s
ra
or our own temporality and finiteness.
3. It is maintained that all sentient beings—whether gods, humans,
pretas
, animals, or inhabitants of hell—are subject to dukkha. Gods suffer the least in the hierarchy of different beings, and the inhabitants of hell the most.
It is by comparison with
nirv
na
BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
11.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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